際際滷shows by User: bridgetwillard / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: bridgetwillard / Thu, 16 Dec 2021 03:13:24 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: bridgetwillard How Many People Use Twitter in San Antonio? /slideshow/how-many-people-use-twitter-in-san-antonio/250847274 howmanypeopleusetwitterinsanantonio-211216031324
So, How Many People Use Twitter in San Antonio? According to the Census, 1,547,253 people live in San Antonio, Texas, 25% of which are under the age of 18. That leaves 1,160,439 adults. Pew Research shows that 22% of American adults use Twitter. Its reasonable, then, to project that 255,296 adults in San Antonio use Twitter. Why Should I Care About Twitter Users? Twitter users are a different demographic. People who choose Twitter are slightly different than other social media users, according to Pew Research. They spend time on Twitter to read and engage. Theyre learning, researching. They are looking to make connections. I have had the same experience managing client Twitter accounts since 2009. You dont have to care about Twitter. But you should ask yourself if you care about that demographic. Can your business afford to not reach 250,000 people who are highly educated with a higher income than the US population at large? Can your San Antonio business afford to ignore the social media users who believe in true diversity and inclusion?]]>

So, How Many People Use Twitter in San Antonio? According to the Census, 1,547,253 people live in San Antonio, Texas, 25% of which are under the age of 18. That leaves 1,160,439 adults. Pew Research shows that 22% of American adults use Twitter. Its reasonable, then, to project that 255,296 adults in San Antonio use Twitter. Why Should I Care About Twitter Users? Twitter users are a different demographic. People who choose Twitter are slightly different than other social media users, according to Pew Research. They spend time on Twitter to read and engage. Theyre learning, researching. They are looking to make connections. I have had the same experience managing client Twitter accounts since 2009. You dont have to care about Twitter. But you should ask yourself if you care about that demographic. Can your business afford to not reach 250,000 people who are highly educated with a higher income than the US population at large? Can your San Antonio business afford to ignore the social media users who believe in true diversity and inclusion?]]>
Thu, 16 Dec 2021 03:13:24 GMT /slideshow/how-many-people-use-twitter-in-san-antonio/250847274 bridgetwillard@slideshare.net(bridgetwillard) How Many People Use Twitter in San Antonio? bridgetwillard So, How Many People Use Twitter in San Antonio? According to the Census, 1,547,253 people live in San Antonio, Texas, 25% of which are under the age of 18. That leaves 1,160,439 adults. Pew Research shows that 22% of American adults use Twitter. Its reasonable, then, to project that 255,296 adults in San Antonio use Twitter. Why Should I Care About Twitter Users? Twitter users are a different demographic. People who choose Twitter are slightly different than other social media users, according to Pew Research. They spend time on Twitter to read and engage. Theyre learning, researching. They are looking to make connections. I have had the same experience managing client Twitter accounts since 2009. You dont have to care about Twitter. But you should ask yourself if you care about that demographic. Can your business afford to not reach 250,000 people who are highly educated with a higher income than the US population at large? Can your San Antonio business afford to ignore the social media users who believe in true diversity and inclusion? <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/howmanypeopleusetwitterinsanantonio-211216031324-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> So, How Many People Use Twitter in San Antonio? According to the Census, 1,547,253 people live in San Antonio, Texas, 25% of which are under the age of 18. That leaves 1,160,439 adults. Pew Research shows that 22% of American adults use Twitter. Its reasonable, then, to project that 255,296 adults in San Antonio use Twitter. Why Should I Care About Twitter Users? Twitter users are a different demographic. People who choose Twitter are slightly different than other social media users, according to Pew Research. They spend time on Twitter to read and engage. Theyre learning, researching. They are looking to make connections. I have had the same experience managing client Twitter accounts since 2009. You dont have to care about Twitter. But you should ask yourself if you care about that demographic. Can your business afford to not reach 250,000 people who are highly educated with a higher income than the US population at large? Can your San Antonio business afford to ignore the social media users who believe in true diversity and inclusion?
