In a sentence:
In another conversation yesterday, I was talking to an LB Lewisham officer about how he could make better use of Wordpress on a site he runs. We got to the point of agreeing in principle to a demo, and hopefully something will come of that, although I'm not counting on it. In a few minutes, I hope to be talking to a Council contractor, who I see is also using Wordpress, but I'm not counting on that either - just chipping away at the basic idea, my one sentence explanation above.Because Wordpress is so much the dominant technology used for creating web sites, those of us who are using it locally should be getting together to exchange ideas about how to use it better.
It's not really a technical problem - there are some technical problems around, but whole point of getting people together is to share expertise, and get such problems solved.
The main problem is human - or you could say political, with a lower case "p". Or maybe that's another way of saying it's a communications problem. How do you get someone who wants a website, but isn't interested in the technology for its own sake, feel comfortable with the advice of someone who is? One solution is to go professional - you find someone who offers to do the work for a fee, and whose other websites look good, and you pay them. The problem with this is that most customers don't know enough about web site development that they are very likely to waste money, or get ripped off. They would be better served if they knew where they could go to pick up advice from local people - so what I'm proposing - where they can talk to other local people who have some experience, and only start paying if they need more done than can reasonably be ask for free.
I don't want to go into too many technicalities here, but I think a couple are worth mentioning.
- There are Wordpress sites and Wordpress.com sites. Wordpress.com sites can be set up for nothing, can look very good when run by someone with good design and comms skills, but they miss out on a lot of the extras which can be done with third party Wordpress plugins. Plugins are much of what I'd expect any exchange of Wordpress ideas to be about.
- We're not just talking about Wordpress - by using plug ins a Wordpress site can be made to link in to other social media, such as Twitter & Facebook. Just now I also googled 'Wordpress plugin Instagram', and there are a whole lot of plugins which look as if they will link in with that - learning more there is what I'd hope to get from exchanging Wordpress ideas.
which was kind of news to me, because all I'd done was post to the Friends of Dacres Wood Wordpress site, which has a plug in which automatically tweets links to any new posts on @dacreswood, and, thanks to my having been made an admin on the Friends of Dacres Wood Facebook, I'd set that up to post automatically whenever there was a tweet from @dacreswood.
I don't expect everyone to be as excited by all this techie stuff, but there are ways the wider community can leverage off such enthusiasm.