POPULARITY
Die Strategieexperten Podcast - Mit Plan und Grips zum Erfolg
Du zögerst, zusätzliche Verkaufsmails zu schreiben, weil Du nicht nerven willst? Sieh es einmal anders herum: So paradox es klingt, diese Verkaufsmails sind auch Kundenservice. Eine wahre Geschichte. Das Beispiel aus dieser Episode - Der Keyword Magic Workshop von Jonas Tietgen, WP Ninjas https://wp-ninjas.de/keyword-recherche-workshop Bekommst Du schon meinen Newsletter? Ich schreibe Dir einen persönlichen Letter mit Erfahrungen, Erkenntnissen und Impulsen rund um Positionierung, Sichtbarkeit und Marketing. Am Ende gibt es die News zu aktuellen Inhalten und Angeboten Meistens Donnerstags https://www.reckliesmp.de/strategieexperten-newsletter/
The Digital Helpdesk - Marketing, Vertrieb, Kundenservice und CRM
Wie begegnet man am Besten den Core-Updates von Google? Wie hilfreich ist AI Content momentan und werden wir unseren Content in Zukunft überhaupt noch selber schreiben? Warum fällt uns Linkbuilding in Deutschland so schwer? Und was hat das alles mit explodierenden Tauben zu tun? Jonas Tietgen, Consultant bei WP-Ninjas, und Jannik Schubert, Owner und SEO Consultant bei stop looking, machen sich gemeinsam mit Jennifer Lapp, HubSpots Leiterin des SEO-Teams, auf die Suche nach Antworten und liefern sich dabei einen informativen, wie unterhaltsamen Schlagabtausch. Themen: [3:37] WP-Ninjas und andere Webprojekte [7:25] Linkbuilding-Strategien im globalen Vergleich [16:06] Core-Updates & Helpful Content Update [20:42] Wie relevant ist das Suchvolumen? [23:57] Core-Updates als Chance für Optimierung [30:00] Verbessern Core-Updates die Suchergebnisse? [43:00] Wie hilfreich ist AI Content? [49:56] Was ist euer Lieblingstool und warum? In der Show erwähnt: Jonas Tietgen – Co-Host – Search Effect SEO Podcast | LinkedIn Jannik Schubert – E-Commerce-Manager | SEO – NOVAFON | LinkedIn Search Effect Podcast How to Write a Content Marketing Mission Statement in 3 Steps (Plus 12 examples) Semantische Suche ausführlich erklärt von Olaf Kopp » Aufgesang https://www.google.com/search?q=why+don%27t+i+see+baby+pigeons SommerSEO: So heiß wird der SEO-Contest 2022 Lieblingstools: Ahrefs, Keyword Insights, Surfer SEO Feedback? Gerne an podcast-dach@hubspot.com Mehr über uns unter: https://www.hubspot.de/podcasts/listen-and-grow
In dieser Folge fachsimple ich zum ersten Mal öffentlich - und zwar mit meinem Tandem-Partner und Freund Jonas Tietgen. Wir gehen der Frage nach, ob sich WordPress ausnahmslos als CMS für Einzelunternehmerinnen und Einzelunternehmer eignet - oder ob es auch andere sinnvolle Alternativen gibt. Die im Podcast versprochenen "Goodies" sind: a) von Jonas Speziell für Dich als Hörerin oder Hörer des Marketing-Zauber-Podcasts kannst Du hier kostenlos und ohne Registrierung das frisch überarbeitete ToolKit von Jonas herunterladen: https://wp-ninjas.de/wptk-mz b) von Birgit Speziell für alle Hörerinnen und Hörer dieser Podcastfolge gibt es einen exklusiven über 50%igen Rabatt auf "Der Wöchentliche Stups" - bleibe ein ganzes Jahr dran an Deinem Online-Marketing und gewinne so mehr Kunden. https://marketing-zauber.de/podcast-goodie (Aktion endet am 31. Dezember 2022 um 23:59 Uhr!) Mehr Informationen zu Jonas' Angebot mit WP-Ninjas findest Du auf dieser Website: https://wp-ninjas.de Wenn Du immer mal wieder Hilfe bei WordPress benötigst, werde doch Mitglied im WP-Ninjas-Dojo hier: https://wp-ninjas.de/wp-ninjas-dojo Wenn WordPress nur manchmal ein Thema für Dich ist, Du aber mit Deinem Online-Marketing und auch der dazugehörenden "Technik" auf Kriegsfuß stehst, werde doch Mitglied im Marketing-Zauber-Zirkel hier: https://marketing-zauber.de/zirkel/
Ninja Forms is used on over 1 million WordPress sites. In this episode, Mark interviews James Laws, the co-founder of WP Ninjas, the developers behind this robust and powerful form builder. James and Mark talk about revenue models that work, how to find new opportunities through market research, experimentation with new products and services as well as learning from your customers. They also discuss how to choose your next project when you have too many ideas, and the new businesses James and WP Ninjas are exploring in eCommerce. It's a fascinating discussion that will help you think about your own businesses and career in new ways. Enjoy!