How Many People Use Twitter in San Antonio? from Bridget Willard
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Developer Marketing Tips From the Car Industry /slideshow/developer-marketing-tips-from-the-car-industry/182912320 productmarketingforwordpress-191016202838
Have you seen the concept sketches for the new Volkswagen ID.Buzz? Theyve been marketing this concept car and evolving it since 2001. This isnt new in the automobile industry. The concepts are always marketed years before they go into production. And, yet, in the WordPress product space, we tend to build something, see if it is viable, and then throw a few dollars at marketing. And were left wondering why there are so many abandoned products and plugins. Instead, my suggestion is to start a GitHub repo (or Trello Board) for your marketing so what while you are building your next SaaS Product or WordPress plugin, you will simultaneously be working on brand]]>

Have you seen the concept sketches for the new Volkswagen ID.Buzz? Theyve been marketing this concept car and evolving it since 2001. This isnt new in the automobile industry. The concepts are always marketed years before they go into production. And, yet, in the WordPress product space, we tend to build something, see if it is viable, and then throw a few dollars at marketing. And were left wondering why there are so many abandoned products and plugins. Instead, my suggestion is to start a GitHub repo (or Trello Board) for your marketing so what while you are building your next SaaS Product or WordPress plugin, you will simultaneously be working on brand]]>
Wed, 16 Oct 2019 20:28:37 GMT /slideshow/developer-marketing-tips-from-the-car-industry/182912320 bridgetwillard@slideshare.net(bridgetwillard) Developer Marketing Tips From the Car Industry bridgetwillard Have you seen the concept sketches for the new Volkswagen ID.Buzz? Theyve been marketing this concept car and evolving it since 2001. This isnt new in the automobile industry. The concepts are always marketed years before they go into production. And, yet, in the WordPress product space, we tend to build something, see if it is viable, and then throw a few dollars at marketing. And were left wondering why there are so many abandoned products and plugins. Instead, my suggestion is to start a GitHub repo (or Trello Board) for your marketing so what while you are building your next SaaS Product or WordPress plugin, you will simultaneously be working on brand <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/productmarketingforwordpress-191016202838-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Have you seen the concept sketches for the new Volkswagen ID.Buzz? Theyve been marketing this concept car and evolving it since 2001. This isnt new in the automobile industry. The concepts are always marketed years before they go into production. And, yet, in the WordPress product space, we tend to build something, see if it is viable, and then throw a few dollars at marketing. And were left wondering why there are so many abandoned products and plugins. Instead, my suggestion is to start a GitHub repo (or Trello Board) for your marketing so what while you are building your next SaaS Product or WordPress plugin, you will simultaneously be working on brand
Developer Marketing Tips From the Car Industry from Bridget Willard
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Backward Compatibility is Good for WordPress, not Mental Health /slideshow/backward-compatibility-is-good-for-wordpress-not-mental-health/169867292 backwardcompatibilityisgoodforwordpressnotmentalhealth11-190907182320
Imposter syndrome combined with isolation is a concern in our increasingly growing industry, particularly for those working remotely. How do we address imposter syndrome without looking our internal programming or self talk? Though talking with developers over the years, I believe many of us came to tech because of our backgrounds. Namely, computers are something we can control. More than half of the people I know in technology have dysfunctional backgrounds. Teaching emotional coping skills with something developers understand (logical code) can produce powerful breakthroughs. Though I am not a licensed therapist, I do care about our developers, our community, and specifically, my friends. In this talk, I'll relate how I've dealt with mental health through my journey and the insight into how destructive our self-talk is. It affects the jobs we go after, the work we do, and how we relate with each other. Instead of keeping old self-talk and growing around it, we need to make breaking changes in the way we talk about ourselves. ]]>

