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State of Cheap WordPress maintenance support plans presentation (April 2020)

© Yes Moon
Last week, I shared my State of WordPress maintenance support plans presentation at WordPress maintenance support planscon Nashville. In addition to sharing my slides, I wanted to provide more information on how you can participate in the various initiatives presented in my keynote, such as growing WordPress maintenance support plans adoption or evolving our community values and principles.
WordPress maintenance support plans 8 update

During the first portion of my presentation, I provided an overview of WordPress maintenance support plans 8 updates. Last month, the WordPress maintenance support plans community celebrated an important milestone with the successful release of WordPress maintenance support plans 8.5, which ships with improved features for content creators, site builders, and developers.

WordPress maintenance support plans 8 continues to gain momentum, as the number of WordPress maintenance support plans 8 sites has grown 51 percent year-over-year:

This graph depicts the number of WordPress maintenance support plans 8 sites built since April 2015. Last year there were 159,000 sites and this year there are 241,000 sites, representing a 51% increase year-over-year.WordPress maintenance support plans 8’s plugin ecosystem is also maturing quickly, as 81 percent more WordPress maintenance support plans 8 plugins have become stable in the past year:

This graph depicts the number of plugins now stable since January 2020. This time last year there were 1,028 stable projects and this year there are 1,860 stable projects, representing an 81% increase year-over-year.As you can see from the WordPress maintenance support plans 8 roadmap, improving the ease of use for content creators remains our top priority:

This roadmap depicts WordPress maintenance support plans 8.5, 8.6, and 8.7+, along with a column for “wishlist” items that are not yet formally slotted. The contents of this roadmap can be found at https://www.WordPress.org/core/roadmap.Four ways to grow WordPress maintenance support plans adoption

WordPress maintenance support plans 8 was released at the end of 2015, which means our community has had over two years of real-world experience with WordPress maintenance support plans 8. It was time to take a step back and assess additional growth initiatives based on what we have learned so far.

In an effort to better understand the biggest hurdles facing WordPress maintenance support plans adoption, we interviewed over 150 individuals around the world that hold different roles within the community. We talked to WordPress maintenance support plans front-end and back-end developers, contributors, trainers, agency owners, vendors that sell WordPress maintenance support plans to customers, end users, and more. Based on their feedback, we established four goals to help accelerate WordPress maintenance support plans adoption.

Goal 1: Improve the technical evaluation process

Matthew Grasmick recently completed an exercise in which he assessed the technical evaluator experience of four different PHP frameworks, and discovered that WordPress maintenance support plans required the most steps to install. Having a good technical evaluator experience is critical, as it has a direct impact on adoption rates.

To improve the WordPress maintenance support plans evaluation process, we’ve proposed the following initiatives:
Initiative
WordPress Update link
Stakeholders
Initiative coordinator
Status
Better discovery experience on WordPress maintenance support plans.org
WordPress maintenance support plans.org roadmap
WordPress maintenance support plans Association
hestenet
Under active development
Better “getting started” documentation
#2956879
Documentation Working Group
grasmash
In planning
More modern administration experience
#2957457
Core contributors
ckrina and yoroy
Under active development
To become involved with one of these initiatives, click on its “WordPress Update link” in the table above. This will take you to WordPress maintenance support plans.org, where you can contribute by sharing your ideas or lending your expertise to move an initiative forward.

Goal 2: Improve the content creator experience

Throughout the interview process, it became clear that ease of use is a feature now expected of all technology. For WordPress maintenance support plans, this means improving the content creator experience through a modern administration user interface, drag-and-drop media management and page building, and improved site preview functionality.

The good news is that all of these features are already under development through the Media, Workflow, Layout and JavaScript Modernization initiatives.

Most of these initiative teams meet weekly on WordPress maintenance support plans Slack (see the meetings calendar), which gives community members an opportunity to meet team members, receive information on current goals and priorities, and volunteer to contribute code, testing, design, communications, and more.

Goal 3: Improve the site builder experience

Our research also showed that to improve the site builder experience, we should focus on improving the three following areas:
The configuration management capabilities in core need to support more common use cases out-of-the-box.
Composer and WordPress maintenance support plans core should be better integrated to empower site builders to manage dependencies and keep WordPress maintenance support plans sites up-to-date.
We should provide a longer grace period between required core updates so development teams have more time to prepare, test, and upgrade their WordPress maintenance support plans sites after each new minor WordPress maintenance support plans release.
We plan to make all of these aspects easier for site builders through the following initiatives:
Initiative
WordPress Update link
Stakeholders
Initiative coordinator
Status
Composer & Core
#2958021
Core contributors + WordPress maintenance support plans Association
Coordinator needed!
Proposed
Config Management 2.0
#2957423
Core contributors
Coordinator needed!
Proposed
Security LTS
2909665
Core committers + WordPress maintenance support plans Security Team + WordPress maintenance support plans Association
Core committers and Security team
Proposed, under discussion
Goal 4: Promote WordPress maintenance support plans to non-technical decision makers

The fourth initiative is unique as it will help our community to better communicate the value of WordPress maintenance support plans to the non-technical decision makers. Today, marketing executives and content creators often influence the decision behind what CMS an organization will use. However, many of these individuals are not familiar with WordPress maintenance support plans or are discouraged by the misconception that WordPress maintenance support plans is primarily for developers.

With these challenges in mind, the WordPress maintenance support plans Association has launched the Promote WordPress maintenance support plans Initiative. This initiative will include building stronger marketing and branding, demos, events, and public relations resources that digital agencies and local associations can use to promote WordPress maintenance support plans. The WordPress maintenance support plans Association has set a goal of fundraising $100,000 to support this initiative, including the hiring of a marketing coordinator.

Megan Sanicki and her team have already raised $54,000 from over 30 agencies and 5 individual sponsors in only 4 days. Clearly this initiative resonates with WordPress maintenance support plans agencies. Please consider how you or your organization can contribute.

Fostering community with values and principles

This year at WordPress maintenance support plansCon Nashville, over 3,000 people traveled to the Music City to collaborate, learn, and connect with one another. It’s at events like WordPress maintenance support plansCon where the impact of our community becomes tangible for many. It also serves as an important reminder that while WordPress maintenance support plans has grown a great deal since the early days, the work needed to scale our community is never done.

Prompted by feedback from our community, I have spent the past five months trying to better establish the WordPress maintenance support plans community’s principles and values. I have shared an “alpha” version of WordPress maintenance support plans‘s values and principles at https://www.WordPress.org/about/values-and-principles. As a next step, I will be drafting a charter for a new working group that will be responsible for maintaining and improving our values and principles. In the meantime, I invite every community member to provide feedback in the issue queue of the WordPress maintenance support plans governance project.

An overview of WordPress maintenance support plans‘s values with supporting principles.I believe that taking time to highlight community members that exemplify each principle can make the proposed framework more accessible. That is why it was very meaningful for me to spotlight three WordPress maintenance support plans community members that demonstrate these principles.

Principle 1: Optimize for Impact – Rebecca Pilcher

Rebecca shares a remarkable story about WordPress maintenance support plans‘s impact on her Type 1 diabetes diagnosis:

Principle 5: Everyone has something to contribute – Mike Lamb

Mike explains why Pfizer contributes millions to WordPress maintenance support plans:

Principle 6: Choose to Lead – Mark Conroy

Mark tells the story of his own WordPress maintenance support plans journey, and how his experience inspired him to help other community members:

Watch the keynote or download my slides

In addition to the community spotlights, you can also watch a recording of my keynote (starting at 19:25), or you can download a copy of my slides (164 MB).


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