Posted on 18 Comments

Wordcamp 2007 Future State Wishlist for WordPress 2.3

The 2nd annual Wordcamp, a gathering of WordPress users, will take place this weekend in San Francisco! The agenda looks quite interesting and I wish I could be there amongst some of the Internet marketing speakers, not blithering idiot blog readers. It’s awesome that every business keynote speaker is a WordPress user! I hope some folks will come here and post live stream URL’s Saturday morning so folks can tune in.

It’s also interesting to note that Google blog search shows 583 posts on this while Technorati shows 541. You might want to check out my post on “The Death of Blog Search” and politely encourage Mr. Matt Cutts to put the blog search on the home page of Google. 😀

I do think the conference falls short on what is truly needed – a long, heart to heart conversation about he overall health of WordPress platform and it’s future direction and stability, driven more by usability and stability needs than it is at present.

So without further delay I say hello to my fellow WordPress users and present my WordPress wish list for the era between now and the next Wordcamp in 2008 – I strongly encourage blogosphere discussion of the current state of self-hosted WordPress and desired future state of WordPress.org.

Current state of self-hosted WordPress:

– Lack of stability/testing of newly released versions – over the past year, see WordPress (version 2.0.6) and plugins see Podpress (version 7.7) have been released to the user community that broke feedburner feeds.

– Lack of testing of security in new WordPress versions – See WordPress 2.1.1 dangerous, Upgrade to 2.1.2

– Constant changes in WordPress’ core structure are frequently not backward compatible with old plugins. This often causes immediate and time consuming break downs and make upgrading WordPress a major chore instead of the low maintenance joy that it should be. (I’m presently running WordPress 2.1.3 because Podpress apparently has several conflicts with WordPress version 2.2.1 in an effort to prevent this)

Proposed self-hosted WordPress User Bill of Rights:

– As a WordPress self-hosted user we both respect and understand your time is valuable and that you deserve to have a low maintenance experience when installing plugins or upgrading versions and that the WordPress open source community should prioritize changes based on user suggestions based on functionality.

– Users have a right to expect fully tested software before release and appreciate those efforts greatly. We realize and hope for less frequent, more stable releases are strongly preferred as more and more WordPress users utilize WordPress for mission critical functions and do not have time to debug these items.

How do I suggest we get to this desired future state and what’s on my wishlist?

– Make releasing stable versions with coordinated releases of all plugins a priority for each new release. Maybe even develop a robust testing checklist?

– Integrate popular plugins into the core functionality of WordPress to prevent the above problem. Ideally, I’d love to be able to post podcasts, videos (especially Youtube) , pictures and other media without reposts and glitches. Plugins I’d like to see integrated include Viper’s Video Tags, Podpress, Trackback Validator 0.7.1 and Feedburner Feed Replacement 2.2

– Make RSS feed compatibility – images, videos and formating an area of focus. I have one friend whose images do not consistently show up and I had a major formatting problem for a long period of time due to the Podpress 7.7 feed problem of which I was not aware.

– A WordPress dashboard allowing people to check if all plugins currently in use are safe for the latest version based on a centralized database of reports of issues.

– Make it so trackbacks are standard in all WordPress themes.

These are my main areas of concern, I’m sure you can think of others that I may of left out, but I just wanted to post my top few items. Again, I’d like to hear from others on their desires for the future of the customer experience and advancement of WordPress.

Posted on 10 Comments

Thank You For Your Comments on Marketing and Search News

Drew McLellan recently reached a comment milestone and linked out to those participants in a post thanking them for making his blog a success. Comments are the lifeblood of a blog. It’s why I have the recent comments prominently displayed in the top right corner of this blog now. Since I just reached 500 comments and trackbacks (the number of links below is less due to the frequent comment leavers!!!), I’m celebrating your contributions! Thank you to all!!!