Imposter syndrome combined with isolation is a concern in our increasingly growing industry, particularly for those working remotely. How do we address imposter syndrome without looking our internal programming or self talk? Though talking with developers over the years, I believe many of us came to tech because of our backgrounds. Namely, computers are something we can control. More than half of the people I know in technology have dysfunctional backgrounds. Teaching emotional coping skills with something developers understand (logical code) can produce powerful breakthroughs. Though I am not a licensed therapist, I do care about our developers, our community, and specifically, my friends. In this talk, I'll relate how I've dealt with mental health through my journey and the insight into how destructive our self-talk is. It affects the jobs we go after, the work we do, and how we relate with each other. Instead of keeping old self-talk and growing around it, we need to make breaking changes in the way we talk about ourselves. ]]>
Sat, 07 Sep 2019 18:23:20 GMT /slideshow/backward-compatibility-is-good-for-wordpress-not-mental-health/169867292 bridgetwillard@slideshare.net(bridgetwillard) Backward Compatibility is Good for WordPress, not Mental Health bridgetwillard Imposter syndrome combined with isolation is a concern in our increasingly growing industry, particularly for those working remotely. How do we address imposter syndrome without looking our internal programming or self talk? Though talking with developers over the years, I believe many of us came to tech because of our backgrounds. Namely, computers are something we can control. More than half of the people I know in technology have dysfunctional backgrounds. Teaching emotional coping skills with something developers understand (logical code) can produce powerful breakthroughs. Though I am not a licensed therapist, I do care about our developers, our community, and specifically, my friends. In this talk, I'll relate how I've dealt with mental health through my journey and the insight into how destructive our self-talk is. It affects the jobs we go after, the work we do, and how we relate with each other. Instead of keeping old self-talk and growing around it, we need to make breaking changes in the way we talk about ourselves. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/backwardcompatibilityisgoodforwordpressnotmentalhealth11-190907182320-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Imposter syndrome combined with isolation is a concern in our increasingly growing industry, particularly for those working remotely. How do we address imposter syndrome without looking our internal programming or self talk? Though talking with developers over the years, I believe many of us came to tech because of our backgrounds. Namely, computers are something we can control. More than half of the people I know in technology have dysfunctional backgrounds. Teaching emotional coping skills with something developers understand (logical code) can produce powerful breakthroughs. Though I am not a licensed therapist, I do care about our developers, our community, and specifically, my friends. In this talk, I&#39;ll relate how I&#39;ve dealt with mental health through my journey and the insight into how destructive our self-talk is. It affects the jobs we go after, the work we do, and how we relate with each other. Instead of keeping old self-talk and growing around it, we need to make breaking changes in the way we talk about ourselves.
Backward Compatibility is Good for WordPress, not Mental Health from Bridget Willard
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You can't have a thriving codebase without a thriving community. /slideshow/you-cant-have-a-thriving-codebase-without-a-thriving-community-94817327/94817327 raleigh-slides-2018-180424034934
You can't have a thriving codebase without a thriving community. What does code have to do with community? Free and Open Source Software depends upon the community who builds, creates, maintains, supports, translates, and markets it. That means any Open Source project depends upon a volunteer-based workforce. We all recognize that our livlihoods are somewhat attributed to the ability to use Free and Open Source Software -- like WordPress -- so we volunteer, contribute, to give back. What about burnout? It's real. We've addressed it before in many ways. So let's talk about how what a thriving community looks like. What is a thriving community? A thriving community realizes they can ebb and flow in and out of a project. They can contribute for months or years, take a break, maybe even mentor others, and come back -- or not. A thriving community recruits volunteers based upon inclusion, not guilt. A thriving community isn't burnt out or bitter. A thriving community is healthy -- physically, emotionally, and financially. A Word About Perfection I spent 14 years in construction accounting and my job demanded perfection. I spent hours looking for a penny if my bank reconcilation was off. Job costing had