weDevs have developed into Angels

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weDevs is a WordPress based product company located in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Their very first product was WP User Frontend, released on the WordPress plugin repository in early 2011, which officially started business with the Pro version in early 2013. Since then, they are mostly known for front-end plugins.

WP User Frontend is their most popular plugin with more than 151,280 downloads and 10,000 active installs till now. It is used to create front-end interfaces for custom post type and page.

WP Project Manager is their signature product and the only complete project & task management system for WordPress. It was first released in late 2012 and more features requested by more than 3500 customers are being added.

Dokan is their flagship product and the only complete front-end based multi-vendor plugin for WordPress, first released on February 2014. It has all the features that you might need to run a marketplace and can be used with any WooCommerce compatible theme and plugin.

We are proud to have a neighbour as a sponsor for the first time! We hope this helps better co-operation and collaboration between the South Asian WordPress communities across political boundaries!

Alexander Gounder will critique your favourite SEO plugins

Alexander Gounder is a web design and SEO professional running a digital agency called Ink my web. At WordCamp Pune, he’s going to analyse The most popular SEO plugins/solutions for WordPress in a critique followed by a QnA. This grand-daddy of the Indian WordPress community is speaking at a WordCamp for the first time!

Alex is an SEO / SEM, Internet Marketer with a wide variety of work experience across industries and domains like Films, TV Production, Customer Service, Politics, Government Operations, Press Relations, Graphic & Web Design to finally Internet Marketing & SEO.

In the last few years he has been involved with the Indian WordPress Community which has helped him use WordPress for his clients at Ink my web  better and also dabble with theme development (th3mes.com).

ZNetLive is now Live as a WordCamp Pune Angel

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Founded in 2001, ZNetLive is an ICANN accredited domain registrar and is a provider of whole range of hosting services starting from Shared hosting, Reseller hosting, WordPress hosting, VPS, Dedicated server, Cloud solutions, & other related online business applications. One of the early-adopters of the new gTLD wave, ZNetLive provides more than 250 Generic Top Level Domains to its end customers.

They provide economical domain names and hosting services as they believe that being the pre-requisites for the presence on web, they should be available at a minimal price. They strive to deliver ingenious services and products with consistently higher standards. Their WordPress hosting is especially optimised exclusively for WordPress websites and blogs.

The nice people from ZNet approached us to sponsor WordCamp Pune and were very friendly and co-operative. They even went ahead and converted one of their sister brands from a partially restrictive license to GPL. Needless to say, we’re really glad to see them aboard!

The Current List of Sessions at WordCamp Pune

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We have announced quite a lot of sessions till now. While we work on the exact schedule and confirm a few remaining sessions, here’s a summary/recap of all the sessions announced till date.

Topic Facilitator(s) Language Session Type Useful for
Importing content from other systems into WordPress and WooCommerce Akshaye Raje Marathi and English Lecture/Talk Development, Administration
Unit Testing for WordPress Sudar Muthu English Lecture/Talk Development
An Introduction to the WordPress REST API Gaurav Pareek Hindi and English Lecture/Talk Development, Business
Local, Staging and Production Made Easy Joe Guilmette English Lecture/Talk Development
Let your site speak multilingual! Bigul Malayi,
Minesh Shah,
Ankit Gade,
Harshad Mane,
Sumit Singh
Marathi, Hindi and English Workshop Develpoment, Blogging, Administration
Growing from a Single Author Blog to a Multi-author Community Arun Prabhudesai English Lecture/Talk Blogging, Business
Automated Theme Development with Grunt Sagar Jadhav Marathi Lecture/Talk Development
Beyond the Blackboard: Building Education Products for South Asia Mahangu Weerasinghe English Lecture/Talk Business, Community
Theme Customisation Puneet Sahalot Hindi and English Workshop Development, Administration
HeroPress: Stories of Success Topher DeRosia English Lecture/Talk Community
WordPress JSON API Priyanka Goyal Hindi Lecture/Talk Development
Promote your WordPress Plugin or Theme Shilpa Shah English Lecture/Talk Business
How to Design Useful Websites Jitesh Patil Marathi and English Lecture/Talk Administration, Business
Podcasting with WordPress Shrikant Joshi English Workshop Blogging
Content Creation and Promotion in 2015 and beyond Priya Florence Shah English Lecture/Talk Blogging, Business
Careers in Development & Support with WordPress Karthikraj Magapu,
Jeremy Herve,
Joshua Abenazer,
Rahul Bansal,
Gagan Deep Singh
English Panel Discussion Business
User Experience best practices for a WordPress Blog Siddharth Ashok Hindi and English QnA Development, Administration, Business
Contributing to WordPress, the Project Andy Christian English Lecture/Talk Blogging, Business, Community
Contributing to WordPress, the Software Sathish Nagarajan English Workshop Development, Community
Building a Good Quality WordPress theme Nisha Singh Hindi Workshop Development

Of the total 20 sessions as of now, there are 10 sessions related to development, 5 related to blogging, 5 related to administration, 8 related to business (including support) and 3 related to the community.