Adventures in Businessing: Entrepreneurship, Small Business, and a Healthy Dose of Humor
In this week's Part 2 story of WP Ninjas, James and Kevin talk candidly about the stages of their business; successes, failures, and general curiosities await. Celebrating renewals and sales. McDonald’s gets frork'd! Making changes in the digital market versus the physical space. Getting your product known Branding Hiring a design team. Enter FocusLab The investment risk and reward of branding. Kevin’s move back to America, from U.K. The impact of James and Kevin finding out they would both become fathers. How that revelation translated into kicking the business into the next gear. Kevin’s plot to influence James into hiring the first employee. Transitioning to the first office space. The impact of annual renewals. How ignorance garnered experience. How Kevin’s daughter, in part, led to a hiring frenzy. The potential hires that did work out…and the ones that didn't. The 2016 office switch. Going back to FocusLab to revamp the UI The intensity and lead up to launch. Launching the 3.0 redesign, reaping the benefits. Bringing on Jon and KR. All business is a risk, there are always investments in startups, and most things are a gamble. The Keystones of Growth
We talk with James Laws, founder of WP Ninjas, and co-creator of Ninja Forms. In this episode James share his insights on building a WordPress product company, managing internal growth, and advice for podcasters in the WordPress space. WP Ninjas https://wpninjas.com/ Mastermind.FM http://mastermind.fm/ Adventures in Businessing http://aib.fm ================== Our episode this week is sponsored by LiquidWeb. Liquid Web is offering a 33% discount for your first 6 months of managed WordPress hosting. Head over to https://LiquidWeb.com/wordpress and use the code WPTONIC33 at checkout for your discount. ================== Table of Contents for Episode 175 0:00 Podcast intros. 2:53 James' origin story, and getting into web development. 3:59 Where the idea for WP Ninjas originally came from. 6:35 Did the market saturation of contact form plugins dissuade James from creating another plugin? 10:50 Why sharing information helps everyone's business grow. Advice for joining a mastermind, and what James looks for in a mastermind. 13:03 How a business changes as it grows. How choosing a business model can have a significant impact on your business. 19:53 How internal process must change and adapt as your web development company grows. 25:30 How important is service and support to growth for a WordPress product? 30:39 Thoughts on marketing in the WordPress ecosystem in 2017. 39:32 Some tips for people looking to market a plugin to the WordPress ecosystem. 44:26 The importance of UX design in a WordPress plugin. 54:00 Thoughts on e-commerce with Ninja Forms. 59:00 What advice does James have for people looking to start their own podcast? 1:04:21 Podcast outros =================== Links mentioned during the show: WP Candy:NinjaForms plugin chops its way into WordPress Dashboards (2011) http://wpcandy.com/reports/ninjaforms-launches-competes-with-gravityforms/ Andon (manufacturing) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andon_(manufacturing) The Value of Sponsoring a WordCamp from a Business’ Perspective https://wptavern.com/the-value-of-sponsoring-a-wordcamp-from-a-business-perspective Focus Lab http://focuslabllc.com/ =================== Find bonus content for this episode on the WP-Tonic website: https://www.wp-tonic.com/podcast-episodes/ =================== Subscribe to WP-Tonic on iTunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/wp-tonic-wordpress-podcast/id893083124?mt=2 =================== WP-Tonic is both a WordPress maintenance and support service, and the publisher of a twice-weekly WordPress podcast.