to be accurate. Contracts had to be perfect. I get it. The problem with perfectionism is when we take a marketable skill from our career and apply it to our personal lives. Progress is better than perfection. Done is better than perfect. Something is better than nothing. Let's Talk about Whole Health Health comes in many forms: physical, emotional, and financial. And there are quite a few overlaps in these three distint areas, too. It's fine to talk about the abstract. In the conceptual, we all agree we should be physically, emotionally, and financially healthy. But are we? And do we stop from iterating in our personal lives because we haven't created the perfect meal or exercise plan, because we haven't felt emotionally ready or because we have financial goals that haven't been met? Maybe. But let's take some actionalble steps toward progress. The -er approach Better. Faster. Thinner. Healthier. Happier. They all end in -er. This suffix communicates progress -- not completion. I'm going to talk about some of the things I've done in my life to be -er.]]>

You can't have a thriving codebase without a thriving community. What does code have to do with community? Free and Open Source Software depends upon the community who builds, creates, maintains, supports, translates, and markets it. That means any Open Source project depends upon a volunteer-based workforce. We all recognize that our livlihoods are somewhat attributed to the ability to use Free and Open Source Software -- like WordPress -- so we volunteer, contribute, to give back. What about burnout? It's real. We've addressed it before in many ways. So let's talk about how what a thriving community looks like. What is a thriving community? A thriving community realizes they can ebb and flow in and out of a project. They can contribute for months or years, take a break, maybe even mentor others, and come back -- or not. A thriving community recruits volunteers based upon inclusion, not guilt. A thriving community isn't burnt out or bitter. A thriving community is healthy -- physically, emotionally, and financially. A Word About Perfection I spent 14 years in construction accounting and my job demanded perfection. I spent hours looking for a penny if my bank reconcilation was off. Job costing had to be accurate. Contracts had to be perfect. I get it. The problem with perfectionism is when we take a marketable skill from our career and apply it to our personal lives. Progress is better than perfection. Done is better than perfect. Something is better than nothing. Let's Talk about Whole Health Health comes in many forms: physical, emotional, and financial. And there are quite a few overlaps in these three distint areas, too. It's fine to talk about the abstract. In the conceptual, we all agree we should be physically, emotionally, and financially healthy. But are we? And do we stop from iterating in our personal lives because we haven't created the perfect meal or exercise plan, because we haven't felt emotionally ready or because we have financial goals that haven't been met? Maybe. But let's take some actionalble steps toward progress. The -er approach Better. Faster. Thinner. Healthier. Happier. They all end in -er. This suffix communicates progress -- not completion. I'm going to talk about some of the things I've done in my life to be -er.]]>
Tue, 24 Apr 2018 03:49:34 GMT /slideshow/you-cant-have-a-thriving-codebase-without-a-thriving-community-94817327/94817327 bridgetwillard@slideshare.net(bridgetwillard) You can't have a thriving codebase without a thriving community. bridgetwillard You can't have a thriving codebase without a thriving community. What does code have to do with community? Free and Open Source Software depends upon the community who builds, creates, maintains, supports, translates, and markets it. That means any Open Source project depends upon a volunteer-based workforce. We all recognize that our livlihoods are somewhat attributed to the ability to use Free and Open Source Software -- like WordPress -- so we volunteer, contribute, to give back. What about burnout? It's real. We've addressed it before in many ways. So let's talk about how what a thriving community looks like. What is a thriving community? A thriving community realizes they can ebb and flow in and out of a project. They can contribute for months or years, take a break, maybe even mentor others, and come back -- or not. A thriving community recruits volunteers based upon inclusion, not guilt. A thriving community isn't burnt out or bitter. A thriving community is healthy -- physically, emotionally, and financially. A Word About Perfection I spent 14 years in construction accounting and my job demanded perfection. I spent hours looking for a penny if my bank reconcilation was off. Job costing had to be accurate. Contracts had to be perfect. I get it. The problem