Bob Dunn - Episode 1 - English

Episode 1 – Bob Dunn

We are honoured to have Bob Dunn as our first guest!

In our “Host the Host” series, we shine the spotlight on those who usually highlight others.

Welcome to Episode 1

Watch on YouTube, click the like button 👍, subscribe to the channel, activate the bell 🔔 and share the link 🔗 to your social media! Thank you!

Description

Welcome to the inaugural episode of WPMondo!

In this episode, we sit down with Bob Dunn, also known as BobWP, a prominent figure in the WordPress community. Bob is the founder of the DotheWoo podcast network, where he shares his passion for WooCommerce and WordPress.

Join us for this insightful conversation as we explore BobWP’s vast experiences and his dedication to the WordPress community. Whether you’re a WordPress enthusiast, a podcast lover, or just curious about the WordPress world, this episode is packed with inspiration and practical advice. Tune in and get inspired by the stories and insights from one of the most influential voices in the WordPress community! 🎧

🔗 Follow BobWP:

DotheWoo Website
X/Twitter: Bob and DotheWoo
LinkedIn

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Episode Highlights

  • Introduction to BobWP: Learn about Bob’s journey with WordPress since 2006 and his various roles in the community, from consulting and coaching to running workshops and podcasts.
  • Early Days of WordPress: Bob shares his initial experiences with WordPress, his transition from print design to web design, and his early struggles and triumphs.
  • Community Involvement: Dive into Bob’s first WordCamp experiences and how they shaped his approach to community building and networking.
  • Starting a Podcast: Bob talks about his journey into podcasting, the evolution of his shows, and the importance of finding your unique voice in the podcasting world.
  • Podcast Production Insights: Get valuable tips from Bob on podcast production, including the benefits of audio-only formats and the importance of making guests comfortable.
  • Language and Accessibility: We discuss the challenges and beauty of hosting multilingual podcasts and making content accessible to a global audience.
  • Future of WordPress: Bob shares his thoughts on the future of WordPress and the community, emphasizing the importance of continuous innovation and inclusivity.

Recorded on: 15 July 2024
Published on: 24 July 2024
Video tool: Wave.video
© WPMondo
Music: Valdi Sabev – Endless Sky
Keyframe Audio license and clearance: Endless Sea

Transcript

WEBVTT
Kind: captions
Language: en-US


00:00:33.238 –> 00:00:37.878
Yes. Recording now.
So hello Bob

00:00:37.878 –> 00:00:41.338
and thank you so much for
being here on WPMondo.

00:00:41.823 –> 00:00:47.363
I’m so happy that you will be
the first ever person published

00:00:47.503 –> 00:00:53.358
on our new WPMondo web show.
So, very welcome to you.

00:00:53.818 –> 00:00:58.298
I’m so happy to have you because we
have known each other for a few years

00:00:58.538 –> 00:01:02.243
in WordCamp and stuff, but there
are still a lot of things that

00:01:02.243 –> 00:01:06.343
I’m happy to discover, and I will
let you introduce yourself.

00:01:06.803 –> 00:01:11.268
Well, first, thank you. And, yeah, how
honored to be the very first guest.

00:01:11.268 –> 00:01:14.948
I don’t I don’t know if I’ve ever been
a first guest on an actual podcast,

00:01:14.948 –> 00:01:17.508
so this is a first
for being a first.

00:01:17.508 –> 00:01:22.553
So, anyway, yeah, most
people know me as BobWP.

00:01:22.933 –> 00:01:28.088
I’ve been around a long time since
about 2006 doing WordPress,

00:01:28.088 –> 00:01:30.588
and I’ve done a lot of
different things in WordPress.

00:01:31.048 –> 00:01:35.493
And probably more things I
failed at than I succeeded at,

00:01:35.653 –> 00:01:37.653
but that’s kind of
how we do things.

00:01:37.653 –> 00:01:43.573
And, yeah, I currently, I run a channel
of podcasts called DotheWoo,

00:01:43.573 –> 00:01:48.408
and it’s a mix of, WooCommerce and
WordPress podcasts, quite a variety.

00:01:49.108 –> 00:01:52.388
And, yeah, that keeps me
pretty busy. So I’ve yeah.

00:01:52.388 –> 00:01:55.923
I’ve just I have a a love for
the community and love for education.

00:01:57.023 –> 00:02:05.088
Yeah. Same. Okay. Actually, the focus
of this interview is, host the host.

00:02:05.548 –> 00:02:09.308
It means that people who usually
put the others in the light

00:02:09.308 –> 00:02:10.753
on their shows that,

00:02:11.153 –> 00:02:16.113
that I think you all deserve to be
the one that is in the light today.

00:02:16.113 –> 00:02:17.953
So that will be you,

00:02:17.953 –> 00:02:23.958
and we’ll have other famous persons
as podcasters or running web shows,

00:02:24.578 –> 00:02:29.063
and also in different languages. So this
one is in English. So that’s perfect.

00:02:30.163 –> 00:02:33.283
So maybe we’ll talk about your
podcast a little bit later and

00:02:33.283 –> 00:02:38.528
first focus on you as a person
and whatever you have done in

00:02:38.528 –> 00:02:42.708
the WordPress community and
in your life before that.

00:02:43.008 –> 00:02:48.003
So maybe, you started helping
people, on WordPress,

00:02:48.003 –> 00:02:50.583
on working with
WordPress quite early.

00:02:51.738 –> 00:02:57.258
So tell me about the early
days, your beginning. Yeah.

00:02:57.258 –> 00:03:01.563
So prior to WordPress, just
a kind of a short little history

00:03:01.563 –> 00:03:05.563
is my wife and I, Judy, ran
a marketing company marketing

00:03:05.563 –> 00:03:07.503
design company for
seventeen years.

00:03:07.788 –> 00:03:12.748
So we did print design for a long,
long time, moved into word oh,

00:03:12.748 –> 00:03:17.133
not WordPress, into the web because
I knew I had to know that,

00:03:17.133 –> 00:03:21.873
and I was I was more of a designer at
heart. So I went in very begrudgingly.

00:03:22.253 –> 00:03:25.613
I wasn’t thrilled
about code and stuff.

00:03:25.613 –> 00:03:28.548
So I was looking for
a way to get into it.

00:03:28.768 –> 00:03:31.648
Came across WordPress in
2006 and started playing

00:03:31.648 –> 00:03:38.143
around with it and incorporated it
into my workflow and that business.

00:03:38.443 –> 00:03:41.263
But as I started doing that,
I got the itch for education.

00:03:41.323 –> 00:03:45.858
So that’s when I started doing
workshops and doing stuff around

00:03:45.858 –> 00:03:50.598
WordPress because I found this new
product, this open source project,

00:03:50.658 –> 00:03:53.673
and thought, wow. People,
you know, this is great.

00:03:53.673 –> 00:03:57.433
You can actually do a nice
professional looking website,

00:03:57.433 –> 00:04:01.938
and you don’t really need to know how
to use code. So I dove into that.

00:04:01.938 –> 00:04:06.178
And by 2010, I decided
to close the other business

00:04:06.178 –> 00:04:09.263
and brand myself as BobWP
because I thought I’m just gonna

00:04:09.263 –> 00:04:13.823
immerse myself in WordPress.
And for several years then,

00:04:13.823 –> 00:04:17.308
it was more around consulting,
coaching, and training.

00:04:17.308 –> 00:04:21.408
So I worked with a lot of beginners,
ran a lot of in person workshops.

00:04:23.153 –> 00:04:27.793
And, yeah, over the years, just I
got out of design at one point.

00:04:27.793 –> 00:04:31.253
I think that might have been
around 2014 or so.

00:04:31.338 –> 00:04:35.738
I just didn’t wanna do client work
anymore. I was enjoying my workshops.