Adventures in Businessing: Entrepreneurship, Small Business, and a Healthy Dose of Humor
The AIB crew starts this week's episode by visiting THE 'Ancient Email' that started James and Kevin's business partner. Which leads into the celebration of the WP Ninjas transitioning Jon from part-time, to the newest member of their salaried roster. They then briefly (in proper AIB jokingly-awkward fashion) segway into emotions and being/not being in touch with them. Our Favorite Things: Productivity tips, tools, and hacks. Compartmentalization Separating your concerns. Bear Notes Noteshelf Basecamp Omnifocus TextExpander The value of good ol’pen and paper “Thoughts untangle themselves through the lips and the finger tips.” SnagIt SmarterQueue Analyze when you’re most productive. Be mindful of your time. PhpStorm IDE Codetree The crew topic breaks with Kenny “gratefully” delivering this week's sponsor, Chevrolet, and the Chevy Volt. Business Processes, Systems, and Productivity: Implementing a support ‘Andon’ system. What it is, why it matters, why you need it. Measure the health of process flow. Support will be with you always. 24/7 support is NOT healthy. You team cannot be effective with that philosophy. On implementing process. Preparing for the probable and the unlikely. Never 100% trust forecasts. Treat your data with a grain of salt. Acknowledge trends and react to them. Why James enforces and lives his "no one left behind" mentality. Special thanks to the CrashJonesBand for providing us with our theme music. No One Can Tell You How To Live by CrashJonesBand
Adventures in Businessing: Entrepreneurship, Small Business, and a Healthy Dose of Humor
The crew comes to terms with life without Jon. ...James gets so choked up that he can't pronounce the show title. James, Kevin, and Kenny proceed to suggest many ways to bring Jon back…which includes everything from replacing him with his twin, picking another Jon from the multiverse, to cloning. (Spoiler: Due to the dark turn this show has taken, Jon may very well be undead at this point. Find out in Episode 11!) We also learn that Kenny has baby arms, like that of a newborn T-Rex. Criticism and You: What do you do when other's critique your work? Make sure you're absorbing the feedback, regardless. Harsh words and mean spirits don't negate the truth. Be self aware and humble enough to take criticism. Analyze, are they a troll, or just rude? Be careful how you respond; think before you act. "I'm not concerned with whether your critics can sleep at night, I'm concerned with whether you can sleep at night." - James The guys take a mid-show break with a fantastic product of Taco-Bell's finest food-mancers, the Naked Chicken Chalupa. Now antibiotic free! WordCamp Breakdown: Conference season is here. How can you get the most out of your experience as a business owner, freelancer, etc.? Increasing a conference's value for a business. What IS a hallway track?? Go in with a plan. Be strategic and network with a purpose. If you are sponsoring a WordCamp, take it seriously. Are you trying to raise brand awareness, launch a product, or revitalize interest in your offerings? Don't be a swag robot...unless you are Swagbot 9,000. Leave your options open, there are other ways to raise awareness. Trade time...or in Kenny's case, dignity for money. Grassroots/Guerilla Marketing The superhero origin of the Kenatee. Why the WP Ninjas won't be sponsoring as avidly in 2016. Sunglasses and T-shirts are a wonderful method of marketing. T-shirts are potential expensive, branded sunglasses much less so Make sure your logo is prominently displayed on the back! Don't be afraid to approach new people. Implant yourself in a group. People in the WordPress community are generally super inviting. Look for the relationships that bring synergy to you & the companies you are trying to connect with. AIB then signs off with a 'If Kenny were president, what would be his top five executive orders signed off day one?' Special thanks to the CrashJonesBand for providing us with our theme music. No One Can Tell You How To Live by CrashJonesBand
Adventures in Businessing: Entrepreneurship, Small Business, and a Healthy Dose of Humor
