WordCamp Toronto 2013

It’s on … and, yes, I am involved with the event as a co-organizer.

WordCamp Toronto 2013 will be held in the fall at a well known and historical Toronto location. The full details of the date and the venue will follow soon …

This year, the current WordCamp Toronto Organizers team members are, in alphabetical order:

Obviously the official announcements will be easily found at the official WordCamp Central site: http://2013.toronto.wordcamp.org/, but we will also be making use of the official unofficial WordCamp Toronto site at: http://wcto.ca where you will be able to see WordCamp Toronto as it is planned … and be able to participate in those discussions.

Some important points to note with this year’s version of WordCamp Toronto:

I am looking forward to an exciting next six months as we plan, organize, and have a great deal of fun presenting WordCamp Toronto 2013 …
… and I am looking forward to seeing everyone there, too!

To see the other organizer related posts click here.To hide the other organizer related posts click here.

You Are The Competition I Want

I would love to read that from my competition … obviously written in a good way.

You might ask why, which is really rather simple to answer.

  1. I have no reason to poach your clients. There are simply too many potential clients in the marketplace and definitely more than enough to share and prosper with.
  2. I recommend end-users seek you out for support of your themes and plugins first … it just makes sense. Addressing an issue with code in one installation does not serve the greater good of fixing the issue at its root and having the entire installation base benefit.
  3. If you need a quick answer with something and I know it, or have a reasonable suggestion, I am more than willing to share. A simple thank you is more than fair compensation for my time.

I help you, you help me; the WordPress community wins … and, you are the competition I want.

To see the Aside click here.Read the thoughts of my competition

Unpaid Expectations

One must always remember … demanding a task be accomplished with little to no compensation by a specific deadline provides no leverage in its negotiation.

No Charge

I write WordPress Themes and Plugins and often contribute them to the WordPress community by submitting them to the relevant WordPress Extend repository. This provides an extensive distribution venue and allows these themes and plugins to be available to millions of users all over the world … all at no charge. Let me repeat that, with emphasis, no charge!

Now, let’s have a look at that idea. I have spent in some cases quite a bit of time developing a theme or plugin; and, I take pride in the work I do. I have spent many hours debugging and improving my themes and plugins with every intent to make sure they are of the best quality every time I release a new version. So, if an end-user points out something I’ve missed then by all means I note the issue and address it at no charge. Let me repeat that, again with emphasis, no charge!

Also, if an end-user of one of my themes or plugins offers an idea I feel would provide “greater good” benefit I make note of it; I review what would be involved to implement the idea; and more often than not I add it to the theme or plugin; and, yes, I do it at no charge. Let’s repeat that one more time, with feeling … no charge!

So, when someone expects me to provide “free support” for one of my contributions to the WordPress community I look at what I already offer and weigh if what the end-user is asking fits into the above ideals, or is more suitable to a chargeable customization … or if it’s just a Five-Minute-Fix:

The five minutes is purely subjective and completely based on my personal opinion. If I believe a project should take five minutes then that is how long the project will take. If it takes five hours, or five days, the cost will still be the same: free!

Be that as it may, I fully understand if an end-user expects “free support” for a “free product” downloaded from a “free source” and in many cases I also agree with their “reasonable” expectations as I still to this day have not been able to assign a value to the free advertising and exposure provided by the WordPress repositories.

Even though I agree with providing free support on items with “reasonable” expectations, I do not agree with nor do I offer support for unreasonable requests or outlandish ideas. If an end-user wants a specific customization, or requests a specific feature, that is not currently scheduled or under consideration to be added the end-user can just as reasonably expect their request to not be no charge.

If the end-user has modified the code in the theme or plugin; finds it no longer works as expected; and, then requests free support … really? seriously?! Why would that be no charge?

What support do you offer at no charge?

Into The Foggy Night

Man and Child on a Foggy Night
Man and Child on a Foggy Night
To see the Footnote click here.To hide the Footnote click here.
This is a JPEG version of the original posting in order to display the EXIF data attached to the image. The original PNG can be found here

Going Forward

A philosophy of enjoying oneself first, and foremost, will provide the greatest encouragement to continue going forward.