00:04:35.738 –> 00:04:39.898
I was enjoying, well, client work in
the sense of one on one peep you know,

00:04:39.898 –> 00:04:44.343
not doing website builds. And,
yeah, that just blossomed.

00:04:44.563 –> 00:04:48.073
And the more I got into it,
early on, I got into the community

00:04:48.313 –> 00:04:50.738
because I was involved with
some local communities.

00:04:51.358 –> 00:04:56.638
And once I think my very first
WordCamp was in, I’m gonna say,

00:04:56.638 –> 00:04:59.058
2010, I think,
in San Francisco.

00:04:59.703 –> 00:05:04.343
So I dove right into it right away,
and I wanted to start meeting people.

00:05:04.343 –> 00:05:07.863
And it was a very different
feel from what I was used to in

00:05:07.863 –> 00:05:10.968
conferences that I’ve gone to before,
and I thought, well, this is,

00:05:10.968 –> 00:05:14.648
you know, this is I like this.
I think I could get into this.

00:05:14.648 –> 00:05:16.588
So I started going
to more WordCamps.

00:05:17.183 –> 00:05:21.023
And, yeah, it just over time, I
did several different things.

00:05:21.023 –> 00:05:22.783
Like I said, I failed
at many things.

00:05:22.783 –> 00:05:26.938
I tried membership sites and video
sites and all sorts of stuff,

00:05:26.938 –> 00:05:31.358
and my motto is kind of, you know,
move on if something doesn’t work.

00:05:31.978 –> 00:05:34.733
Don’t sit there and beat
it to death instead.

00:05:34.793 –> 00:05:38.153
You know, try something
different, find what works.

00:05:38.153 –> 00:05:43.908
And, yeah, that’s kind of the short of
a long history of how I got into it.

00:05:44.448 –> 00:05:48.423
Yeah. And you are right. Every
non success is not a failure,

00:05:48.423 –> 00:05:52.983
is a lesson and to move
forward from yes. Thank you.

00:05:52.983 –> 00:05:57.803
So you you moved to WordPress quite early. You said 2006.

00:05:59.098 –> 00:06:03.198
Before that, what were
you using or doing?

00:06:03.498 –> 00:06:09.983
Man, I was using I believe it
was was a mix between Dreamweaver

00:06:10.523 –> 00:06:15.218
and what was the other one?
I’m drawing a blank.

00:06:15.218 –> 00:06:19.698
It was go go something. Go.
It they were programs that you

00:06:19.698 –> 00:06:21.558
would basically
build in HTML,

00:06:21.618 –> 00:06:26.493
and I was doing these horrible
sites with Flash for my own site.

00:06:26.493 –> 00:06:29.613
I I’ve had little letters
dropping in on the homepage,

00:06:29.613 –> 00:06:33.478
and then they’d scurry off, you know,
the oh, it was terrible thing.

00:06:33.478 –> 00:06:36.178
Yeah. I remember the.
Got a Yeah. Flash days.

00:06:36.638 –> 00:06:41.253
And it was but it seems so cool, but
nothing ever really looked great.

00:06:41.253 –> 00:06:45.353
I could just never you know, it was
like and I think the you know?

00:06:45.653 –> 00:06:50.398
Yeah. It was, GoLive. That was it.
Go Adobe GoLive and Dreamweaver.

00:06:51.018 –> 00:06:55.738
So I use those two for doing I did
some projects, actually paid projects,

00:06:55.738 –> 00:06:58.223
but I look back on those
sites and they were Yeah.

00:06:58.303 –> 00:07:01.283
You know, they were, yeah,
pretty bad, actually.

00:07:01.663 –> 00:07:05.443
What what I like to use
sometimes is the Wayback Machine.

00:07:06.088 –> 00:07:09.448
Yeah. I did find one
and it had parts of it,

00:07:09.448 –> 00:07:12.908
and that was enough to make me
remember the whole thing. So Yeah.

00:07:13.743 –> 00:07:19.843
Actually, there was a website
when I had my first, I mean,

00:07:20.063 –> 00:07:22.943
personal computer only
in 98 because before that,

00:07:22.943 –> 00:07:28.598
I was traveling the world, and it was
before the laptops were a thing.

00:07:29.138 –> 00:07:35.193
And I discovered in 98
a site done in Flash.

00:07:35.653 –> 00:07:41.798
I can still remember the name if the guy
one day hear that. It was Tom Design.

00:07:41.798 –> 00:07:47.338
Tom Design maybe in German or maybe
.de or I’m not sure, maybe .com anyway.

00:07:47.753 –> 00:07:53.853
And it was a flash experiment
or artistic way where he copied

00:07:53.993 –> 00:07:59.138
the like the theme or
the from a movie,

00:07:59.918 –> 00:08:01.518
I don’t remember
the name of the movie,

00:08:01.518 –> 00:08:03.778
but it was something
with Bruce Willis.

00:08:04.093 –> 00:08:08.673
And he made these the same with the
same music with his own image images

00:08:09.213 –> 00:08:14.348
So if that Tom, one
day, I loved that.

00:08:14.968 –> 00:08:19.833
It was, yeah, it I say, oh, what we
can do now on the web. You know?

00:08:20.713 –> 00:08:24.793
But okay. That was flash early days.
Yeah. And that’s what this was the thing

00:08:24.793 –> 00:08:29.538
It was so cool back then. It was
like, wow. I can make this happen.

00:08:29.538 –> 00:08:31.858
Now we look at it, and
we kind of laugh at it.

00:08:31.858 –> 00:08:34.118
But, you know, it’s
it was the time.

00:08:35.138 –> 00:08:37.463
So in 2006,
WordPress.

00:08:38.723 –> 00:08:42.903
So at that time, myself,
I discarded WordPress.

00:08:43.283 –> 00:08:47.568
I was auditing a few CMSs and I discarded it because it was not

00:08:47.738 –> 00:08:53.498
multilingual, and I did need that. It’s, still
not, but well, it’s gonna come.

00:08:54.833 –> 00:08:57.473
And I came to WordPress
in 2012,

00:08:57.473 –> 00:09:00.193
but you you were there
already in 2006.

00:09:00.193 –> 00:09:03.573
So tell me about that
those early days.

00:09:04.228 –> 00:09:07.288
Did you have any struggle,
or what was, like,

00:09:07.348 –> 00:09:10.948
scratching your head or something
to make things work,

00:09:10.948 –> 00:09:14.793
or was that all all okay? You
know, thinking back on it,

00:09:14.793 –> 00:09:19.033
I think when I first got into it, I
just kinda poked at it. You know?

00:09:19.033 –> 00:09:20.828
I mean, I just go
in and look at it.

00:09:20.828 –> 00:09:23.888
It wasn’t quite and it was
a combination really of both,

00:09:26.748 –> 00:09:29.753
blogging and finding
a tool for my clients.

00:09:29.813 –> 00:09:32.933
Because my wife was,
shortly around that time,

00:09:32.933 –> 00:09:35.113
she got on Typepad and
started blogging.

00:09:35.813 –> 00:09:39.398
And she built up quite a successful
blog there and then moved

00:09:39.398 –> 00:09:40.838
it over to WordPress
eventually.

00:09:40.838 –> 00:09:46.683
But for me, I spent probably a good
year or more just not really saying,

00:09:46.683 –> 00:09:50.043
okay. I’m committing to this,
but I’m starting to look at it.

00:09:50.043 –> 00:09:55.328
So I didn’t really wanna
build anything right away.

00:09:55.468 –> 00:09:57.808
I just thought
this is intriguing,

00:09:58.748 –> 00:10:02.753
and it was a little bit more
of the blogging at first.

00:10:02.753 –> 00:10:07.713
And then as I got into it more
and more, I thought, wow.

00:10:07.713 –> 00:10:10.468
Now I’m starting to see
these products come out,

00:10:10.468 –> 00:10:14.488
and I can’t remember what
year iTheme started. Yeah.