In this episode (after James pours a massive Jack'n'Coke) the guys ease into things by briefly discussing what they've been working on... Kevin slips on the developer management shoes, as the WP Ninjas trial a potential hire. Kenny learns from his coding philosophy mistakes on a big project. (Spoiler: Communication saved the day.) Jon gets support savvy, while beginning to march to the beat of JavaScript. While James has been figure-heading support, piercing issues like spearfishing goblin sharks right in their ugly mugs. Then as a special treat for you, the crew delivers a double-feature, two topic episode! Support Breaking down WP Ninjas renewed focus on support. The immediate (monetary) fruits of that labor. The near instant change in customer tone. "As support goes, so to does sales." Hiring Best practices. Biggest mistakes. How we think about hiring. When do you hire? How do you know it’s the right time. Have you properly budgeted for a new hire? It’s all about “Attitude, then aptitude.” Ask yourself the following about your potential hire... “Do they get it, do they want it, do they have the capacity to do it?” Hire for the person, not the position. How you can apply this to your company. Special thanks to the CrashJonesBand for providing us with our theme music. No One Can Tell You How To Live by CrashJonesBand
Adventures in Businessing: Entrepreneurship, Small Business, and a Healthy Dose of Humor
A great round up episode or our favorite things to listen to currently. It's a great mix of business, development, and entertainment resources that you might want to add to your own playlists. In this episode we also welcome a new member to the show, Kenny Hall. Introduced through a new segment we call Meet a Ninja, Kenny is a Junior Developer with the WP Ninjas. We're so glad he was able to joins and he will be missed. Resources Mentioned: Favorite Things: Podcasts & Other Listens Kevin: http://www.maximumfun.org/shows/my-brother-my-brother-and-me http://applyfilters.fm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just_as_I_Am_(Bill_Withers_album) Kenny: http://www.giantbomb.com/podcasts/ https://teamtreehouse.com https://www.noclip.video Jon: http://www.retronauts.com http://www.dancarlin.com/hardcore-history-series/ http://frogpants.com James: http://www.theminimalists.com/podcast/ https://www.andystanley.com/podcasts/ http://www.mikemichalowicz.com/category/profit-first-podcast/ I said Mike has a book called The Pumpkin Patch, but it is in fact The Pumpkin Plan. :) Special thanks to the CrashJonesBand for providing us with our theme music. No One Can Tell You How To Live by CrashJonesBand
Adventures in Businessing: Entrepreneurship, Small Business, and a Healthy Dose of Humor
In episode 4 you can definitely tell that the crew is getting more comfortable and finding their voice. This was a great episode where we all share some of favorite resources for keeping up to date in our industry as well as dig into why James & Kevin chose to keep the WP Ninjas as an in-office team versus hiring a more distributed team. We share some of the in-office dynamics of our own space along with some of the challenges. Regardless of which option you choose, it should be based on the values and goals of your company. There may be lots of wrong ways to build a team, but there is definitely no right way. Resources Mentioned: yearinwp.com Favorite Things: How we stay up to date Kevin: Blogs (Josh Pollock, Tom McFarlin, Pippin Williamson, Brad Touesnard) WordPress Trac Tickets Kenny: Laracasts Advanced WP Facebook Group Jon: WP Mayor, Quay Morgan (wpninjas.com, ninjaforms.com) Competitors who shall rename nameless James: Twitter... Boooo... WP News Desk Pros of working in-office vs remote Chris Wallace Tweet bonlifecoffee.com Backwoods Alabama Cleveland, TN Sponsor: Wendy's Taco Salad Special thanks to the CrashJonesBand for providing us with our theme music. No One Can Tell You How To Live by CrashJonesBand
With Jean absent this Episode, James has Chris Wallace on to guest host. (Nope, not THAT Chris Wallace.) This is the Chris of Lift UX, Faithmade, ChurchThemes, Remote Jobs, etc...who is just as good, if not better than THAT Chris Wallace. (No offense to the Fox News anchor.) Topics Include: James inquires about Andy Wilkerson's recent acquisition of UpThemes and Chris's branding. Chris talks faith, in correlation to his businesses. Chris talks about working with AMC and developing their second screen experiences. Pioneering a new way to watch and interact with TV. What's next in line for Chris and team. James talks plans for his own team at WP Ninjas come 2017. Working with a small team Team Culture Personal Challenges "I'm not building a business. I'm building a team, and THEY'RE building a business." - James Chris on functioning as a remote team. James on having local office oriented team. What is culture? "What you allow, what you disallow, what you celebrate, what you discipline." "You can't over communicate." - Chris Featured on the Show: UpThemes Lift UX Faithmade Remote Jobs ChurchThemes Pagely You can follow Chris on his Twitter @chriswallace ...or at his personal blog, here!