with perfectionism is when we take a marketable skill from our career and apply it to our personal lives. Progress is better than perfection. Done is better than perfect. Something is better than nothing. Let's Talk about Whole Health Health comes in many forms: physical, emotional, and financial. And there are quite a few overlaps in these three distint areas, too. It's fine to talk about the abstract. In the conceptual, we all agree we should be physically, emotionally, and financially healthy. But are we? And do we stop from iterating in our personal lives because we haven't created the perfect meal or exercise plan, because we haven't felt emotionally ready or because we have financial goals that haven't been met? Maybe. But let's take some actionalble steps toward progress. The -er approach Better. Faster. Thinner. Healthier. Happier. They all end in -er. This suffix communicates progress -- not completion. I'm going to talk about some of the things I've done in my life to be -er. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/raleigh-slides-2018-180424034934-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> You can&#39;t have a thriving codebase without a thriving community. What does code have to do with community? Free and Open Source Software depends upon the community who builds, creates, maintains, supports, translates, and markets it. That means any Open Source project depends upon a volunteer-based workforce. We all recognize that our livlihoods are somewhat attributed to the ability to use Free and Open Source Software -- like WordPress -- so we volunteer, contribute, to give back. What about burnout? It&#39;s real. We&#39;ve addressed it before in many ways. So let&#39;s talk about how what a thriving community looks like. What is a thriving community? A thriving community realizes they can ebb and flow in and out of a project. They can contribute for months or years, take a break, maybe even mentor others, and come back -- or not. A thriving community recruits volunteers based upon inclusion, not guilt. A thriving community isn&#39;t burnt out or bitter. A thriving community is healthy -- physically, emotionally, and financially. A Word About Perfection I spent 14 years in construction accounting and my job demanded perfection. I spent hours looking for a penny if my bank reconcilation was off. Job costing had to be accurate. Contracts had to be perfect. I get it. The problem with perfectionism is when we take a marketable skill from our career and apply it to our personal lives. Progress is better than perfection. Done is better than perfect. Something is better than nothing. Let&#39;s Talk about Whole Health Health comes in many forms: physical, emotional, and financial. And there are quite a few overlaps in these three distint areas, too. It&#39;s fine to talk about the abstract. In the conceptual, we all agree we should be physically, emotionally, and financially healthy. But are we? And do we stop from iterating in our personal lives because we haven&#39;t created the perfect meal or exercise plan, because we haven&#39;t felt emotionally ready or because we have financial goals that haven&#39;t been met? Maybe. But let&#39;s take some actionalble steps toward progress. The -er approach Better. Faster. Thinner. Healthier. Happier. They all end in -er. This suffix communicates progress -- not completion. I&#39;m going to talk about some of the things I&#39;ve done in my life to be -er.
You can't have a thriving codebase without a thriving community. from Bridget Willard
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Marketing for Freelancers and Small Agencies /slideshow/marketing-for-freelancers-and-small-agencies/90853981 ocwp-marketing-for-freelancers-small-agencies-180316023724
For the Orange County WordPress Business Meetup, Monday March 19, 2018, I will be discussing how content marketing can augment your business goals through creation and distribution.]]>

For the Orange County WordPress Business Meetup, Monday March 19, 2018, I will be discussing how content marketing can augment your business goals through creation and distribution.]]>
Fri, 16 Mar 2018 02:37:24 GMT /slideshow/marketing-for-freelancers-and-small-agencies/90853981 bridgetwillard@slideshare.net(bridgetwillard) Marketing for Freelancers and Small Agencies bridgetwillard For the Orange County WordPress Business Meetup, Monday March 19, 2018, I will be discussing how content marketing can augment your business goals through creation and distribution. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/ocwp-marketing-for-freelancers-small-agencies-180316023724-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> For the Orange County WordPress Business Meetup, Monday March 19, 2018, I will be discussing how content marketing can augment your business goals through creation and distribution.
