WordCamp Miami Speakers: Round Three

WordCamp Miami is happy to announce the third round confirmed speakers and panelists for WordCamp Miami 2018.

Chris Flannagan

Chris is a full time Back End Developer for Modern Tribe.  Chris has dreamed of working with Tribe for a couple years so he pushed myself to reach the level needed to work there.  Now he can confidently and proudly say he loves his job, and his co-workers and the work he does.  WooCommerce has been his specialty for a three years and he works with it daily at Tribe.

Sandy Edwards

Sandy Edwards has been working in the online marketing space for over 7 years. She started at a niche firm that utilized WordPress to create sites quickly utilizing several options frameworks. Today, she owns Data Driven Labs to bring analytics to all size companies. She loves to give back by teaching kids about coding, WordPress, and other technical skills. Sandy is very active in the Orlando WordPress community and is excited to see what 2018 will bring to the tech space in Florida!

Louise Treadwell

Louise is an eternal web development geek and social media junkie. She’s a native of Metro Detroit and an alumna of the University of Michigan. She learned about the human side of computer science while earning a Master’s Degree in Library and Information Science and has fined tuned her web developer skills over the course of a 20+ year career building, breaking, and fixing sites for a multitude of startups. She’s never had a “real” job or worked in a real office and thus is quite well-versed on the realities of being a successful freelancer, remote contractor, and small business owner. Louise loves coffee, is full of useless facts, and is eagerly waiting for her shot on Jeopardy. She lives in South Florida with her three bouncing boys and her husband.

Carole Olinger

Carole is a former Luxembourgish government agent on a four-year sabbatical to take care of her health and to find new professionally enjoyable challenges. She lives in the German Eifel since 2014 together with her husband and three French bulldogs.

The magic of WordCamp Europe 2016 in Vienna made her become a true WordPress Community-Junkie. Through several WordCamps as a passionate volunteer, she got involved in the organization of WordCamps without even having used WordPress before. Meanwhile, she works as a WordPress Community Manager for Plesk.

Raquel Landefeld

Raquel Landefeld* is a serial volunteer with a young soul. In 2010 she co-founded Mode Effect, a Phoenix-based WordPress agency that specializes in WooCommerce integration. Intentional about community building, she believes that wherever her feet are is where the building happens. Currently she is active in several communities from tech to government to neighborhoods and more. You can usually find her organizing a WordCamp or volunteering pretty much anywhere.

On the personal side of her life she is a wife & mum, an active dancer, a music lover, an amateur photographer, and has a 20-year-curated Wonder Woman collection.

*Loves doing cartwheels

John Maeda

John Maeda is an American executive spearheading a new convergence across the design + technology industries. He joined Automattic in 2016 as Global Head of Computational Design + Inclusion and previously served as Design Partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, a world-leading venture capital firm and was the 16th President of the Rhode Island School of Design.

His books include The Laws of Simplicity, Creative Code and Redesigning Leadership. He holds degrees in Electrical Engineering + Computer Science from MIT, an MBA from Arizona State U, and a PhD from University of Tsukuba in Japan. Maeda was the recipient of the White House’s National Design Award, the Tribeca Film Festival’s Disruptive Innovation Award for STEM to STEAM, the Blouin Foundation’s Creative Leadership Award, the AIGA Medal, the Raymond Loewy Foundation Prize, the Mainichi Design Prize, the Tokyo Type Director’s Club Prize, and induction into the Art Director’s Club Hall of Fame.

Tara Claeys

Based in Arlington, Virginia, Tara Claeys is the owner of Design TLC, and a co-founder of Nice Work, LLC, producing custom websites for small and medium businesses. Tara’s focus is on private school and non profit websites, although she has also worked on business-to-business, restaurant, e-commerce and real estate projects. She works closely with her clients to create effective, clean and personal communication platforms.

Tara is obsessed with digital efficiency and productivity tools and techniques.

In addition to running her own companies, she is a regular attendee at the WordPress DC Meetup and runs the Arlington/NoVa WordPress branch of this Meetup. Tara is also a co-host of the podcast Hallway Chats.

John James Jacoby

WordPress. BuddyPress. bbPress. Sandhills. Co-host WordPress Weekly. East Troy, WI Village Trustee. Conquistador de la Web.