There are no more development related sessions to be announced. There’s more in store for blogging, business and the community. We have at least four very exciting speakers and sessions lined up that we will announce soon. In total, we still have to announce about 10 more sessions. Whether you are a blogger, developer or someone else, you’d find a lot of sessions in the list that’ll interest you!

There are 11 sessions in English, 2 in Marathi and English, 3 in Hindi and English, 2 exclusively in Hindi, 1 exclusively in Marathi and 1 in all the three languages. Like we had promised, you can go the whole day without attending a single session that’s exclusively in English!

There are 13 talks, 5 workshops, 1 QnA and 1 panel discussion. The discussions and workshops are longer in duration, so there’s more interaction time than plain listening!

So, how about making sure you don’t miss out on these and other awesome sessions by grabbing your tickets before we run out!

Nisha Singh will make sure your WordPress theme is of great quality

Nisha Singh spoke at the last WordCamp Pune and it was the first time someone was doing a session in Hindi! She’s back at WordCamp Pune 2015 to guide us with How to build a good quality WordPress theme and that too, in Hindi! Now how about adding your own theme to WordPress.org repository?

Nisha Singh is a Quality Analyst at WPoets Technology LLP. She is also a member of WordPress theme review team since 2010 and has reviewed more then 1300 tickets on WordPress theme trac.

If there’s someone who knows what makes a theme good or bad, it’s Nisha. She is also the best person to know if your theme would make it to the WordPress repository!

Introducing the WordPress Lounge

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WordPress Lounge?

You may need help with something related to your WordPress site and you need to speak with someone who can help. You may want to discuss blogging or something related to code. Or you just wish to discuss and talk about anything related to WordPress. Imagine a day long discussion that you could leave or join whenever you like. That’s the WordPress Lounge.

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This is exactly how the ancients used to share knowledge all over the world, discussion or what we call चर्चा in a lot of Sanskrit derived languages! Our Prime Minister is very fond of it and so are we. The Chai (tea)/Coffee will flow, of course!

Why have one?

It is the best part of our meetups when people talk just after the sessions. We though it’d be nice to have a designated space where birds of a feather could flock together and enjoy some useful conversations and discussions.

If you have anything related to WordPress on your mind and it is not covered in any of the sessions, head to the WordPress Lounge. Or maybe you have something on mind because of a session! 😉

Can I help?

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Sure. Just be present at the lounge and help anyone who has a question or join in an existing conversation to share your knowledge. Everyone is welcome! Who knows, you might make even more friends.

The WordCamp Pune Selfie Hunt

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You can call it a Scavenger Hunt, a Treasure Hunt, Bingo, Housie, Find Someone Who… or any other name you can think of. We call it the Selfie Hunt because there’s a selfie involved.

How to Play

More details and the exact rules will be announced closer to the event but you’d get a ticket with clues:

  • You just have to find someone or something that your clues point to. For eg, a clue would be Find someone whose WordPress website has been hacked once.
  • Once you identify them, go say Hi.
  • Have a little chat about the clue, make a new friend and take a selfie.
  • Mention them in a social media post on Facebook or Twitter, attach the selfie and hashtag #SelfieHunt #WCPune.
  • When you’re done with all your clues, shout #BINGO on Facebook or Twitter. Also hashtag #SelfieHunt #WCPune and the url to your ticket.
  • Your ticket will have buttons to make such sharing very easy. You’d only need to mention the person/ object.
  • The first three people to complete their tickets successfully win prizes*!
  • But you can continue even after that, just for fun or to make more friends.
  • Here’s a sample ticket just to give you an idea. The actual ticket will be very different.

Super simple! You’ll hopefully make new friends and network more while having a lot of fun, we’re sure!

*Since it is a community event, the prizes would be nominal and in kind. The point of this is not to win a grand prize, the point of it is fun and networking.

Announcing the WordCamp Pune Buddy Program

People are shy

True that. A lot of us are extremely shy or just introverts. This is especially true of the stereotypical geek/nerd developers. However, we want this community of nice people to meet each other and exchange ideas, information and knowledge at WordCamp Pune 2015. So, we’ve devised a little scheme that will ensure some level of interaction.

