Seattle WordPress Meetup is Growing Like Crazy! Next Meetup December 8

For all the latest about our Seattle WordPress Meetup, visit the new site on Meetup.com. Our next meeting will be December 8th at StartPad.

We have had some great presentations already, and we are looking forward to many more. Thanks to sponsors StartPad Software Coworking Offices, IvyCat Web Hosting and WordPress Website Design, and FirstTimeOnline Web Design.

Next Seattle WordPress Meetup October 13

Our second Seattle WordPress Meetup was last night, and it was basically awesome. Sure, we’re biased, but c’mon. We had a fantastic presentation by Nick Ohrn on Custom Post Types. Those of you not familiar with Nick, check out his website: WordPress Plugin Developer. He works for himself and for Giga-Om. That was preceded by a report from Josh Harrison about next year’s WordCamp Seattle. We would love to get lots of participation in organizing and fund raising for that to ensure its success. And for the remainder of the meeting we talked about various topics: best WordPress resources, theme customization, and other good stuff. Scott B. agreed to do a presentation at our next meeting on Plugin Coding 101. Sound good? Join us!

Our next meetup will be on Wednesday, October 13, at StartPad. All the details are now on Meetup.com at Seattle WordPress Meetup. Please signup and you’ll receive notices of all our meetups, and you can RSVP for the next one. Looking forward to seeing you!

Seattle WordPress Meetup – Next WordPress Meetup Sept. 15 at StartPad

We had a good turnout and lots of enthusiastic participation at the August Seattle WordPress meetup, with a good mix of developers and creatives/users.

Thanks again to Mike Koss and StartPad for allowing us to use their space.

The next Seattle WordPress meetup will be on Wednesday, September 15. 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM at StartPad in downtown Seattle http://startpad.org/about-us Hope to see you there! Tell a friend.

WordPress Tips for Business Blogs

WordCamp Seattle Speaker Mark McLaren

WordCamp Seattle Speaker Mark McLaren

Editor’s Note: Mark McLaren (one of our speakers from WordCamp Seattle 2009) originally posted this to a local email list and gave us permission to republish it here.

I have noticed a number of list members using WordPress.com to host their business blog, and I thought I would offer a few suggestions.

You can continue to host your blog on WordPress.com but use an upgrade (about $10 a year) to map your own subdomain to the site. That way your blog URLs will start with http://blog.yourdomain.com/ rather than http://yourusername.wordpress.com/.

There are lots of reasons to do this, including improved search engine optimization, but the most significant is that if you ever decide to switch to a self-hosted blog, you will be able to change hosts without losing any URLs.

Details for subdomain mapping are here:
http://support.wordpress.com/domain-mapping/map-subdomain/

In almost every case, I recommend using a self-hosted installation of WordPress right off the bat. Again, there are many reasons for doing so. One is that, at the very least, it will allow you to place an obvious link to your main website in the navigation of the blog.

Typically, when you host your blog on WordPress.com, there is no easy way to get to the main website from the blog, which is a significant usability and web marketing issue.

First of all, people will be going to the blog from the main site. You want them to be able to get back to the main site without having to think about how to do it.

Second, people will be landing on individual blog posts from many different sources: search engines, links pasted into email messages, other web pages, Twitter, etc. You want them to be able to get to your main website quickly and easily from any page they land on.

Even if your main site runs on .NET, it is still possible to use self-hosted WordPress. Here is an example I built for one of my customers: http://www.photosafaris.com/blog/

(Editor’s note: Thanks for the tips, Mark, and we’d love to hear feedback in the comments!)

DECEMBER 17, 2009 UPDATE:
There are more reasons to choose self-hosted WordPress over WordPress.com.

You can’t install Google Analytics on WordPress.com. If you are going to go to the effort of maintaining a blog, you should track visitors. The analytics that are included in the WordPress.com Dashboard are inadequate.

There are thousands of outstanding plugins and custom themes for WordPress that you cannot use on WordPress.com. The range and depth of plugins and themes is hard to convey in a few sentences. Some plugin examples are the Disqus comments system (shown here on Jeremiah Owyang’s blog) and the Share This plugin. Installing these plugins takes only minutes and significantly increases your blog’s chances of success.