2009 content ideas

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If you're interested in speaking on any of these subjects:

  • Add you name and contact details after the relevant subject below
  • If it's a new subject add it below along with your details

Please follow the same format as last year.

Quickfire show and tell

First session of the first day: a rapid-fire procession of (ideally) all participants - who are you? why are you here? and what do you do with WordPress? A good icebreaker, and an opportunity for participants to single out the people they want to chat to later. I felt it's the one thing we sorely missed last time. - Simon Dickson

Writing for blogs

Content, style, generating article ideas

Building Audience + Community

attracting and connecting with readers

Localisation (into Welsh + other languages)

Maybe not enough interest for all 'delegates', but is relevant locally to Cardiff.

More and more public bodies and civic groups are using WordPress for their blogs or for building websites which they either need or desire to have in both languages (English and Welsh), but the WordPress.org translation is out of date.

A chance to bring developers, volunteer translators and potential users (who might even pay for translations!) together and hopefully spur more up-to-date translations?--Rhys 09:52, 17 February 2009 (UTC)

MegaPress - Integrating WordPress Mu, BuddyPress and bbPress

Getting all the *Press stuff working together, and enabling a single login across it all. - Simon Wheatley

Enterprise and Corporate WordPress

These days some 70% of our work comes from developing WordPress solutions for large organisations. As it's a little niche for some this may be best suited to the smaller room. I can cover the specifics of what large companies tend to look for and need, and discuss some recent cases. David Coveney of Interconnect IT

WordPress for News Organisations

By the time WordCamp comes around, we will have implemented one significant news website which (we believe) is likely to be one of the most sophisticated WordPress installations worldwide. I'd like to cover some of the challenges met, how we solved them, demonstrate the solution, and discuss what we learned - all in a short talk. David Coveney of Interconnect IT

From fag packet to 202 sites in 2 days

The unexpurgated story of the design and development of the Twestival site, built using WordPress MU. Tony Scott

SEO tools, tips and tricks to help your site rank

Wordpress is wonderful for SEO (Its why it's the spammers choice). Advice on how to tune your site up for search engines including:

  • getting the best out of 'all in one SEO' for wordpress
  • dynamic sitemaps
  • automatic redirect on 'www to no www'
  • the value of page and post titles
  • the power of good meta descriptions
  • tricks on how to make your site easy for the engines i.e. css tricks so engines see your content before all your code
  • and loads of reference sites to get you up to speed on attracting the right search traffic to your site
 Nick Garner

WordPress in the Health Sector

Recently I've helped a large NHS organisation develop a WordPress powered website Link. This is the first time that I am aware of where WordPress has been used in a NHS Foundation Trust. I would like to talk about the future of WordPress in the health sector and how I convinced my employer to move into unknown territory.

I would also like to highlight my future ideas for using WordPress in a health environment and how it can be used to develop sites which:

  • Save money
  • Give a fast turnaround
  • Are easy of use
  • Allow for a better dialogue with patients and staff

Michael Kimb Jones base6 Design

Wordpress in Sport

We've been using Wordpress to support the English Table Tennis Association's online properties for a while now, powering everything from their events calendar, as a CMS for their main site and also to power their many blogs. We could give a presentation on how Wordpress makes an effective development platform for large organisations where content is being managed by a large body of people and where numerous developments need to be centralised - not just traditional blogs.