On this week's show, Jean is willfully "trapped" in Cleveland, Tennessee, after the hurricane evacuation in Florida rendered LoopConf cancelled. Since Jean's conference was cut short, the WP Ninjas crew shows Jean and his wife their Southern hospitality, and their lovably cheesy sense of humor. So be sure and join the whole team in this very special episode, as they "let their hair down", have some fun, and even bare their souls. Topics Include: WP Ninjas team introduction. James has Jean describe his perception of what the WP Ninjas "day-to-day" is like. Table tennis, LOTS of table tennis. Jean wonders how the office layout was determined or assigned. The benefits and challenges of working as a team in one large room. How the team combats distractions and/or interruptions. Plans for their setup as the team continues to grow. On considering a hybrid model of distributed and in-office team members. WordCamps and deciding who attends. Why attending and speaking at WordCamps is important. The origin of the official/unofficial WordCamp Atlanta 2016 mascot: The Kenatee. How the team accomplishes 8 hours of support work in 1 hour every morning. On keeping consistency in writing across documentation written by the whole team. The benefits of having the development team work support and write documentation. How working for WP Ninjas has changed each members' life and perspective. Featured on the Show: WP Ninjas Ninja Forms Ping Pong/Table Tennis! LoopConf WordCamp Atlanta 2016 The Kenatee 30 Rock
Expressly laid out in absolute detail, this Episode is presented in QA format, as Jean inquires how James and his team took their existing product of Ninja Forms and released a complete rewrite successfully. As such, James gets quite candid about launching WP Ninjas' tremendously challenging work on Ninja Forms, with the release of their very own Ninja Forms 3.0. Covered are things like: the successes, stepping stones, marketing, feedback, the competition, and fear itself. Topics include: The epiphany that innovation is key. How rebranding & reimagining form building has led to WP Ninjas' sizeable achievement. Jean has James detail the time and monetary investment that went into 3.0 before release. The hefty and worthwhile expense of hiring a professional UI company. How to get in touch with people who provide such a service. How a mutual love of the classic comedian/actor/singer Danny Kaye sealed the deal on James' chosen UI company. The development & opportunity cost. Keeping existing users happy during 3.0's lengthy development. Predicting optimum sales "seasons" in the plugin community. Preparing for low income months. Fighting to battle toward continued growth in user base. How James made his peace with the anxiety of working toward something so important. James' hindsight clarifies the value of preparing a budget. Contrasting product revamps as an entrepreneur vs. the process of doing so under an investor facing potentially exponential loss. Understanding and quantifying support costs. How transparency can save face. The lengths James and team went to, to include others in the celebration of launching Ninja Forms 3.0. Building and harnessing anticipation. Timing is everything. The results of all the hard work The issue of having 50+ add-ons that had to work on the new schema. The positives of users being able to roll back to a previous build, should problems arise. Managing the inevitable increase in support load & prioritizing paid users. Defining and admitting failures. The fruits of their labor. James' advice for those going through a similar process. Seize an adventurous outlook and take risks. Never be afraid to ask "What if?" Featured on the Show: Ninja Forms WP Ninjas Dribbble Danny Kaye Additionally, the technical side of the Ninja Forms rewrite can found here in Episode 14.