00:10:14.788 –> 00:10:18.648
But that was around probably
2008, and I think WooThemes,

00:10:18.788 –> 00:10:21.153
all of them started, and I
started looking at them and we

00:10:21.153 –> 00:10:24.293
bought one of their themes for
our own business website.

00:10:25.153 –> 00:10:28.693
And I put together you know,
it was a basic landing page,

00:10:30.038 –> 00:10:34.038
and it looked so good. It was, like,
better than anything I’d ever done,

00:10:34.038 –> 00:10:36.938
and I probably did it in, you
know, one tenth of the time.

00:10:37.483 –> 00:10:38.923
And that’s when I yeah.

00:10:38.923 –> 00:10:45.003
So it was it was a slow thing for me,
but I knew I had to get into it.

00:10:45.003 –> 00:10:47.938
And if I could kind of figure
out this tool and see how it

00:10:47.938 –> 00:10:50.358
went over the next
twelve months or so,

00:10:50.818 –> 00:10:54.338
it started to develop into
something that would work for

00:10:54.338 –> 00:10:58.403
my clients and then probably work, you
know, if I wanted to start blogging.

00:10:58.403 –> 00:11:01.943
And so I just you know,
from probably 2018

00:11:02.003 –> 00:11:07.658
is when I released I mean, 2008
is when I really dove into it.

00:11:07.958 –> 00:11:11.318
And then that’s couple years
later, I just said, you know,

00:11:11.318 –> 00:11:14.353
this is it. This is the change
I’m gonna make, the big pivot.

00:11:14.833 –> 00:11:15.348
Yeah.

00:11:15.348 –> 00:11:18.313
And you mentioned earlier
that you have been,

00:11:18.473 –> 00:11:21.773
to that early WordCamp
in San Francisco.

00:11:22.228 –> 00:11:25.348
Because, remind me, you are from
the US. Right? Right. Right.

00:11:25.348 –> 00:11:29.368
The, West Coast. So it wasn’t
it was a close one or fairly

00:11:29.428 –> 00:11:32.713
close because I met in
the northwest. Okay.

00:11:33.093 –> 00:11:36.713
So what did you discover there
in WordCamp San Francisco?

00:11:37.093 –> 00:11:42.038
You know, it was a little bit what I
said was, and to elaborate on it,

00:11:42.118 –> 00:11:45.238
I think it was just the feel
of the conference.

00:11:45.238 –> 00:11:49.098
I was used to go into very
large blogging conferences with

00:11:49.823 –> 00:11:53.183
thousands and thousands of people,
and it was more the, you know,

00:11:53.183 –> 00:11:54.863
standard conference,
I wanna say.

00:11:54.863 –> 00:11:57.203
You know, you you meet
people, hand cards.

00:11:57.708 –> 00:12:02.348
And looking back on it,
sometimes I wish I could remember

00:12:02.348 –> 00:12:07.363
more of the actual experience, but
it seems so it seemed different,

00:12:07.903 –> 00:12:12.403
but it seemed like a more
of a big networking event.

00:12:12.703 –> 00:12:16.438
I mean, it just the way I’m
you were able to meet people.

00:12:16.438 –> 00:12:21.738
The people were more, even back
then, open for conversation.

00:12:22.038 –> 00:12:25.313
It wasn’t like the first thing
you did was exchange business

00:12:25.313 –> 00:12:28.673
cards when you met somebody. You
would actually probably learn

00:12:28.673 –> 00:12:32.833
a little bit about them, and I think that’s
it was kind of a shock at first,

00:12:32.833 –> 00:12:38.578
but there was also an online
what kind of set me in motion

00:12:38.578 –> 00:12:41.378
for this was and I won’t
spend a lot of time on it.

00:12:41.378 –> 00:12:49.153
There was an online, called Biznik,
and it was localized in the US,

00:12:49.293 –> 00:12:52.753
but it kinda did worldwide.
And it was an online in person

00:12:53.678 –> 00:12:58.978
kinda meetup type of a,
a startup this couple did.

00:12:59.118 –> 00:13:01.278
So you would meet
people online,

00:13:01.278 –> 00:13:05.303
but you’d also do local workshops
and local networking events.

00:13:05.303 –> 00:13:09.863
So I was already getting in that
feel at the same time of a more

00:13:09.863 –> 00:13:12.388
community oriented rather
than just, you know,

00:13:12.388 –> 00:13:14.968
going to a business conference
and dealing with that.

00:13:15.028 –> 00:13:20.973
So it wasn’t it was still different
enough, but it was an easy migration,

00:13:21.033 –> 00:13:25.353
I say I’d say because it was more
what I realized is even after

00:13:25.353 –> 00:13:30.178
being in business as long as I was,
that it fit my personality more,

00:13:30.178 –> 00:13:34.518
a WordCamp, than a normal
business conference would. Okay.

00:13:35.058 –> 00:13:41.683
I know that there were conferences
like, NSW something Southwest.

00:13:42.543 –> 00:13:45.538
Oh, yeah. Yeah. I know. Yep. I
know what you’re talking about.

00:13:45.538 –> 00:13:49.658
The, Those are the kind you say
that are big and Yeah. Yeah.

00:13:49.778 –> 00:13:53.513
Business first. I mean Yeah. And I
met some of the first people.

00:13:53.513 –> 00:13:59.293
I went to a conference about several
times, spoke at it called Blog World,

00:13:59.558 –> 00:14:02.438
and it was this huge, huge
conference of bloggers.

00:14:02.438 –> 00:14:06.518
And, actually, that was where
very first time I met Syed from

00:14:06.518 –> 00:14:08.538
AwesomeMotive was there.

00:14:08.678 –> 00:14:13.943
And so I kind of got into
the blogging space initially and

00:14:13.943 –> 00:14:16.523
got to know more of that
on the bigger picture,

00:14:16.798 –> 00:14:21.778
but then a WordCamp was more
localized and a totally different feel.

00:14:22.638 –> 00:14:27.453
Yeah. Okay. Okay. I went in
the US to a conference that was,

00:14:27.693 –> 00:14:33.048
more about, like, marketers and
course creators, content creators,

00:14:33.108 –> 00:14:37.748
bloggers as well. It was that conference
by Chris Guillebeau called,

00:14:37.988 –> 00:14:41.203
World Domination Summit.
Oh, I’ve heard that.

00:14:41.583 –> 00:14:44.943
Well, the name is a bit
domination is a bit strange to me,

00:14:44.943 –> 00:14:49.283
but the rest you know, Chris Guillebeau
is The Art of Non-Conformity author.

00:14:49.868 –> 00:14:51.888
And there was a lot
of people there.

00:14:53.388 –> 00:14:58.553
Yeah, you can I mean, it was more like
the not the technical part of things,

00:14:58.553 –> 00:15:01.213
but the content part of
of things, I guess?

00:15:01.673 –> 00:15:05.563
But, yeah, I still have friends
that we still talk to each other

00:15:05.848 –> 00:15:11.478
from that year. I went in
2013 only one time.

00:15:11.778 –> 00:15:14.553
And it was even (before) I attended my
first WordCamp, actually,

00:15:14.633 –> 00:15:18.733
because my first ever WordCamp was
2013 in October in

00:15:18.953 –> 00:15:23.103
at WordCamp Europe in
Leiden in the Netherlands.

00:15:23.273 –> 00:15:29.528
So, yeah, it’s, it’s I came much
later to that game. Exactly.

00:15:29.688 –> 00:15:33.583
Than you. Yeah. And WordCamp
San Francisco, was, like,

00:15:33.583 –> 00:15:38.863
the ancestor of WordCamp US. Right?
Yeah. Yeah. It was. What became Yeah.

00:15:38.863 –> 00:15:42.528
I think I went to a couple of
them early on, and then I think,

00:15:44.848 –> 00:15:48.208
Seattle, which is where I was
closely located, and then,

00:15:48.528 –> 00:15:53.543
Chicago was another early one I went to
and stuff. And I just got the bug.