Speaker Selection Update

For the first time, WordCamp Miami is posting an online update regarding our speaker submissions. To be clear at the present time NOT EVERYONE has been confirmed to be a speaker (or not a speaker) but we wanted to get some information out publicly for the sake of some transparency.  A link to this post will be sent to all those that applied to speak via our online form.

All-Time Record Of Submissions

We experienced close to 240 speaker submission this year, which is a new record. That is an honor to have that number of submission for a WordCamp – and we are happy to have that kind of variety of people and topics. As you can imagine, with only about 60-70 slots available that means only 1/4 of the submissions can be accepted.

Emails, Emails, Emails

An improvement over last year is us sending “your submission is under review” emails to those submitting (we did this two times during the selection process). It’s difficult to keep speakers updated more than that, but we definitely good feedback that those kinds of emails were welcome.

In addition, it’s our policy to send an email out to EVERY person who submitted via our official online form. The acceptance emails are pretty much the same (outside of some minor details related to the talk). The emails stating we couldn’t accept the speaker are also short and sweet. We try to mention any particular reason why the sessions submitted weren’t accepted if we can, but many times it just boils down to a few innocent reasons (see below). Sending out these emails takes alot of time and energy.

Reasons Why Applications Weren’t Accepted

A few people ask, so we figure we would share common reasons why applications are not accepted (outside, again, of the sheer fact that we don’t have slots for everyone). The vast majority (>95%) of ones that get a confirmation that they have been selected this time around fall into one of these three categories:

– Simply too many talks submitted with the same subject. This is the most common reason, and you can’t blame this really on anyone. But sadly with an event like ours if you are looking for (let’s say as a random example) an SEO talk… and there are 40 SEO talks submitted by qualified speakers… you can only realistically pick one.

– Some submitted talks interested us greatly, but simply wasn’t relatable to attendees of a WordCamp event. Random example (this was NOT submitted): how to build a toaster (if there’s a toaster conference though, we know who to recommend).

– Format changes for our 10th anniversary event (such as adding a keynote) removed spots in our schedule that would have otherwise gone to other speakers.

It’s the nature of the beast that with large conferences the odds aren’t in your favor, sometimes if you submit multiple talks. Highly suggested reading: Speakers And Organizers: Dealing With Conference Rejections. If you among not sadly not accepted this round, there’s some good pointers there.

Other Recommended Places To Submit

If you are looking to give talks to other WordCamps in sunny Florida and Georgia (general Southeast), we would recommending checking out these:

WordCamp Jacksonville – https://2018.jacksonville.wordcamp.org (at the time of this writing, no call for speakers yet but looks to be soon)

WordCamp Atlanta – https://2018.atlanta.wordcamp.org/speak-at-wordcamp-atlanta/ (looks like they are closing the call soon)

WordCamp Orlando – https://2018.orlando.wordcamp.org/ – happens late in the year, usually around November. 

Meetups

If you are local to the South Florida area, we highly encourage you to give those same submitted talks at your local WordPress meetups. Speaking at a local WordPress meetup is an excellent way to demonstrate that you are interested in supporting the local WordPress community, which is what WordCamps primarily focus on.

No matter where you are, find your local meetups and give your talks there. Some speakers come recommended to us just by the fact they gave a presentation at a local meetup that impressed enough people to made to our ears.

Speaker Announcements

Please help us spread the word about all the speaker announcements coming out. That not only shows support for the conference, but those speakers that got selected. There are going to be quite a number of speakers that are new to speaking at WordCamp Miami, or new to speaking at a WordCamp period.

More Information

We hope to share more information about our submissions – we will likely share some interesting stats Saturday (March 17th) during our opening remarks or during our closing remarks on Sunday March 18th.

Thank You

We sincerely want to thank EVERYONE who submitted a talk. If you were not accepted this year PLEASE SUBMIT AGAIN NEXT YEAR. WordCamp Miami is dedicated to locating new speakers locally and from around the world. Feel free to get in touch with us after April if you want to pick our brains on future submitted talks.

WordCamp Miami Speakers: Round Two

WordCamp Miami is happy to announce the second round confirmed speakers and panelists for WordCamp Miami 2018.

Mary Baum

Just back from four years in the high desert of California, St. Louisan Mary Baum is the founder and principal of RacquetPress, which builds Genesis child themes and more for the tennis industry.