Marketing for Freelancers and Small Agencies from Bridget Willard
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Building Community One Conversation at a Time /slideshow/building-community-one-conversation-at-a-time/82276300 wcroc-2017-community-171118155219
In the WordPress Community, weve heard the word Community thrown around quite a bit. But what does it really mean? How do you build a community? Who is relevant? How do you spend your time in a way that brings a return? What is a return? Communicating with people in person and online and building relationships is the key to personal brand awareness and more. At this talk, Ill reveal all of my relationship building tips and tricks both in person and on Twitter. See you there!]]>

In the WordPress Community, weve heard the word Community thrown around quite a bit. But what does it really mean? How do you build a community? Who is relevant? How do you spend your time in a way that brings a return? What is a return? Communicating with people in person and online and building relationships is the key to personal brand awareness and more. At this talk, Ill reveal all of my relationship building tips and tricks both in person and on Twitter. See you there!]]>
Sat, 18 Nov 2017 15:52:19 GMT /slideshow/building-community-one-conversation-at-a-time/82276300 bridgetwillard@slideshare.net(bridgetwillard) Building Community One Conversation at a Time bridgetwillard In the WordPress Community, weve heard the word Community thrown around quite a bit. But what does it really mean? How do you build a community? Who is relevant? How do you spend your time in a way that brings a return? What is a return? Communicating with people in person and online and building relationships is the key to personal brand awareness and more. At this talk, Ill reveal all of my relationship building tips and tricks both in person and on Twitter. See you there! <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/wcroc-2017-community-171118155219-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> In the WordPress Community, weve heard the word Community thrown around quite a bit. But what does it really mean? How do you build a community? Who is relevant? How do you spend your time in a way that brings a return? What is a return? Communicating with people in person and online and building relationships is the key to personal brand awareness and more. At this talk, Ill reveal all of my relationship building tips and tricks both in person and on Twitter. See you there!
Building Community One Conversation at a Time from Bridget Willard
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Content Hacks for Nonprofits - Bridget Willard WordCamp Sacramento 2017 /slideshow/content-hacks-for-nonprofits-bridget-willard-wordcamp-sacramento-2017/79646640 wcsac-17-contenthacksnonprofits-170911165216
Content marketing for your nonprofit doesnt have to be difficult. You can reuse and repurpose content. You have more content at your fingertips that you realize. I promise. Well talk about how nonprofits can repurpose content from marketing materials, incorporate user-generated content, refresh older content, and more. In this media age everyone is a publisher -- even nonprofits. Blog Post here: https://givewp.com/content-hacks-nonprofits/]]>

Content marketing for your nonprofit doesnt have to be difficult. You can reuse and repurpose content. You have more content at your fingertips that you realize. I promise. Well talk about how nonprofits can repurpose content from marketing materials, incorporate user-generated content, refresh older content, and more. In this media age everyone is a publisher -- even nonprofits. Blog Post here: https://givewp.com/content-hacks-nonprofits/]]>
Mon, 11 Sep 2017 16:52:16 GMT /slideshow/content-hacks-for-nonprofits-bridget-willard-wordcamp-sacramento-2017/79646640 bridgetwillard@slideshare.net(bridgetwillard) Content Hacks for Nonprofits - Bridget Willard WordCamp Sacramento 2017 bridgetwillard Content marketing for your nonprofit doesnt have to be difficult. You can reuse and repurpose content. You have more content at your fingertips that you realize. I promise. Well talk about how nonprofits can repurpose content from marketing materials, incorporate user-generated content, refresh older content, and more. In this media age everyone is a publisher -- even nonprofits. Blog Post here: https://givewp.com/content-hacks-nonprofits/ <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/wcsac-17-contenthacksnonprofits-170911165216-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Content marketing for your nonprofit doesnt have to be difficult. You can reuse and repurpose content. You have more content at your fingertips that you realize. I promise. Well talk about how nonprofits can repurpose content from marketing materials, incorporate user-generated content, refresh older content, and more. In this media age everyone is a publisher -- even nonprofits. Blog Post here: https://givewp.com/content-hacks-nonprofits/