You get a buddy, your buddy gets a buddy too

Everyone who comes to WordCamp Pune will be assigned a buddy, randomly (by pure WordPress/PHP code). In addition, they will be assigned as buddies to another user.

So every participant will have two buddies. This way we are hoping we can connect a lot of people with each other. Sample this:

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Vaishali is assigned to you as a buddy. You are assigned to Topher as a buddy. Vaishali’s buddy is Abhishek. Topher is Sheeba’s buddy. Sheeba is someone’s buddy and Abhishek has a buddy, as well.

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All these people are already friends with someone outside this buddy program. You will also meet people outside the buddy program. How many people do you think you’d have met by the end of the day and how may friends would you have made at WordCamp Pune!

Seriously?

Sounds silly and confusing? Let it be. Silly is fun, sometimes. Have too many questions? Let them be. Just remember that you have to go say “Hi!” to whoever has been designated as your buddy. Everything else happens automatically! Just remember to say “Hi!” back to whoever walks upto you and says that you are their buddy!

Introverts

You could be an introvert and you might meet introverts at the WordCamp. Just acknowledging each other will cause no harm. Also, Dr. Carmella’s Guide to Understanding the Introverted by the cartoonist Schroeder Jones will come in handy. It’s fun and here’s a sample:
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Transparency Report 5: Speaker Selection Process

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In a series of posts, we lay bare our processes and list the tools that we use. For the sake of absolute transparency and so that other events may pick up a few, since we’ve already tried and tested them. We’ll be revealing the organiser selection, speaker selection and volunteer selection criteria and processes.

If you’ve read the previous transparency reports, some of this would be very obvious. Still, there were only two factors that we considered when we decided upon a speaker:

1. Great facilitators, not just good speakers

It is easier to speak on a stage to an audience than interact with the audience and facilitate the transfer of knowledge from you (or someone else) to the audience and use the feedback and cues to mould your session to what works and not a pre-decided and rehearsed speech.

We did not select a lot of great speakers because we found the interaction lacking. We selected some whose language or presentation skills or even speech delivery wasn’t that great but they were very interactive and hence were way more interesting!

2. Advanced users, not necessarily experts

There are two choices that we faced sometimes when selecting a speaker. Should we select an expert who’s not a good speaker or should we select a good speaker who’s probably not an expert but has decent enough knowledge.

WordCamp after WordCamp we’ve learnt that there are enough experts in the audience who are more than ready to participate and help both the speaker and the rest of the audience with their knowledge.

So, we decided to have great speakers on stage instead of experts. Luckily, almost all of our speakers are also experts on the topics they are dealing with. So it worked out automatically most of the times.

There were other secondary factors that were also considered but the first two took absolute precedence.

3. Open to formats other than lectures/ talks

Some topics can only be dealt with in a lecture or talk while others can be taken in a workshop, QnA or any such interactive format. Speakers who were excited about such changes were given priority over speakers who would rather give a speech!

4. Compulsory demos

We didn’t approve a single speaker who we haven’t seen or heard speaking before. We asked for previous videos from those who we hadn’t heard in a previous conference.

We asked those who didn’t have such videos to record videos for us to consider. Some of them even held demo sessions in their workplace that they recorded and sent across. Some others came down in person in our meetups to deliver their sessions.

In the end, we based our decisions on our own experience and the audience’s reaction.

5. No fame seekers and VIPs

In our communication with speakers, sooner or later it became very clear that some speakers wanted special VIP treatment or wanted to speak to become famous.

A special quality of such applicants is extensive name dropping and excessive communication about who they are and where have they spoken rather than what they are going to speak about. As soon as we realised this, we put them on the dicey list. They were also interested in discussing the publicity options more than the actual content of their talks.

Which is why probably, none of them actually had any well thought of and interesting topics or well structured, well planned content of good quality. It doesn’t mean that you will not find an exception of someone with great content but lousy intentions. If we had met such an applicant, we might have accepted them due to our first criteria. You can make your own choice.

6. Technically sound session structure

We included two questions in our application form. One was about the Magic Number 7 and other was about Chunking. Both the concepts deal with our working memories where information is stored in the run time before turning it over to short term or long term memory for storage.

Magic Number 7

The theory of magic number seven says that our working memories can only hold seven instances or chunks of information at a time. It varies by +/- 2 in individuals. So the maximum information everyone can gather in their working memory is about five chunks! Anything more than that would be useless as it will overflow and be lost.

So, if you provide 9 pieces of information, 2 will be lost for some and 4 for some more. That’s why, a 10 digit phone number can’t be remembered together: 9224198765.