A veteran creative and degreed designer, she speaks on WP design and development and helps organize WordCamp St. Louis.

Birgit Pauli-Haack

Since 1998 Birgit Pauli-Haack has worked with nonprofits as a web developer, a technology strategist, a trainer and community organizer. She founded Pauli Systems, LC in 2002, now a team of six. It is a 100% distributed company. Since 2010, her team has used WordPress to build new nonprofit sites and applications.

In her spare time, Birgit serves as a deputy with the WordPress Global Community team, as a WordPress Meetup organizer and a Tech4Good organizer.

Mauricio Dinarte

Mauricio Dinarte is passionate about Drupal, teaching, and traveling. Over the last few years, he has presented 25+ sessions and full day trainings in 12+ Drupal events across America and Europe, including DrupalCon Vienna.

In Nicaragua, his tropical home, Mauricio serves as a lead organizer of the Drupal community where he had helped to organize meetups, trainings, and a DrupalCamp. He also volunteers with the WordPress community and is part of the program team for WordCamp Managua 2018.

Lindsay Halsey

Based in Basalt, Colorado, Lindsay Halsey is a co-founder of WP SEO Hub, a do-it-yourself WordPress SEO platform, and partner of webShine, a search engine marketing agency. She graduated from Dartmouth College with a degree in Economics and spent several years in the outdoor industry as a mountain guide and ski patroller. In 2008 Lindsay made the leap into search engine marketing. Her primary interest is search engine optimization for WordPress websites. Outside of the office, Lindsay is a mom, wife and enthusiastic skier and biker. She also is the founder of a nonprofit in Tanzania, To Return.

Melanie Adcock

Melanie G Adcock has been designing websites since the late 90’s. In May of 2010 Melanie became a full-time freelance Web Designer / Developer. She has been using WordPress exclusively since 2011. Her current clients include several small businesses, continuing care retirement communities, churches, and other non-profit organizations.

Melanie Adcock is a past presenter at WordCamp Atlanta, WordCamp Birmingham, and WordCamp Miami and various local WordPress MeetUp Groups. She lives in Stuart, Florida.

Michelle Schulp

Michelle is an independent graphic designer and frontend developer in Minneapolis. Prior to beginning her career, she studied Visual Communications, with minors in Psychology and Sociology. As her work progressed, she also branched into front-end development and user experience design to round our her skillset. This combination of disciplines led her to adopt a strategy-based approach to design, focused on solving tangible problems and achieving real goals based on how people think.

She loves the open source community, and when she is not working on projects she speaks/volunteers/organizes at events and workshops around the country. Her passions are communication and empowerment, and she believes in the power of “Why?”

Dwayne McDaniel

Dwayne has been working in tech and open source sales since 2005. He knew as soon as he started working with Java middleware developers he never wanted to work outside of open source ever again. Dwayne first started building in Drupal and WordPress for the San Francisco Improv teams and projects. He fell in the love the community and then found a position at Pantheon at the end of 2013.

As a Community and Agency Success Manager he has had the privilege of presenting at dozens of community events from Paris to Iceland to MIT and Stanford.

Andrew Taylor

Andrew currently works for Pantheon providing consulting for their agency partners and giving back to the WordPress community.

As a former web developer, Andrew spent his time on large scale projects for clients such as AMC Networks, Frito Lay, National Van Lines and more. With over 10 years of web development experience, specializing in WordPress, he is a seasoned veteran.

First Round of Tickets Now On Sale!

The time has finally arrived!

You can now purchase your tickets for WordCamp Miami!

We’re offering several ticket types:

  • A full weekend ticket, which covers sessions for both Saturday and Sunday (March 17/18). This will include lunch each day, glorious swag, an official t-shirt, and some surprises. All for only $40!
  • Beginner’s Workshop (which we will post more information on this week) ticket for March 24th. This ticket includes lunch and gives you full access to the workshop.
  • Developer’s Workshop ticket for March 16th. This workshop is for developers of all types, but especially those that build WordPress themes and plugins. WordPress is changing in a BIG way in 2018, and this workshop will prepare you for it.
  • E-Commerce Workshop ticket for March 16th. Our third workshop is for anyone looking to know how to build an e-commerce solution w/ WordPress. Attendees – bring your laptops… you can literally walk out of the workshop with an e-commerce store and tools to play with. We will release the full schedule for this workshop soon.
  • Kid’s Workshop tickets for March 16th and March 17th are coming soon and we’ll have a separate announcement soon.