Without further delay here are the comments that left URL addresses or made pingbacks – I think I removed the duplicates:
:: jozjozjoz ::
365questions.org
Aaron Brazell
Abe Olandres
Adam Hertz
Adam Lasnik
adrian
Agerhart
Alan Wilensky
Alexandre
An ongoing Press Release
anatol
Andrew
Andy Beal
Angela Vargo
annieo
Atari
Cartoon Barry Blog
Barry Schwartz – Search Engine Roundtable
Bill Hanekamp
Bill Slawski
Blogging Pro
BlogSchmog
Blueheart Blossip
blyberg
Brian
Brian Ray
Brian’s Business Blog
Bryan Eisenberg
BusinessBlogWire
byron
Carl Bromley
Carolyn Shelby
Charlotte Web Design
Chris Garrett
Chris Messina
chris williams
Craig Smith
Dakars
Dan
Dan Schawbel
Dana Todd
Daniel Sitter
Dave Pasternack
Dave Van de Walle
Me in Chicago
David Sifry
China Search Marketing Tour
David Temple
Dawn Douglass
Digged Stories
discreet_chaos
Don MacAskill
dwlt
Easton Ellsworth
Ed French
Ed Kohler
Ed Kohler
El Cable
Elaine Vigneault
Eli Sand
EveryDigg
Famous Quotes – Famous Sayings
Florchakh
For once and for all!
Forever Geek
Frank Gruber
Garrett French
Geeky Housewife
gl hoffman
Glenn Sheiner
Guy
Henri Duong
Hiten Shah
Ian Kennedy
Bill Slawski
Inside the Mind of an Internet Marketer
Internet Marketing Monitor
Internetno
Ivan Minic
Jakob
Jason Alba
Jason Bartholme
Jason Jacobsohn
Jeff Barson
jennifer jones
Jeremiah Owyang
Jeremy Zawodny
Jim Santo
Joe C
Joel Lemieux
John
John
John Carcutt
johno
Jonathan-C. Phillips
Joost
JR
K T Cat
Karl Long
Kathie Thomas
Kathy Sierra
Kevin Dugan
Kevin Lee
Kevin Makice
Kris Kolodziej
Kyle Korleski
Kyle Libra
Lake Neuron
Lawrence Lugar
Lee Odden
Life Rocks ! 2.0
Liz Strauss
Lorelle
Loren Baker
lucas josh
Manataseosolutions
Marketing Strategy Innovation Blog
Mathpoints
Matt Keegan
Mexico501
Michael Arrington
Michael’s Views
michaelzimmer.org
Mike Maddaloni
Mikerochip
ModernMagellans
Nancy
Nashville SEO
Nate Koechley
Neil Patel
Netpaths
News Doggy
Next Google CEO
Nice
Nick Chandler
Nicki Dugan
Not So Relevant
Nunsuni
Office-Ninja.net
OFlaherty
Ordinary Folk
paisley
Pamela
Pascal Van Hecke
Pat Phelan
Patrick Schaber
Perfect Blogger
Pete Cashmore
Pete Prestipino
Peter Harkins
pigduck.com
PR meets the WWW
Problogger
ProfitPapers
Project Syndicate
Ranking Konzept
Reality Me » Today’s Political Video
RichardatDELL
Robyn Tippins
rod/techfold.com
Ryan M
Robert Scoble
SEA Expert NL
Sean
Search Engine Land
Search Engine People
SELaplana
SensibleWords
shel israel
Shoemoney
Showeb2.0
SirNuke
SMSWorld.
spacecowboy ian
Steven
Sumit Chachra
Takuya
TechCrunch en francais
TechFold
Technology Evangelist
TechTxt.Org
The Article Writer
Chris Dinges
The Wannabe Venture Capitalist
TheBizofKnowledge
TheVanBlog
Tilak
Tom Shelley
tom sherman
Toma e Embrulha
University Update
Vidize.com
Weblog Tools Collection
WebProNews
Website Magazine
Wendy Piersall
Whoisandrewwee
Wiglaf
WildBlueSkies
William C. Spaulding
WindyBits
techtagg.com
Xbil
Year Zero at (((withoutsound)))
ymarketing
Zeppelin Media Blog

Posted on 11 Comments

The Death of Blog Search

Death of the A-list blogger? Not exactly. Is blog search currently on life support? Yes. Does this affect blog traffic? Yes. Is anyone analyzing this situation holistically? Uncertain.

Over the past several months:

1) Technorati has “redesigned” in such a way that other content, especially mainstream media content has become more prominent.

2) Sphere has done much the same thing and it’s widgets seem to favor mainstream media content.

3) Live.com and Yahoo! don’t currently have blog search at all.

4) Ask.com blog search is on the homepage but few know about it.

5) As written previously, Google has a decent blog search but has not yet put blog search on the home page.

Based on the increase in traffic when Google moved Video to the front page, I firmly believe that a change to Google’s home page to include blog search would yield an immediate increase in blog traffic – regardless of social network sites.

Is Google on the side of the mainstream media or the average blogger? Time will tell by their action or lack thereof. Can we revive blog search?

Posted on 2 Comments

Jason Alba Shares Blogging Secrets as Gifts

Jason Alba is a unique blogger and friend who just had his one year blog birthday. I had previously met him on Linkedin. Jason has many other things in common with me. Amazingly, I only met him in person for the first time recently at SOBCon 07 in Chicago. What I’ll remember about that is he actually seemed more excited to meet me than I was to meet him! And trust me it’s awesome to meet a web friend you’ve known for a long time.

Here are Jason Alba’s 5 blogging secrets post series:

Day 1 – Relationships

Day 2 – Branding

Day 3 – Abundance Mentality This is one of the best posts I’ve seen on the subject though it applies to much, much more than blogging

Day 4 – Build Community

Day 5 – Be Wary of Technology

Congrats Jason! Thanks for the gifts. 🙂

Posted on 3 Comments

Julie Roehm Chief Marketing Officer Article

Julie Roehm wrote this interesting Imedia Connection article about when it’s time for you to fire your CMO.

I’d like to add a few items to Julie Roehm’s list:

1) If they don’t understand the basics of search engine optimization (SEO) and marketing. More importantly, they need to understand how this gets incorporated in other traditional forms of marketing which are still relevant in our society.

2) They need to understand blogs and customer listening. In other words how to innovate in real time from customer feedback. They need to have a CEO and a board which fully understand and support these efforts. A good way to determine if one is qualified in this regard is to be a blogger themselves who “gets it”. Not in terms of frequency, but in terms of quality and conversation.

What others can you think of to add to Julie Roehm‘s list? I’d like your thoughts.

UPDATE 7/2009:  New Personal Life Media Interview