Chunking

However, by bundling multiple pieces of information into chunks, one could place more things in the working memory. For eg, the number above can be presented as 922 419 8765. Now there are just 3 chunks instead of 10 and it is easier to process! That’s why numbers are written in chunks.

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We were looking for speakers who understood this, so as to structure their presentations into 3-5 chunks/ points and at the most 3-5 sub-points. The topic’s introduction and conclusion themselves form 2 chunks!

Transparency Report 4: Structuring the WordCamp

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In a series of posts, we lay bare our processes and list the tools that we use. For the sake of absolute transparency and so that other events may pick up a few, since we’ve already tried and tested them. We’ll be revealing the organiser selection, speaker selection and volunteer selection criteria and processes.

Using our guiding principles, we started structuring the WordCamp. We used observations from other tech and startup conferences since they were the most relevant, apart from WordCamps in other cities in India and elsewhere.

Just one day

One day conferences had better attendance because of the cost of staying and the fatigue.

Parallel tracks

Not all attendees were in interested in all the sessions which led to section of disinterested audience who had nothing else to do. It also led to the speakers working with an unnecessary audience load and less interaction. So, parallel sessions were a great idea.

More than lectures

Not all attendees are interested in lectures/ talks. More people learn by doing or experiencing rather than just seeing and listening. We had to accomodate interactive formats like Workshops, Discussions, Debates, QnA, etc.

Local language

We wanted to be more inclusive and hence decided to get rid of the language barrier by inviting sessions in Hindi and Marathi. We have had such a great response that you can just attend the Hindi, Marathi or multilingual sessions the whole day!

Session Overflow

Sessions almost always end with a discussion. Some discussions are interesting and everyone wants to explore it further. But, we run out of time. So we decided to have some extra time that can be had in a separate room that can be used to continue the discussion that overflows from the session. What else to call it?

Unconference

We are not the best judge of who’s a good speaker. Sometimes we can’t accomodate some speakers. Sometimes people miss the call for speakers for various reasons. Sometimes people feel like taking a session at the last moment, maybe because another session or event inspired them to. So, we decided to have a BarCamp style unconference space of two slots that anyone can take up on the day of the WordCamp to conduct a session!

The WordPress Lounge

Not all attendees are interested in any kind of formal sessions. We had to find something for them to do. People should attend WordCamp Pune for any reason they have, not ones that we enforce. We decided to have a WordPress Lounge which would include the Happiness Bar or Support Desk or a similar concept. Basically you can just walk into the WordPress Lounge and meet some speakers, experts and other WordPress users and discuss anything under the roof. Someone will always moderate the Lounge so that the discussions are always fruitful!

Networking

It is possibly the most important reason that everyone comes to a conference or an event. WordCamps are no exceptions. So, we decided to have longer breaks and some other activities (that we will announce soon) that will make sure everyone interacts with everyone else even if they are extremely shy and won’t talk to strangers! 😉

Fun & Frolick

And while we are at a conference, why not have fun! We decided to include some activities and contests purely for fun! Some of these we haven’t talked about before and some we will spring as a surprise! Some of the activities include the Buddy Program, a Photography contest and a Treasure/ Scavenger hunt!

Swag

Everyone loves wearing T-shirts, especially from events they’ve been to. A WordCamp Pune t-shirt won’t just popularise WordCamp Pune but all WordCamps and WordPress itself. A t-shirt was must!

The best swag we saw wasn’t something that commemorated an event. That can be done with a piece of decorative wood/metal/paper/plastic/ceramic/cloth with text engraved on it or maybe a certificate! The best swag was uitilitarian.

We have often felt extremely thirsty in the middle of a session, especially looking at the little water bottles the speakers have and some other smart people brought with them. How we wish we remembered to carry a small bottle. It’s very inconvenient to keep going to the water dispenser for a sip of water, all the time. Added to the fact that we didn’t want to use plastic or paper cups for serving water, we decided to provide a sipper that attendees can fill with water and carry wherever they need.

There’s some other stuff that some sponsors and well-wishers are itching to give you but we’ll let that be a surprise!

The total cost & Convenience

We didn’t base our calculations on simply the money the organising group spend in the WordCamp. We also considered the additional costs that our attendees had to bear. We have even finalised a deal with autowale.in for a ₹100 discount on all rides that have the venue as source or destination. All you have to do is use their app and book your ride. Autos are as it is cheaper than cabs and Pune in September is great for an auto ride!

We’re even speaking to hotel booking services for a one stop, convenient service for you to book your stay in Pune! Look for an announcement soon.

We also considered the environmental cost of the event and made sure we reduced what we wasted, reused and recycled what we used.

WordCamp Pune 2015 is over. Check out the next edition!