Welcome to Episode 22 of Mastermind.fm! Today our masterminds Jean and James will be talking about starting your plugin business from scratch. In the last 2 episodes we talked about getting your new product off the ground and gaining traction. We’re going to back up a little here and look at the pre-launch phase. What’s involved? What do you need to plan and prepare for? How do you break into the WordPress space and carve out a niche of your own? Listen in! As always, show notes are below but catch it all in the audio! Community Jean and James open up talking about the close-knit, unique nature of the WordPress community. The sense of community is strong in WordPress and coming in with an attitude that projects humility and an open mindedness to learn the terrain means a lot for your success within the community. Engage with members, get involved, and be respectful to be successful. It’s an industry with a value system, which is something fairly unique in larger industry settings. Learn the community and be willing to merge with it, don’t come in swinging or trying to reshape the ecosystem in your own image right off the bat. Starting From Scratch Acquire a Brand If you have the capital up front, finding an established WordPress business that already has an established brand and team behind it is one option for entering the WordPress space. What you’re getting in this scenario: Brand Customers Talent behind the brand Understand that you’re not buying the code. WordPress plugins operate under General Public License (GPL), meaning code is open and available to the public. This is an important point to remember. Don’t look for a product first- look for an established brand with a positive, well established reputation in the community and a stable customer base. If you’re a technical person coming into the space... So you can build something awesome yourself and want to join the community? Great! This is how Jean got his start. How long is it going to take to make this a replacement for your full time job? How much can you make how fast? This is very variable. For James and the WP Ninjas, it took him one year to feel comfortable leaving his previous full time job. He recommends getting started with your business side by side with your full time job first, closely following your monthly growth, and saving all of it until you get a year’s salary saved. If growth is sufficient and stable at that point, you can consider replacing your previous full time income with your WordPress income. Jean recommends planning for a year to two years, but notes that the time and effort you are able to devote to it is going to affect that timeline considerably. Regular checkups are important- don’t just set out a 6 month or 12 month income goal. Look to the customer base, market penetration, and other growth factor metrics outside of just revenue. Partnering with someone with technical skills If you can’t build a product on your own but have good business chops, consider partnering with someone who does. It’s important to choose someone you trust and who will be around to support your product wholeheartedly. It’s not enough to hire someone to build a product and then hire a developer to support it. You need someone with a vested interest who won’t bat an eye at responding to a 2 am crisis if something goes wrong. Even if you’re a technically talented person that can build a product on your own, a vested business partner can be a huge boon. Someone to bounce ideas off of, brainstorm, share the down times with you, etc can be a huge advantage unless you’re someone who is just hardwired to go it solo! Featured On The Show: Ninja Forms WP Mayor WP RSS Aggregator Jigoshop WooCommerce Automattic WordPress.com Flippa Empire Flippers FEInternational WPMods WP Lift Sliced Invoices
Welcome to episode 18 of Mastermind.fm! This week our resident masterminds Jean and James will continue last week’s discussion of office hardware & tech. Last week we talked about standing desks, ergonomic office chairs, and the monitors of choice around the WP Mayor and WP Ninja offices. This week we’ll explore more of what we use around the office. As always, the shownotes are below for your convenience, but tune in so that you don’t miss a thing! Keyboards Jean swears by his wireless Apple keyboard. It’s slim, lightweight, and you don’t have to fool with batteries on the newest model- you just charge it with a USB cable. It’s perfect for traveling and hauling around in general. It’s also rechargeable and holds its charge for a long time. James concurs here: the newest model Apple keyboard is his bread and butter. He does point out that there are a handful of different keyboards around his office, though. The WP Ninjas dev team prefers mechanical keyboards with lots of tactile feedback, for example. Mice Jean is using a Logitech MX Master and feels it’s one of the best on the market currently. It can be connected via USB or Bluetooth, has a number of programmable buttons, and is comfortably