00:15:53.543 –> 00:15:56.023
I wasn’t going, you know,
up to a lot of them,

00:15:56.023 –> 00:15:59.143
but I was going to enough of
them to start to get more and

00:15:59.143 –> 00:16:08.028
more into the community. Yeah. Yes.
I realized that I will cut that.

00:16:08.028 –> 00:16:10.953
I realized that the the background
is not was not correct.

00:16:12.953 –> 00:16:15.273
Anyway, it’s okay. It’s from
the tool, but it’s okay.

00:16:15.273 –> 00:16:19.693
Maybe I leave even that in
the in the show. Yeah. Okay.

00:16:20.338 –> 00:16:25.938
So I guess one of the things at
WordCamp be is that it’s very

00:16:25.938 –> 00:16:27.778
easy to meet people
and make friends,

00:16:27.778 –> 00:16:32.123
and I can say I have friends from
so many parts of the world now.

00:16:32.123 –> 00:16:36.123
Thanks to that. Was that the same
feeling in the in the beginning

00:16:36.123 –> 00:16:39.578
in the US as well?
You had a lot of people coming

00:16:39.578 –> 00:16:45.358
from other countries, or was it
more, like, American centric?

00:16:45.683 –> 00:16:51.043
I think it was more local because
it was still that local.

00:16:51.043 –> 00:16:53.683
You know, I mean, I think in
the early years, you know,

00:16:53.683 –> 00:16:58.808
when you go to Chicago, there’d
be some people that would, yeah,

00:16:58.808 –> 00:17:03.873
fly in, but, typically, they would
fly in from other parts of the US.

00:17:03.873 –> 00:17:07.713
So there wasn’t quite
the, you know yeah.

00:17:07.713 –> 00:17:11.153
It was probably even back then,
it was a factor of, you know,

00:17:11.153 –> 00:17:15.728
do you want to use those kind
of resources to go that far for

00:17:15.948 –> 00:17:19.628
a small WordCamp and
didn’t really, I think,

00:17:19.628 –> 00:17:22.763
start touching on that till we
started doing the flagships or

00:17:22.763 –> 00:17:25.823
at least the US started
it, you know, and and,

00:17:26.283 –> 00:17:31.578
Europe and maybe started
attracting more from around the world

00:17:31.578 –> 00:17:35.758
versus the local camp. So it was,
yeah, it was very US centric.

00:17:36.458 –> 00:17:40.033
Yeah. Okay. Yeah. But that’s Makes
sense. That’s what you yeah.

00:17:40.033 –> 00:17:46.488
It makes sense. Yeah. And then you
moved to Europe. That’s recent.

00:17:46.488 –> 00:17:50.248
Right? Yeah. That was
a little over a year ago.

00:17:50.248 –> 00:17:58.203
It’s, it was, March of last year. So
or was it no. It’s actually it wait.

00:17:58.203 –> 00:18:02.188
Now let me think about that. Is it
actually no. It’s actually two years now.

00:18:02.188 –> 00:18:06.428
In 2022? Two years. Right
after WordCamp Europe in Porto?

00:18:06.428 –> 00:18:10.853
Right? Yeah. It was it’s been about
a year and a half. Not quite.

00:18:10.853 –> 00:18:14.828
Well Yeah. Not quite.
Okay. So until that,

00:18:14.828 –> 00:18:18.188
you were in the US because
I had a maybe I’m wrong.

00:18:18.188 –> 00:18:22.368
I had a feeling that you were in
already in Europe before that,

00:18:22.668 –> 00:18:27.813
but no. No. No. Yeah. It was,
it was WordCamp Porto. Okay.

00:18:28.273 –> 00:18:31.998
WordCamp Europe in Porto, not
WordCamp Porto. I should say.

00:18:32.218 –> 00:18:37.578
That was, so that was three
WordCamps ago. Yeah.

00:18:37.578 –> 00:18:41.403
That was the one that that was
actually my first time in Europe too.

00:18:41.403 –> 00:18:47.023
So, it and that’s what kind of set
the ball rolling to move us to here.

00:18:47.803 –> 00:18:53.108
Yes. And that’s when I met you.
Exactly. Yep. At the picnic.

00:18:53.108 –> 00:18:57.828
Right? Yeah. Right. Right.
Yeah. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Okay.

00:18:57.828 –> 00:19:03.523
So in between, what made
you start, podcasts?

00:19:04.143 –> 00:19:06.303
And not only
continuing on, like,

00:19:06.303 –> 00:19:10.408
your client work or design work
or website development, but,

00:19:10.808 –> 00:19:14.888
thinking now I’m going to
host a podcast. Yeah.

00:19:14.888 –> 00:19:19.233
I think it was so it was
in 2014.

00:19:20.013 –> 00:19:23.773
I’d had early on in the around
2010, 2011,

00:19:23.773 –> 00:19:28.728
I had several people I knew because I
was so much into content and blogging.

00:19:28.728 –> 00:19:33.548
They said, oh, you should do
a podcast. And I’m like, really?

00:19:33.913 –> 00:19:35.833
And they said, yeah. You
have the voice for it,

00:19:35.833 –> 00:19:38.793
which isn’t the only reason
you should do a podcast.

00:19:38.793 –> 00:19:42.073
So I told them, well, maybe you
think I have the voice for it,

00:19:42.073 –> 00:19:45.508
but I also need to have the time
and the resources and all that.

00:19:45.508 –> 00:19:48.708
So I didn’t go into it right
away when people are trying to

00:19:48.708 –> 00:19:52.663
push it in push me into it.
And I decided in 2014

00:19:52.663 –> 00:19:54.393
to try
a little podcast,

00:19:54.393 –> 00:19:57.693
and I started doing it
a couple times a month.

00:19:57.903 –> 00:20:02.408
And it was called WordPress breakdown. And it was really

00:20:03.078 –> 00:20:05.978
It was okay. I did it for
about a year,

00:20:05.978 –> 00:20:10.603
and it was like a fifteen minute
podcast where I talk about

00:20:10.603 –> 00:20:13.103
a plugin or talk about
a couple of plugins.

00:20:13.243 –> 00:20:17.343
And I realized after about a year
that I was basically doing

00:20:17.938 –> 00:20:21.458
what I was doing in my blog
post. It wasn’t unique enough.

00:20:21.458 –> 00:20:24.818
And so I said, well, I’m gonna
put it aside and wait till this

00:20:24.818 –> 00:20:29.373
idea comes to mind. And that
took about two more years.

00:20:29.373 –> 00:20:31.953
I just I wasn’t
gonna rush into it.

00:20:32.253 –> 00:20:35.373
I felt like I
wanted to do it,

00:20:35.373 –> 00:20:37.538
but I wanted to make sure I
was doing the right thing.

00:20:37.538 –> 00:20:42.998
So I started in 2016.
I actually started to DotheWoo.

00:20:43.953 –> 00:20:46.433
But then a few
months into it,

00:20:46.433 –> 00:20:50.453
I changed it to a show called
the WP ecommerce show.

00:20:51.393 –> 00:20:54.658
And did that for
about three years,

00:20:54.658 –> 00:20:58.518
which was more of a generalized
ecommerce in the WordPress space.

00:20:59.218 –> 00:21:03.238
Switched it back to DotheWoo
or restarted DotheWoo again

00:21:03.683 –> 00:21:08.643
in 2018 and eventually
stopped the other

00:21:08.643 –> 00:21:12.128
one as well as I’d done
about, oh, about five,

00:21:12.128 –> 00:21:14.468
six other little
podcasts I had started.

