Dec 19
John DonovanCompany News, Reference & Tutorials, Technology
3.3, Wordpress
Based on the reviews I’ve been reading, I’m going to hold-off spending a lot of time with the new WordPress 3.3. Like with most bleeding-edge software updates, there are going to be performance and quality issues with the initial releases that I’d prefer others spend time finding and resolving. My clients’ sites are working fine and the new features implemented in WP 3.3 are largely cosmetic – adding little in the way of functionality. It will take several weeks/months for plugin developers to complete their upgrades for the new system, where needed, and the WordPress team a similar amount of time to get all of the bugs resolved. We’ll revisit WP 3.3 next quarter and evaluate the benefit of jumping on the bandwagon.
In the mean time, enjoy the solid performance of your present system and know that we’re keeping a close eye on the progress of this new version of the WordPress core.
Nov 23
John DonovanClient News, Company News
Customized Theme, SEO, Wordpress
When Mark Chapman at Illumination Systems Inc found that his SEO results were much less than expected – he asked us to look at the design of the site he had just paid to have developed. What we found were poorly designed content structure, missing elements, and static meta tags. Additions or edits to the content required hardcoding HTML … and lots of FTP back-and-forth. Sadly, this happens all too often when using a website-mill developer.
We were able to move his content and site design into a WordPress 3.2 platform and open a whole new world of easy-to-use content management, with powerful SEO tools that provide content-specific titles, descriptions, and keywords … using WordPress and the Genesis framework.
Content is still being defined and the site design will be refined over time – but Illumination Systems is now on a solid foundation for building their internet presence.
Sep 12
John DonovanClient News, Company News
Custom Plugins, Customized Theme, Genesis, Wordpress
Another site we’re proud to announce is the new site for Laverty Chacón Commercial Real Estate in the Sacramento area. This was another collaborative project with Nicole Bratt of Rock+Feather Creative in San Francisco, who was responsible for the fantastic graphical design. Lisa Yaple did the content editing.
The site is built on a WordPress 3.2 platform, using the Genesis Framework as our foundation. There was a fair amount of custom code written (Google Map and custom data element ‘shortcodes’ and plugins, custom taxonomy, conditional menu selection, etc) to provide Laverty Chacón with the look, features, and functionality they wanted. In the end, they were very happy with the result and I think they have a great looking site that is easy to use and maintain … and provides their clients with a site where it is easy to find what they’re looking for.
Laverty Chacón has also chosen DCP Partners to provide their fully-managed hosting and system administration services.
May 22
John DonovanClient News, Company News
Custom Plugins, Customized Theme, Genesis, Wordpress
We’re very happy to announce the release of a new site for Adaptive Business Solutions. The site was done in partnership with Nicole Bratt of Rock+Feather Creative in San Francisco. Nicole is a gifted graphics designer and has created another fantastic site, which is built on WordPress 3.x and the Genesis Framework. The team at Adaptive specialize in helping companies maximize value by teaching them how to leverage Lean and Six Sigma principles.
Please stop by the site and have a look around.
In addition to doing the development and implementation of the site, Adaptive has selected DCP Partners to provide fully-managed hosting services.
Mar 09
John DonovanCompany News, Technology
collaboration, training, WordCamp, Wordpress
I’ve just completed registration for WordCamp O.C. – which will be held at Chapman University in Orange, CA on May 14th. WordCamp is a day-long gathering of WordPress designers, developers, integrators, bloggers, and devotees – where ideas, methods, and all sorts of creative things are discussed. I attended the WordCamp in LA last fall, which proved to be invaluable for me.
If you’re in SoCal and have any interest in developing on the WordPress open-source CMS platform – you should try to attend. Time to get your geek on.
Mar 05
John DonovanClient News, Company News
Donna Evans, migration, SEO, Wordpress
We’ve recently migrated a ‘hard-coded’ website we developed a year ago for DonnaEvansMusic.com to a WordPress CMS site. Donna provides piano and voice lessons in Aliso Viejo, CA and wanted to achieve better ranking on Google, Yahoo, Bing and other search engines. By moving to WordPress, we can keep a sitemap updated automatically, leverage the intrinsic SEO capabilities of the system, add an easy-to-maintain Event Calendar, and provide her with the ability to publish a blog that her students and others can follow.
Feb 25
John DonovanCompany News, Technology
CMS, content management, Drupal, Joomla, Open Source, Pods, Wordpress
It wasn’t all that long ago that I looked at WordPress as a service for those that had lots of spare time on their hands and whiled-away the hours transcribing their every thought into their blogs. I suspect that same opinion was held by ‘serious’ content management system (CMS) users and developers. When I re-launched the DCP news-site about 5 years ago, we used Joomla – which was (and still is) one of the better-supported CMSs around.
While Joomla, Drupal and others are still fine CMSs – which we develop around and support (to varying degrees) … WordPress has become my de-facto standard when developing new CMS sites. This is especially true when my client is more interested in running their business and less interested in managing their CMS. Recent advances in the WordPress foundation have made it easier for developers to extend and ‘hook’ into the core of the system … resulting in an explosion of new plugins that provide enhancements to the WordPress core feature-set. The add-on functionality that the “Pods” plugin provides in the way of customized database applications opens the door to sophisticated WordPress-based applications. (More on the upcoming Pods 2.0 here)
WordPress 3.1 was released this week and, while I’ve been running the release candidates from RC3 forward, I’m excited about the possibilities I see for this system. We’re able to produce high-quality, easy-to-use, easier-to-maintain solutions for our clients in less time – resulting in better productivity and value for everyone.
If you’re interested in upgrading your present static website to a client-driven CMS-based site – let’s talk about your application. We’re finding that there are few things we can’t do with this platform.