ergonomic. He also uses an Apple trackpad for gesture navigation at his left hand. James prefers the Apple Magic Mouse. The native functionality means a lot to him for navigation. While he concedes that it’s not terribly ergonomic, his use case finds his hands on his keyboard much more frequently than on his mouse, so it’s not that big of a deal for him. Headphones James uses three different headphones for the different tasks he takes on from day to day. The basic Apple headphones serve for common tasks, Bluetooth Beats headphones come into play for exercising, and V-Moda Bluetooth headphones for traveling and noise reduction. Jean uses B&O Play and Bose headphones. He uses his B&O Play primarily for watching movies and relaxing to music. The Bose headphones are work headphones that reduce office noise nicely. Several other bluetooth headphones get use when he’s moving around or at the gym. Kindle Jean and James both emphasize the importance of continuing education in business. Both of them appreciate the Kindle for reading and staying up on news and industry movements. Jean swears by the Kindle exclusively for reading, while James oscillates back and forth between that and his iPad. They both agree that nothing really beats the Kindle for reading, though. Backups James primarily backs up to the cloud, which is a practice he’ll tell you quickly that he doesn’t recommend. Physical backups are important. Jean uses BackBlaze and Apple Time Capsule. Photo backups and cross-device photo management is an area that they both find a lack of solutions for. Suggestions are welcome! Featured On The Show: Magic Keyboard Apple Logitech MX Master Wireless Mouse Magic Mouse Apple Magic TrackPad Apple Apple EarPods Beats Headphones V-Moda Crossfade Headphones MyHeadphoneCollection by Chris Lema The Wirecutter BeoPlay H6 Headphones Bose Quiet Comfort 20 Headphones Monster iSport Wireless Headphones Klipsch S4 In-ear Headphones Aftershokz Bluez 2S Wireless Headphones Kindle Voyage BackBlaze AirPort Time Capsule Apple Transcend StoreJet External Drive Sony RX 100 Mark III Camera Go PRO 3 + Joby Gorilla Pod DxO One MomentLens
A big thank you to our sponsors WP Ninjas, who are working on a new version of Ninja Forms 3.0 which looks awesome. Building a form with keyboard shortcuts is amazing. It's a great functionality improvement,... The post Episode 51: What to expect with the pending release of HTTP2 appeared first on Apply Filters.
A big thank you to our sponsors WP Ninjas, who are working on a new version of Ninja Forms 3.0 which looks awesome. Building a form with keyboard shortcuts is amazing. It’s a great functionality improvement,... The post Episode 51: What to expect with the pending release of HTTP2 appeared first on Apply Filters.
Join me with the founders of WP Ninjas, James Laws and Kevin Stover. We discuss how their WordPress plugin business "found them" and the lessons they've learned over the years. If you're build products for WordPress, this is an episode you'll love.
With our sponsor WP Ninjas soon to be releasing Ninja Forms 3.0 we wanted to share this NinjaForms preview video. Check out what you can expect in the upcoming release of Ninja Forms 3.0. Today... The post Apply Filters 49: Drew Jaynes, WordPress 4.2 Release Lead appeared first on Apply Filters.
With our sponsor WP Ninjas soon to be releasing Ninja Forms 3.0 we wanted to share this NinjaForms preview video. Check out what you can expect in the upcoming release of Ninja Forms 3.0. Today... The post Apply Filters 49: Drew Jaynes, WordPress 4.2 Release Lead appeared first on Apply Filters.
Today we welcome co-founder of the WP Ninjas James Laws to the show. James originally appeared in Episode 13 of the podcast and today, almost a year and a half later, a lot has changed at WP Ninjas. We dig into how he and his co-founder Kevin Stover have scaled the business, what they've learned along the way, and what the future holds of the WP Ninjas team. The post Episode 46 – James Laws, co-founder of WP Ninjas appeared first on Apply Filters.
Today we welcome co-founder of the WP Ninjas James Laws to the show. James originally appeared in Episode 13 of the podcast and today, almost a year and a half later, a lot has changed at WP Ninjas. We dig into how he and his co-founder Kevin Stover have scaled the business, what they've learned along the way, and what the future holds of the WP Ninjas team. The post Episode 46 – James Laws, co-founder of WP Ninjas appeared first on Apply Filters.
James Laws and Kevin Stover from WP Ninjas join us to tell about their history as a business and the challenges and experiences they've had building their flagship product, Ninja Forms. The post Episode 13 – The WP Ninjas appeared first on Apply Filters.
James Laws and Kevin Stover from WP Ninjas join us to tell about their history as a business and the challenges and experiences they've had building their flagship product, Ninja Forms. The post Episode 13 – The WP Ninjas appeared first on Apply Filters.