00:21:14.768 –> 00:21:19.188
And some of those lasted as long as
two weeks and to maybe, you know,

00:21:19.673 –> 00:21:23.033
a few months or something, and they
just kind of weren’t the thing,

00:21:23.033 –> 00:21:25.513
so I’d stop them.
But it was, yeah,

00:21:25.513 –> 00:21:30.448
it was something that I found
that I enjoyed doing, But,

00:21:31.168 –> 00:21:36.528
I shortly after I started
to DotheWoo again,

00:21:36.528 –> 00:21:41.893
I realized that I just didn’t
wanna be the only host.

00:21:41.953 –> 00:21:44.433
You know, dude, I’d been
that a while and stuff,

00:21:44.433 –> 00:21:46.693
and I decided that
I needed to start,

00:21:47.378 –> 00:21:50.038
branching out and thinking of
different ways to do that.

00:21:50.258 –> 00:21:53.798
And so that’s kind of how things
have led to where we are today.

00:21:54.673 –> 00:21:58.193
Yeah. It has grown a lot,
and you have a lot of different

00:21:58.193 –> 00:22:02.468
hosts on your show that host
themselves, other people,

00:22:02.468 –> 00:22:04.648
and I like that very much.

00:22:06.228 –> 00:22:11.103
I would like the same here on WPMondo
but in other languages because,

00:22:11.263 –> 00:22:15.203
languages is a topic
I’m passionate about.

00:22:16.063 –> 00:22:19.238
So imagine I have someone
in, I don’t know,

00:22:19.238 –> 00:22:23.318
in Hindi interviewing people in Hindi
about WordPress, someone in

00:22:23.878 –> 00:22:28.723
Filipino, interviewing people in
Filipino, other in Portuguese,

00:22:30.703 –> 00:22:33.618
Portuguese do Brasil.
Yeah. You know?

00:22:33.698 –> 00:22:36.578
And that that would be great
because there are so many people

00:22:36.578 –> 00:22:38.838
who don’t speak English,
actually, in the world and,

00:22:39.698 –> 00:22:45.403
or not under understanding enough,
to follow a conversation,

00:22:46.343 –> 00:22:49.988
especially, for me, sometimes
it’s difficult another language.

00:22:49.988 –> 00:22:51.988
Not English anymore not
in English anymore,

00:22:51.988 –> 00:22:55.528
but in another language
that I’m trying to learn.

00:22:55.908 –> 00:23:00.373
Audio only is more difficult than,
with video because with video,

00:23:00.373 –> 00:23:03.253
you can see the expression
on the face.

00:23:03.653 –> 00:23:07.348
And that was a topic I wanted
to ask you about because I

00:23:07.348 –> 00:23:12.008
know that your choice was to
do it audio only, not video.

00:23:12.068 –> 00:23:17.513
And you told me once why, so
maybe you can tell here why,

00:23:17.973 –> 00:23:20.373
for the followers. Yes.

00:23:21.093 –> 00:23:25.078
I’ve had several people try
to convince me to do this.

00:23:25.078 –> 00:23:27.158
And so when I started it,

00:23:27.158 –> 00:23:34.453
it was I come from the my
age and youth is around radio.

00:23:34.513 –> 00:23:39.973
So I loved radio, and it’s
kind of what I was brought up on.

00:23:40.168 –> 00:23:43.048
And there was something about
audio that just intrigued me.

00:23:43.048 –> 00:23:45.868
So when I got it, that’s one of
the reasons I got into podcasting

00:23:46.008 –> 00:23:50.823
was it was audio only
and or not only,

00:23:50.823 –> 00:23:53.643
but that’s what most people
were doing when I started it.

00:23:53.703 –> 00:23:58.443
Then I think it’s there
are several reasons that I’ve

00:23:58.503 –> 00:24:03.678
decided not to do it, and
I get what people say.

00:24:03.678 –> 00:24:06.658
And I understand, you know,
both the, visualization.

00:24:07.118 –> 00:24:10.573
I know people I mean,
I’m you know,

00:24:10.573 –> 00:24:14.063
everybody has a different way of learning and absorbing content

00:24:14.143 –> 00:24:15.873
and stuff, some visually,
some auditorial.

00:24:16.178 –> 00:24:19.238
You know, it they have
a strength in one or the other.

00:24:20.258 –> 00:24:27.563
But what one of the things I
found is that it made it a little

00:24:27.563 –> 00:24:31.083
bit more accessible, and especially
as I was growing the numbers.

00:24:31.083 –> 00:24:34.438
So if you’re, you know, if you’re
doing a podcast maybe once

00:24:34.438 –> 00:24:39.958
a week or once every two weeks, I mean
it’s a little easier production wise.

00:24:39.958 –> 00:24:43.203
Of course, there’s a lot of challenges.
I’m not gonna get into that.

00:24:43.503 –> 00:24:49.043
It’s a lot easier to obviously
edit, audio than video and audio.

00:24:49.548 –> 00:24:55.088
But I realized that as I asked more
and more people to the podcast

00:24:55.388 –> 00:25:00.653
that there probably wouldn’t have
been quite as many that said

00:25:00.653 –> 00:25:03.933
yes if I’d said it was video.
And I didn’t wanna do a mix.

00:25:03.933 –> 00:25:08.038
I didn’t wanna say, okay. Some of them
will be video. Some will be audio.

00:25:08.578 –> 00:25:12.978
And it was maybe a reason of they
felt they didn’t have the

00:25:13.378 –> 00:25:17.033
proper equipment, the bandwidth
where they live. You know?

00:25:17.033 –> 00:25:19.113
We know the challenges
of everybody around.

00:25:19.113 –> 00:25:23.478
And I really feel that I you
know, where we are right now,

00:25:23.478 –> 00:25:27.558
I think I’m we’ve had, like,
four hundred and some guests.

00:25:27.558 –> 00:25:29.958
I would say probably fifty
percent of those guests wouldn’t

00:25:29.958 –> 00:25:33.333
have been on if it
had been video.

00:25:33.953 –> 00:25:38.753
And that’s not saying nobody should do
video or not do video because of that.

00:25:38.753 –> 00:25:47.878
It was just the number of shows
I was doing and how I wanted

00:25:47.878 –> 00:25:49.978
to make it as easy
as possible.

00:25:50.143 –> 00:25:54.863
So when I get people on the show, you
know, there’s a lot of times they’re,

00:25:56.303 –> 00:26:00.208
they maybe need to start over or
they would have been very you know,

00:26:00.208 –> 00:26:03.328
even culturally, there’s been
some issues where it would have

00:26:03.328 –> 00:26:07.353
been very difficult for them
to do it visually and stuff.

00:26:07.353 –> 00:26:11.913
So there’s that’s
really a big part of it.

00:26:11.913 –> 00:26:14.393
And I don’t wanna kinda
do a mix, you know,

00:26:14.393 –> 00:26:17.428
do some that are audio and
some of that are videos.

00:26:17.428 –> 00:26:19.908
So I’ve just chosen to
go that direction.

00:26:19.908 –> 00:26:23.748
And I know you, you know, you
can always get a maybe a bigger

00:26:23.748 –> 00:26:27.333
audience with video because
you’ve got, you know,

00:26:27.333 –> 00:26:30.293
YouTube and people are
gonna watch it and stuff.

00:26:30.293 –> 00:26:33.878
But it’s worked for me
and I kinda stick to my guns,

00:26:33.878 –> 00:26:36.218
and some people get
very, you know,

00:26:36.278 –> 00:26:40.403
passionate with me trying to change
my mind. But It’s not my intention.

00:26:40.403 –> 00:26:44.010
No. I know you aren’t.
There’s other people, though.

00:26:44.264 –> 00:26:47.573
To each their own, and I think if
this is the model that’s that

00:26:47.603 –> 00:26:50.008
is a success for you.
And you’re right.

00:26:50.008 –> 00:26:51.788
I mean, some
people would not,

00:26:52.168 –> 00:26:57.083
want to appear on video and would
not have maybe come to your show,

00:26:57.303 –> 00:27:00.423
to your podcast. Even me,

00:27:00.423 –> 00:27:03.543
the first time you asked me
to say something like five

00:27:03.543 –> 00:27:07.238
minutes on a I think it was a feedback
on a WordCamp or something like that.

