{"id":2775,"date":"2014-10-23T18:19:51","date_gmt":"2014-10-23T22:19:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/mighty-little-websites.com\/?p=2775"},"modified":"2014-10-23T18:23:04","modified_gmt":"2014-10-23T22:23:04","slug":"content-management-best-practices-presentation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mighty-little-websites.com\/content-management-best-practices-presentation\/","title":{"rendered":"Content Management Best Practices Presentation"},"content":{"rendered":"

Big thanks to COSE, the 2014 Small Business Convention, and all the awesome small business owners who attended our presentation on ‘Managing Your WordPress Website Content’. We got the opportunity to share some fundamentals and best practices around some of the specifics of how\u00a0WordPress handles content management.<\/p>\n

I experimented with a more work-along style of presentation this time out — some PowerPoint content spliced with some time in the back end of a simple dummy WP site I built as a functional demo of some of the concepts and tools I shared. One of the things I liked best was the opportunity to share some of the best-of-breed plugins we rely on in our own site builds for key capabilities.<\/p>\n

Lots of participants asked afterward for more detail on our “house blend” site ingredients, so here’s our list of plugin and theme recommendations from today’s presentation:<\/p>\n


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Structural<\/h2>\n

Good sites are built on a solid foundation — a responsive, well-coded, extensible theme and solid security improvements.<\/p>\n