If you applied to speak or volunteer and wondering if you need to buy a weekend ticket now – don’t worry. We are holding weekend tickets in reserve for speakers, sponsors, and volunteers. If you want to attend a workshop, you can grab your ticket now if you’re sure you want to attend that workshop and we will refund you if appropriate.

If you are awaiting an email regarding a speaker confirmation, please be patient as these emails are still going out. If you are a confirmed speaker, your discount speaker code is coming!

We’ll be posting information regarding speakers and schedules, so please be sure that you’re subscribed to our mailing list to get ticket updates via email. Or join us in our Slack channel. These are the best ways to be the first to be notified of future announcements.

WordCamp Miami Speakers: Round One

WordCamp Miami is happy to announce the first confirmed speakers and panelists for WordCamp Miami 2018.

Joshua Strebel

Joshua is a husband, father, smart-ass (his words, not ours), rabble-rouser, co-founder of Pagely, inventor of managed WordPress Hosting. A 15 year veteran of the web industry leading teams in design, marketing, and product development. He thinks an old fashioned work ethic is more important than a round of funding.

Tessa Kriesel

Agency and Community Engineer at Pantheon, Tessa has been a web developer for over 10 years. She enjoys front-end development but also loves to build sites from start to finish. She started in Joomla, moved into WordPress shortly after and most recently has been digging into Drupal.

She enjoys teaching others to code, mentoring junior developers and speaking at conferences and youth events. She is an instructor and retired Chapter Leader for Girl Develop It Minneapolis, WordCamp Minneapolis Organizer and founder of Outspoken Women. Tessa is a northern Minnesota native, but now lives in the Twin Cities. She loves dogs and enjoys helping local organizations rescue dogs in her free time.

Francesca Marano

Francesca is the WordPress Community Manager at SiteGround. She is part of the WordPress community team, organising Meetups and WordCamps in Torino and taking part in many other WordPress events worldwide.

She founded C+B, a blog with an editorial staff of more than sixty authors offering daily advice for Italian female creative entrepreneurs.

Jean Regisser

Lead Mobile Engineer at Crossfield, I build awesome mobile products with a special care on crafting slick and engaging user experiences. He pioneered live video streaming back in 2008 on the very first iPhone SDK (that’s what it was called back then) building the now deceased Orb Live app at Orb Networks, Inc (acquired by Qualcomm in 2013).

Miriam Goldman

Miriam leads the development team at Pondstone, a boutique digital marketing agency in Canada’s national capital, Ottawa. She started playing around with WordPress for personal projects in 2009, and for professional projects two years later. Miriam is also one of the co-organizers for WordCamp Ottawa, and helps run the social media for the Ottawa WordPress community.

Brian Richards

Brian Richards is the creator of WPSessions.com and has been using WordPress since 2007 and training and leading development teams since 2011. In addition to investing his time into training, Brian has had the opportunity to work with many amazing WordPress agencies and experts over these last several years. This has allowed Brian to help develop sites for Microsoft, Disney, TIME, YMCA, and numerous others. Brian has an affinity for self-directed learning and helping others to develop skills and workflows to better solve important and complicated problems. He can’t resist helping good people do great things.

Rodrigo Donini

Rodrigo Donini is a nerd, developer, teacher, husband, dad, curious about all the things around him and not necessarily in this order. He is speaker, WordPress evangelist very involved with the community and currently is Toptal Software Engineer living in the south of Brazil.

He works as developer remotely for 8 years exclusively with WordPress, working on different projects from the simplest to the most complex. Also, he is an organizer of WordPress Meetups and WordCamp Porto Alegre, in Brazil.

Syed Balkhi

Syed Balkhi is an award winning young entrepreneur with several 7 figure online businesses. He was recognized as the top 100 entrepreneur under the age of 30 by United Nations. His work has been featured in Forbes, Inc, Washington Post, FoxBusiness, Entrepreneur, Wired, and many top publications.

WordPress Beginner’s Workshop – March 16th

Beginner’s Workshop  has SOLD OUT

There is a waiting list for those who would still like to attend.