00:27:08.258 –> 00:27:12.118
I the first thing I ask is
is it video or audio only?

00:27:12.663 –> 00:27:15.163
Because, you know, I
don’t need to, like,

00:27:15.303 –> 00:27:18.523
make my hair or makeup or I don’t
know. I keep in my pajama.

00:27:20.058 –> 00:27:24.378
You know? Exactly. Yeah. I have
a lot of people that, you know,

00:27:24.378 –> 00:27:28.478
they’ll ask me and and they’ll do
a kind of a heavy sigh of relief like,

00:27:28.833 –> 00:27:31.873
right? You know, I don’t
have to be on or whatever.

00:27:31.873 –> 00:27:35.073
But, again, like you said,
it’s it fits my model.

00:27:35.073 –> 00:27:38.318
And when people ask me about
anything about podcasting and

00:27:38.318 –> 00:27:41.918
starting a podcast, they say,
what preference do you think?

00:27:41.918 –> 00:27:45.378
Video or audio? And I say,
you’ve gotta make that decision.

00:27:45.663 –> 00:27:49.923
It’s all based on you. It’s not
based on what others are doing.

00:27:50.463 –> 00:27:53.988
And I’m very happy that you are you,
yourself, OK to be on video.

00:27:53.988 –> 00:27:56.528
Yeah. Yeah. I will be.

00:27:56.708 –> 00:28:00.678
And I like the cap.
Yeah, thank you.

00:28:03.993 –> 00:28:09.688
Did over five hundred people that
you had, as guests, did you have,

00:28:10.248 –> 00:28:14.028
sometimes a struggle or something
that you had to, I mean,

00:28:14.968 –> 00:28:19.873
delete or not publish of controversial
topic or stuff like that?

00:28:20.253 –> 00:28:27.648
You know, there’s, you know, some
struggles have been with, yeah,

00:28:27.648 –> 00:28:32.068
there’s been heavy editing on some
because the people or the person,

00:28:32.983 –> 00:28:35.863
whether it’s one or more, were
very nervous and maybe they

00:28:35.863 –> 00:28:39.143
had to start over several times. You
know? So there’s extra editing there.

00:28:39.143 –> 00:28:41.988
As far as the content,
most of the time,

00:28:42.148 –> 00:28:46.468
there’s very little time I have
to delete something because I

00:28:46.468 –> 00:28:51.463
think people that come on know
me and know the show enough.

00:28:51.463 –> 00:29:01.448
I’m a very I was recently
noted that I never, you know,

00:29:01.448 –> 00:29:06.328
questioned or challenged anything
about the software or the community.

00:29:06.328 –> 00:29:10.153
And I told the person that
that’s not necessarily something

00:29:10.153 –> 00:29:12.893
I’m doing for anybody else.
That’s just my personality.

00:29:13.113 –> 00:29:16.953
That’s how I’ve always been. I’ve been
a fairly awesome optimistic person.

00:29:16.953 –> 00:29:24.298
So but there has been a few times I’ve
told people afterwards that I may like,

00:29:24.298 –> 00:29:28.358
if they bash a product, you know
they can kind of say

00:29:28.648 –> 00:29:34.153
constructive criticism
about a certain kind of product,

00:29:34.283 –> 00:29:37.223
but I don’t like
bashing brand names.

00:29:37.598 –> 00:29:40.958
So I’ve had to edit out a few
things like that and stuff.

00:29:40.958 –> 00:29:43.618
But then there’s also it’s
it’s very interesting.

00:29:44.078 –> 00:29:51.313
I did a podcast once, and the,
person dropped the F-bomb a lot,

00:29:51.773 –> 00:29:55.018
which was a little you know, I
don’t tell them they can’t do it,

00:29:55.258 –> 00:29:57.678
but it was a it was a different
kind of conversation.

00:29:57.818 –> 00:30:01.438
And it, actually, he didn’t
do it in the, like,

00:30:01.738 –> 00:30:05.413
so much that he was just doing
it to, you know, be whatever.

00:30:05.873 –> 00:30:08.213
It was just part of
his personality,

00:30:08.433 –> 00:30:12.453
and I actually left in quite a bit
of it because it didn’t make sense.

00:30:12.498 –> 00:30:15.138
If I would have edited it out,
it would have lost something.

00:30:15.138 –> 00:30:17.878
And he wasn’t doing it in
a rude kind of way either.

00:30:18.418 –> 00:30:22.333
So there’s not aggressive, but it’s
more his own style of speaking.

00:30:22.333 –> 00:30:26.093
Yeah. Just the way he
communicates. And so it’s yeah.

00:30:26.093 –> 00:30:29.048
You gotta kind of
make a call on it.

00:30:29.128 –> 00:30:31.688
And, you know, there’s gonna be
times I’ve never had to tell

00:30:31.688 –> 00:30:36.488
nobody that this isn’t going out, so I’ve
never had to not publish something.

00:30:36.488 –> 00:30:43.583
I’ve had to one builder, plugin builder
was extremely, extremely nervous,

00:30:43.583 –> 00:30:49.488
and so he was reading his answers.
And he would just keep starting over.

00:30:49.488 –> 00:30:52.208
And I actually felt very bad
for him because, you know,

00:30:52.208 –> 00:30:55.088
he was just he wasn’t
comfortable doing it.

00:30:55.088 –> 00:31:00.293
So I edited as best as I could and
made it sound as good as possible.

00:31:00.293 –> 00:31:06.578
But I do let people know at
the beginning that I ask them,

00:31:06.578 –> 00:31:09.858
you know, if there’s anything
we don’t wanna talk about or

00:31:09.858 –> 00:31:11.618
something you don’t
want us to address.

00:31:11.618 –> 00:31:14.883
And if there is
anything, you know,

00:31:14.883 –> 00:31:17.923
I’m glad to take it out if you’ve
said something that you feel

00:31:17.923 –> 00:31:20.963
like you shouldn’t have said. So
I’m pretty flexible. But.

00:31:22.348 –> 00:31:24.988
And by the way, it’s the same
here for me. Yeah. Yeah.

00:31:24.988 –> 00:31:28.268
I was I was gonna mention some
about that, but I didn’t know.

00:31:28.268 –> 00:31:33.753
But you’re yes. You’re Yeah. I can edit,
but I think it’s pretty good so far.

00:31:33.753 –> 00:31:36.633
So Yeah. I don’t think I
will need to edit a lot,

00:31:36.633 –> 00:31:38.368
but just if there is
something, like,

00:31:38.448 –> 00:31:41.488
suddenly you realize you have said
something about someone and say,

00:31:41.488 –> 00:31:44.628
oh, no. Maybe it should not be there.
So Yeah. Something like this.

00:31:45.328 –> 00:31:48.353
And I’m not very high on
equipment. You know?

00:31:48.353 –> 00:31:50.993
I’m using an online
tool that,

00:31:51.553 –> 00:31:57.093
does at the same time the streaming
or recording and, a studio.

00:31:57.468 –> 00:32:02.108
I was lucky enough to buy it,
when it was a lifetime deal and Oh,

00:32:02.108 –> 00:32:03.568
good. Very, really good.

00:32:04.028 –> 00:32:10.213
You may have seen the background
if I before twenty minutes in,

00:32:10.213 –> 00:32:13.988
I forgot to change the background
and we could see the name.

00:32:14.388 –> 00:32:18.228
And I like it very much. I I believe
it’s the same that is used by,

00:32:18.868 –> 00:32:23.743
Nathan on WPBuilds. Because
I recognize the, like,

00:32:23.743 –> 00:32:27.423
the branding of the names.
You know? Exactly.

00:32:27.423 –> 00:32:29.743
Anyway, so I think
it’s a very good one.