Content Hacks for Nonprofits - Bridget Willard WordCamp Sacramento 2017 from Bridget Willard
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My Road To WordPress -- #WCCINCY 2016 /slideshow/my-road-to-wordpress-wccincy-2016/67304481 roadtowordpress3-161017174126
These slides are the companion to my presentation at WordCamp Cincinnati, October 15, 2016, about how I changed careers and industries from an office manager at a commercial general contractor to a marketing manager at a plugin development shop -- at 42 years old. ]]>

These slides are the companion to my presentation at WordCamp Cincinnati, October 15, 2016, about how I changed careers and industries from an office manager at a commercial general contractor to a marketing manager at a plugin development shop -- at 42 years old. ]]>
Mon, 17 Oct 2016 17:41:26 GMT /slideshow/my-road-to-wordpress-wccincy-2016/67304481 bridgetwillard@slideshare.net(bridgetwillard) My Road To WordPress -- #WCCINCY 2016 bridgetwillard These slides are the companion to my presentation at WordCamp Cincinnati, October 15, 2016, about how I changed careers and industries from an office manager at a commercial general contractor to a marketing manager at a plugin development shop -- at 42 years old. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/roadtowordpress3-161017174126-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> These slides are the companion to my presentation at WordCamp Cincinnati, October 15, 2016, about how I changed careers and industries from an office manager at a commercial general contractor to a marketing manager at a plugin development shop -- at 42 years old.
My Road To WordPress -- #WCCINCY 2016 from Bridget Willard
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Why Should You Blog? /slideshow/why-should-you-blog-62497731/62497731 whyshouldyoublog-presentationslides-160528174110
We write to have a voice, educate our audience, and position ourselves as thought leaders. The more you write, the better you'll get, so publish regularly. Add value, answer questions, educate. Find your voice and your audience will find you.]]>

We write to have a voice, educate our audience, and position ourselves as thought leaders. The more you write, the better you'll get, so publish regularly. Add value, answer questions, educate. Find your voice and your audience will find you.]]>
Sat, 28 May 2016 17:41:10 GMT /slideshow/why-should-you-blog-62497731/62497731 bridgetwillard@slideshare.net(bridgetwillard) Why Should You Blog? bridgetwillard We write to have a voice, educate our audience, and position ourselves as thought leaders. The more you write, the better you'll get, so publish regularly. Add value, answer questions, educate. Find your voice and your audience will find you. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/whyshouldyoublog-presentationslides-160528174110-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> We write to have a voice, educate our audience, and position ourselves as thought leaders. The more you write, the better you&#39;ll get, so publish regularly. Add value, answer questions, educate. Find your voice and your audience will find you.
Why Should You Blog? from Bridget Willard
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-bridgetwillard-48x48.jpg?cb=1639624353 Author of several marketing books, Bridget Willard is a teacher who focuses on building relationships. Small businesses benefit from consults that result in an actionable strategy to focus their effort -- and budgets. Bridget's services include in-house training, marketing strategy, copywriting, and social media account management. Her plugin Launch With Words is a value-add for developers to help those clients use their websites publishing blog posts monthly. To empower small business owners, she writes, teaches, presents to small groups, and creates tutorials. www.bridgetwillard.com https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/howmanypeopleusetwitterinsanantonio-211216031324-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/how-many-people-use-twitter-in-san-antonio/250847274 How Many People Use Tw... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/productmarketingforwordpress-191016202838-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/developer-marketing-tips-from-the-car-industry/182912320 Developer Marketing Ti... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/backwardcompatibilityisgoodforwordpressnotmentalhealth11-190907182320-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/backward-compatibility-is-good-for-wordpress-not-mental-health/169867292 Backward Compatibility...