If you are new to WordPress, then you want to make sure you attend our beginner’s workshop. And as our beginner workshops are quite popular, we wanted to share with you some information before tickets go on sale.

Our workshop is happening on March 16th at FIU (same as our weekend venue). Our workshops worked out last year very well and sold out rather quickly. We limit our workshops to about 100 attendees, so make sure you grab your ticket (follow us on Slack or on Twitter for ticket announcements).

Registration will start at 8am, and a full day’s schedule is planned (9am to 4:30pm). Lunch will be provided, so just bring yourself (a laptop or tablet is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED, or something to take notes with) and get ready for a full day of getting up to speed with WordPress. After this workshop you’ll be ready for WordCamp Miami weekend (March 17th and March 18th).

Schedule

Here’s what we cover in our beginner workshop (note that this schedule might be adjusted, and if so we’ll alert all ticket holders).

1. Decisions / Education (Selecting a domain, what hosting provider might be the best for you, comparing WordPress.com vs. WordPress.org, etc.)

2. Installation and Setup (Guiding through how to install WordPress and giving a tour of the general WordPress admin)

3. Getting Started with WordPress (Showcasing every day things that you do in WordPress such as creating and editing posts, pages, categories, tags, etc. Also we go into items like comment moderation)

4. WordPress Themes (Discussion about trusted sources of getting WordPress themes, best practices, widgets, menus, header images, background images, and more)

5. Trouble Shooting (Knowledge share on common WordPress problems, troubleshooting, customizing, importing/exporting, and more)

6. Plugins (Best practices for plugins, “must-have” plugins, and how to use WordPress beyond a blogging platform)


Our beginner workshops usually sellout, so if you want to learn more about using WordPress or want to review the basic concepts before the WordCamp Miami weekend, then check back soon to get your ticket.

E-Commerce Workshop Coming To WCMIA!

What: E-Commerce Workshop
When: March 16th 2018
Where: FIU Campus in Miami
For: Those That Want To Learn How To Build A Store With WordPress

E-Commerce Workshop  has SOLD OUT

There is a waiting list for those who would still like to attend.

We are proud to announce another brand new workshop for our 10th anniversary event. In addition to our new developer workshop on Friday March 16th we are opening up our first e-commerce workshop.

Get Your Own E-Commerce WordPress Site!

New Update: Bring your laptop to this workshop! Because when you walk in you will be provided your own WordPress site! Follow along with the instructors… and after the workshop you can apply what you learned to the site for the next month. The WordPress site will have pre-installed plugins and access to various tools mentioned by the workshop speakers .

Schedule

Time E-Commerce Workshop (CBC 155)
8:30 am
Registration
9:00 am
Opening Remarks & Logging In Chris Lema
11:15 am
Workshop Lunch
12:15 pm
1:45 pm
2:15 pm
2:45 pm
3:15 pm
3:45 pm
4:15 pm
4:55 pm
What Talks To Watch During WordPress Weekend / Closing Remarks

What Will I Learn?

The first half of the workshop will be a guided tour of the basics of running an e-commerce store.

In the afternoon, you’ll be presented with additional information such as:

  • Additional Features of WooCommerce
  • How Design Makes A Big Impact On Sales
  • Other Popular E-Commerce Solutions w/ WordPress

This WordCamp Miami workshop not only will have experienced developers and leaders of the WordPress e-commerce community present, but will provide you with curated lists of resources so that you can hit the ground running during and after the conference. You’ll also be able to meet some sponsors and companies at the workshop that specialize in the e-commerce space.

Beyond Friday

The learning of e-commerce will go beyond the Friday workshop. A number of talks on Saturday and Sunday will cover concepts such as how to manage larger e-commerce stores, using the right tools, and more.

Check our schedule in January to see related talks that you will want to attend if you are interested in using WordPress as your e-commerce platform.

Who is Speaking?

Speakers are being finalized and will be announced at the start of 2018. Schedule should be released at approximately the same time. Check back on our website soon.

When Are Tickets On Sale? How Much Will They Be?

The entire single day workshop is $15! The workshop is limited to 100 attendees – so if you’re planning on attending grab your ticket as soon as possible.

Anything Else I Should Know?

This page will be updated soon with a schedule (along with other details).