00:32:29.743 –> 00:32:35.758
And even though I do not have that
great equipment with my laptop,

00:32:37.098 –> 00:32:38.298
it works well.

00:32:38.298 –> 00:32:42.638
I sometimes have issue with
Zoom calls and other calls,

00:32:43.163 –> 00:32:48.683
But so far on this one, it just
works. So that’s good.

00:32:48.683 –> 00:32:53.538
But I was going to ask you
about your, like, tech stack.

00:32:53.538 –> 00:32:59.138
Maybe you, I mean, you need to
have equipment and you need to have,

00:32:59.138 –> 00:33:02.073
like, skills how to edit
and stuff like that,

00:33:02.073 –> 00:33:05.613
or it becomes easier and
easier year after year,

00:33:05.993 –> 00:33:09.353
thanks to thanks to
new tools that exist?

00:33:09.353 –> 00:33:13.208
And what do you
think about it? Yeah.

00:33:13.208 –> 00:33:16.248
I think it’s, you know, it’s
it’s like when anybody starts,

00:33:16.248 –> 00:33:20.303
they get stressed out. And you know, do
I need to buy an expensive microphone?

00:33:20.303 –> 00:33:23.583
I mean, you start with
the microphone and you start looking

00:33:23.583 –> 00:33:28.058
at tools and whether you’re streaming
or, you know, video or audio.

00:33:28.758 –> 00:33:32.913
And, you know, I think
it’s important.

00:33:33.133 –> 00:33:35.473
I’m not quite like
most podcasters.

00:33:35.773 –> 00:33:40.878
I don’t just, you know, ram it down
people’s throat that, you know,

00:33:40.878 –> 00:33:42.578
make sure you
have good sound.

00:33:42.638 –> 00:33:46.318
You’re going to if you’re gonna start
a podcast, you’re gonna find over time.

00:33:46.318 –> 00:33:48.503
I mean, I’ve gone through
several microphones.

00:33:48.643 –> 00:33:53.523
I’ve gone through several services that
worked and stuff. You just gotta yeah.

00:33:53.523 –> 00:33:56.978
Like you said, you learn
it over time. It’s you know?

00:33:57.138 –> 00:33:58.418
You’re still gonna
make mistakes.

00:33:58.418 –> 00:34:01.778
I remember one time I did
an entire half of a podcast.

00:34:01.778 –> 00:34:05.803
I forgot I push didn’t push record,
and I was so embarrassed.

00:34:05.803 –> 00:34:08.843
It was this, yeah. And
it was very you know,

00:34:08.843 –> 00:34:13.408
she was this woman that was do
had an ecommerce business in,

00:34:13.648 –> 00:34:17.488
I believe it was Uganda,
and I just felt horrible.

00:34:17.488 –> 00:34:19.648
And she was you know, I said
I stopped, and I said,

00:34:19.648 –> 00:34:22.388
do you realize I haven’t
recorded any of this?

00:34:22.863 –> 00:34:26.223
And I just, you know,
hung my head.

00:34:26.223 –> 00:34:30.723
But, you know, things happen, and
I think that you’re going to,

00:34:31.023 –> 00:34:35.028
you know, yeah, you’re gonna find
the equipment that works well for you.

00:34:35.028 –> 00:34:38.648
I have a I use, yeah,
an audio platform.

00:34:38.868 –> 00:34:43.573
I use I still use GarageBand,
actually, on my Mac for some stuff.

00:34:43.573 –> 00:34:46.233
I use Descript, which
a lot of people use.

00:34:47.013 –> 00:34:51.588
I use, Rev for my,
transcripts,

00:34:51.648 –> 00:34:57.093
and I use I’ve been using ChatGPT
to help clean up the transcripts

00:34:57.093 –> 00:35:01.333
even a little bit better after
that. So you find your yeah.

00:35:01.333 –> 00:35:02.968
You find your
workflows and stuff.

00:35:03.848 –> 00:35:08.028
And I think there’s in fact, I
was just talking to somebody that’s,

00:35:09.768 –> 00:35:13.133
doing a very interesting tool
that’s going to help podcasters

00:35:13.433 –> 00:35:16.953
with questions and stuff.
I think it uses AI,

00:35:16.953 –> 00:35:22.688
but it actually looks at other
interviews that person has had

00:35:22.688 –> 00:35:25.008
so you can see what
they’ve talked about,

00:35:25.008 –> 00:35:27.488
maybe find new topics to
talk with them about.

00:35:27.488 –> 00:35:30.213
So it’s, yeah, it’s it’s
progressing, you know,

00:35:30.213 –> 00:35:34.533
and there’s all sorts of things out there
that but I just tell people don’t,

00:35:34.533 –> 00:35:37.778
you know, don’t invest
tons and tons of money.

00:35:37.778 –> 00:35:40.998
You can do that over time
and find what you need.

00:35:42.258 –> 00:35:43.858
When you said you
forgot to record,

00:35:43.858 –> 00:35:46.993
I just had a quick look in
the corner of the Yeah. Doesn’t it?

00:35:46.993 –> 00:35:50.933
Now you’re it makes you feel, it
it was it was a terrible thing.

00:35:51.233 –> 00:35:55.498
Yeah. It’s written recording
thirty six minutes. Yeah. Good.

00:35:55.678 –> 00:36:03.353
Yeah. And for the, like,
Descript, actually,

00:36:03.353 –> 00:36:05.753
this service is included
in that tool that I have.

00:36:05.753 –> 00:36:10.953
So I will see I know there is still
a lot to edit, especially when we say,

00:36:12.078 –> 00:36:16.658
person’s names because, obviously,
it can’t guess everyone’s names.

00:36:17.518 –> 00:36:21.493
And also sometimes, I guess, with
accent because with my French accent,

00:36:21.493 –> 00:36:23.993
it might not recognize
all the English words.

00:36:24.373 –> 00:36:28.453
So I will see how it works
for our one, and I want to edit.

00:36:28.453 –> 00:36:31.928
If not, at least for the for people’s
name, I think it’s important.

00:36:31.928 –> 00:36:35.608
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I remember I was
interviewed I was in a conversation

00:36:35.608 –> 00:36:40.313
with Remkus on Within WordPress,
and all the names were wrong,

00:36:40.313 –> 00:36:46.413
but sometimes it was like a Kier,
h k l, you know? Yeah. Exactly.

00:36:46.473 –> 00:36:50.648
I need to we need to
edit it because Yeah. Yeah.

00:36:50.648 –> 00:36:55.068
I tried to look at to go through
and visually find names, brand,

00:36:55.433 –> 00:36:57.613
company names, things
that you know?

00:36:57.833 –> 00:37:00.713
And sometimes it’s still
things slip by and stuff.

00:37:00.713 –> 00:37:04.568
But, yeah, it’s I used to
pay for human transcripts,

00:37:04.948 –> 00:37:07.828
which was wonderful because
they were really done well,

00:37:07.828 –> 00:37:09.908
but they’re very
expensive too.

00:37:09.908 –> 00:37:12.933
So that’s not realistic
for a lot of people,

00:37:12.993 –> 00:37:15.493
and it became unrealistic
for me even.

00:37:17.713 –> 00:37:21.428
Another question, and that’s
actually even interesting for me.

00:37:21.728 –> 00:37:25.328
Do you have any advice for
anyone who want to start now?

00:37:25.328 –> 00:37:30.123
A podcast or a web show like this
in video? You know, I okay.

00:37:30.123 –> 00:37:33.323
This is this is really, this
is something I’ve been saying

00:37:33.323 –> 00:37:35.503
for years and I
use this analogy.

00:37:36.523 –> 00:37:43.618
And, it’s kind of a strange one,
but I’ll use the same example.

