There’s no doubt categories are a useful feature of WordPress. By using the category taxonomy you can organize your content more efficiently on the backend of your site, while also making your posts easier to navigate on the front-end. However, if you want to extend the WordPress category functionality and upgrade how they can be...
Non-profits help to serve the common good. And though their emphasis is on public service, they still must be run like businesses in a lot of ways. So yes, that means a good website is a necessity. Whether you need to raise donations, spread awareness, or perform some other vital community outreach, a good website...
Nearly everyone with a website wants their visitors to “read more.” There are some plugins that can help. And by that I mean they want their readers to click on the little link at the bottom of an excerpt that by default these days says, “Continue Reading.” Below we’ve collected a couple of “read more”...
If you have a WordPress site that offers premium content, one of the best ways to monetize it is by adding a paywall or offering membership. Fortunately, there are plenty of solutions available for either option. In this article, we’ll explain what a paywall actually is, and cover the different paywall models that you could implement on...
Some of us are more organized than others. Some have our future posts already written and scheduled a month in advance. We may have even planned on cross promoting them to our social media platforms. This provides numerous advantages, such as boosting traffic, and can be beneficial for many use cases, from casual content marketing...
HTML tables, once commonly used for webpage layouts, are now a layout headache for many web designers. Tables often work best with fixed widths, which means they can wreak havoc on otherwise pixel-perfect responsive website designs. So what’s a WordPresser to do? The first thing to do with tables is to use them sparingly. Tables...
By default, your WordPress installation sends user registration emails from “wordpress@top-level-domain.com” For example, if your blog is at site.example.com, emails will come from wordpress@example.com. Continue reading, or jump ahead using these links: I Don’t Want to Use the Default WordPress Email Change WP eMail From Details Screenshots WordPress Email Settings The functions.php code Customizing the...