Developer Workshop Announcement: Future of WordPress

What: Developer Workshop: Future of WordPress
When: March 16th 2018
Where: FIU Campus in Miami
For: Any Level of Developer, Especially Those That Work With WordPress

Developer Workshop  has SOLD OUT

There is a waiting list for those who would still like to attend.

Every year, WordCamp Miami has a Friday workshop focused on developers. In the past, workshops have been focused alot on BuddyPress (and we’ve called these BuddyCamps). But this year we decided to provide a new experience for developers – a workshop that prepares developers for the future of WordPress.

Why Focusing Now On “The Future of WordPress”?

There are many things coming in 2018 that effects the future of WordPress in various ways – including how WordPress works behind the scenes AND a major change to the WordPress editor and how the average user uses WordPress (Gutenberg). It’s important that developers are made aware, and prepare – especially if they have clients that use WordPress or they use WordPress to build their own themes and plugins for clients.

What’s “Gutenberg”?

Although other subjects will be covered in the workshop, Gutenberg is a primary focus.

Gutenberg is a new publishing experience for WordPress that changes alot of how users will interact and add content into WordPress. It is perhaps the largest change to the WordPress experience in WordPress’s history. If you develop with WordPress, it is important that you learn about Gutenberg in 2018, especially if you build themes or plugins for WordPress.

You can initially learn more about Gutenberg here. You can also see a video of a live demo here:

At WordCamp US 2017, Matt Mullenweg announced that in April 2018 Gutenberg is scheduled to be released. So we decided at WordCamp Miami that our event in March is a perfect time to instruct both developers AND users about this upcoming change.

Who is Speaking?

Speakers lined for this “future of WordPress” workshop include Zac Gordon (teacher of The JavaScript for WordPress Master Course), Josh Pollock (of Caldera Forms), and Brian Richards (of WPSessions) with additional speakers to be announced.

What’s The Schedule?

We are planning on releasing the schedule for this workshop in January 2018. Check back on the website soon.

When Are Tickets On Sale?

Tickets for this workshop will be available with our other workshops soon. You can follow us on Twitter or join our Slack channel for the latest updates when our tickets go on sale.

Learn JavaScript Deeply

WordCamp Miami has a dedicated track to learning JavaScript whether you know WordPress or not. Our developer workshop on Friday will tie into the JavaScript track on Sunday, March 18th. To get a full experience, you should plan on attending both days.

MyCamp.Rocks – Share Your WCMIA Story (Text or Video)

Today we are proud to introduce a way to send us your WCMIA stories: mycamp.rocks.

Over the last decade, WordCamp Miami has had the honor of hosting many networking events, talks, and workshops. To celebrate our 10th anniversary event, we are asking you to share how WCMIA has impacted you or someone who now. We would like to use stories, testimonials, and comments as part of our marketing efforts leading up to WordCamp and during our event in March.

So do you have a good story to tell about WCMIA? Let us know! It doesn’t matter how many WordCamps you’ve attended in Miami. Whether it’s one, all of them, or a number in between, share your memories with us as we prepare to celebrate the 10th WordCamp Miami.

  • Did a particular talk spark something within you?
  • Did you meet or network with someone that went on to change your life in some way?
  • Was your personal or professional life changed by attending a session or workshop?

Send Us Text Or Record A Video

Give it some thought and when you’re ready share at mycamp.rocks (the site is brand new so bare with us as we work out knicks). The great thing about this opportunity is that you submit something in writing OR you can share your story in a video (up to 2 minutes in length). And you can do this from a desktop or from your mobile phone!

Why do we want to share these stories?

We want others – locally and around the world – to truly appreciate the positive impact that WordCamps and the WordPress community can have. Help us make this happen!

Speaker Deadline Extended (But Only Two More Days)

Breaking news! We have extended the speaker submission deadline from December 8th to December 10th. It’s an additional two days, but it’s over this weekend. You now have the weekend to submit any final talks for us to consider!

Why did we extend the date? We got some feedback that some were rushing to complete their talk submissions after WordCamp US this past weekend. Since WordCamp Miami values quality submissions from as much of a diverse group as possible, we figured adding the weekend was the least we could do.

So what are YOU doing to do this weekend? 😊

Read our speaker submissions page – the form is at the bottom of that page.

WordCamp Miami 2018 is over. Check out the next edition!