00:37:43.618 –> 00:37:47.238
So if I sat down with somebody and
they said, I wanna do a podcast,

00:37:49.453 –> 00:37:51.693
You know, I first
probably say, you know,

00:37:51.693 –> 00:37:55.053
you realize the resources and
the time it’s gonna take, you know,

00:37:55.053 –> 00:38:01.348
and you don’t need to spend
tons of it in the beginning. And then

00:38:01.348 –> 00:38:05.793
I would ask them, why do you want
a podcast? Why do you want to do it?

00:38:07.343 –> 00:38:13.818
I always this is really a silly example
but it gives you kind of the idea.

00:38:13.878 –> 00:38:15.958
So if I ask this person
and they said, well,

00:38:15.958 –> 00:38:18.938
I want a podcast because I like
the sound of my own voice.

00:38:19.403 –> 00:38:21.243
Now that’s not really
a good reason.

00:38:21.243 –> 00:38:27.183
But if that’s his reason or her
reason, then I’d say, oh, okay.

00:38:27.323 –> 00:38:31.878
Well, if that’s your reason to
do it, go ahead and do it.

00:38:32.818 –> 00:38:36.023
Then I would come back to
that person after, say,

00:38:36.023 –> 00:38:38.763
three months if they’re
still doing it.

00:38:39.623 –> 00:38:43.323
And I would say, so I see
you’re still podcasting.

00:38:43.543 –> 00:38:48.598
Do you still like to do it because
you like to hear the sound

00:38:48.598 –> 00:38:53.953
of your own voice? And if that person
says, yeah. You know? I love it.

00:38:53.953 –> 00:38:56.133
I love listening to my
voice all the time.

00:38:56.913 –> 00:39:00.408
Then they’re doing it for
the right reason because it’s what

00:39:00.408 –> 00:39:03.448
drives them to continue to
do it. If they said, no.

00:39:03.448 –> 00:39:08.248
That was really a stupid idea, then
maybe you should rethink this.

00:39:08.248 –> 00:39:13.683
So it’s always to me, it’s you know,
you’ve gotta just like everything,

00:39:13.683 –> 00:39:15.443
you gotta have
the resources and time,

00:39:15.443 –> 00:39:19.718
but you’ve gotta make sure
the reason you’re doing it is what

00:39:19.718 –> 00:39:23.758
keeps you doing it. And that
never becomes, you know Okay.

00:39:23.958 –> 00:39:27.353
The dreaded part or you’re just
gonna start belaboring it and

00:39:27.353 –> 00:39:31.353
you’re gonna make it, and it’s not gonna
turn out or or be good for anybody,

00:39:31.353 –> 00:39:36.018
you or your guests.
That’s very good advice.

00:39:36.018 –> 00:39:38.278
And if I may reply
to that question.

00:39:38.898 –> 00:39:44.163
Actually, I was interviewed
quite a lot since January about

00:39:44.303 –> 00:39:49.423
the GatherPress project and I
actually enjoyed to be in so many

00:39:49.423 –> 00:39:51.283
conversations with
so many people.

00:39:51.578 –> 00:39:55.498
I mentioned, Remkus, but I
was also with Michelle Frechette,

00:39:55.978 –> 00:39:58.058
with Mike from
the GatherPress project.

00:39:58.058 –> 00:40:01.863
We were interviewed by Michelle
Frechette on, WP Constellations.

00:40:02.643 –> 00:40:07.623
Then I was in, KrautPress
with Simon Kraft, and others.

00:40:07.923 –> 00:40:12.798
And every time it also with,
Indystack, you know, many.

00:40:12.938 –> 00:40:21.013
So every time I say, oh, actually,
that was much less difficult than,

00:40:21.413 –> 00:40:26.313
that I would have thought. It
was just a conversation with a friend.

00:40:26.798 –> 00:40:30.558
Okay. It’s on video, but it would be
the same if we had talked about this,

00:40:30.718 –> 00:40:34.513
over at a drink or a café at
at a WordCamp, you know.

00:40:34.513 –> 00:40:36.453
So it it’s just,

00:40:37.553 –> 00:40:43.013
that nice feeling to talk with
a friend on a friendly conversation.

00:40:43.988 –> 00:40:46.468
And that’s what
I liked the most,

00:40:46.468 –> 00:40:51.208
and I now know a lot of people
around the WordPress community.

00:40:51.853 –> 00:40:55.693
And I love to go to WordCamps
and especially WordCamp

00:40:55.693 –> 00:40:58.273
Europe because people come
from all over the world.

00:40:58.413 –> 00:41:02.168
And I never have an enough time
to talk with everyone and always

00:41:02.388 –> 00:41:05.588
there is there are people that I
realize, oh, but they were there,

00:41:05.588 –> 00:41:08.788
you know, because they post on social
media. And I didn’t even see them.

00:41:08.788 –> 00:41:14.583
So now we can have conversation
online and talk about things

00:41:14.583 –> 00:41:16.683
that could be interesting
for other people.

00:41:17.288 –> 00:41:23.608
So that’s why, this
idea came and, yeah,

00:41:23.608 –> 00:41:28.253
I if so I will follow your advice and
in three months ask myself Yeah.

00:41:28.573 –> 00:41:31.793
If still the same
reason. I mean,

00:41:32.148 –> 00:41:35.848
sometimes we have conversations that
could be really useful to others,

00:41:35.908 –> 00:41:39.428
and, I was mentioning
the language part.

00:41:39.428 –> 00:41:45.053
So that could be something that
is interesting, to other people.

00:41:46.233 –> 00:41:47.673
There will be
another episode.

00:41:47.673 –> 00:41:50.178
Actually, it’s already recorded,
but it will come after you,

00:41:50.178 –> 00:41:56.918
so you still are the first. It was
with, a Spanish person.

00:41:57.378 –> 00:42:03.913
His name is Javi Guembe and he
started a project called WP Talk Link,

00:42:04.213 –> 00:42:09.408
and then you can find people
from the WordPress community to

00:42:09.408 –> 00:42:11.888
to have a language buddy.
You know? Oh, yeah.

00:42:11.888 –> 00:42:15.563
And with the list of people, and
you can improve other languages,

00:42:16.583 –> 00:42:19.623
talking with people.
So that was,

00:42:20.183 –> 00:42:22.838
that’s something that can
be useful to others.

00:42:22.838 –> 00:42:26.538
And I love to have something
that is useful to many.

00:42:27.318 –> 00:42:34.253
So what’s the best as a web show. I
I don’t call it podcast if it’s with video.

00:42:34.253 –> 00:42:39.233
I call it web show or Yeah. Until I
find a best name, a better name.

00:42:40.093 –> 00:42:43.718
But for now it’s, yeah. For
me, podcast is audio only.

00:42:43.778 –> 00:42:48.823
So it’s what you do, actually.
Yeah. And it’s very Yep. Sorry.

00:42:49.043 –> 00:42:51.363
Oh, I’m just gonna, say
it’s very you know,

00:42:51.363 –> 00:42:54.323
the conversational type podcast
like you were talking about,

00:42:54.323 –> 00:42:56.503
you found you really
enjoyed them.

00:42:57.308 –> 00:43:01.788
On our podcast, I’d say probably
half the people have never

00:43:01.788 –> 00:43:05.068
been on a podcast before, and
some of them come in very nervous

00:43:05.068 –> 00:43:10.063
and very stressed. And at the end
of it, I would say, you know,

00:43:10.603 –> 00:43:15.708
a large amount of those same people
say, wow, that was fun. It is.

00:43:15.708 –> 00:43:17.168
It’s that relaxed
conversation,

00:43:17.468 –> 00:43:22.048
and that’s what’s important is
is getting everybody

00:43:22.108 –> 00:43:24.973
in that zone of being
relaxed and just like,

00:43:24.973 –> 00:43:27.793
you’re sitting and talking
with somebody at a WordCamp.

00:43:27.933 –> 00:43:31.773
And I think that’s huge
because a lot of them have gone

00:43:31.773 –> 00:43:34.048
on to do other stuff
because they said, wow.

00:43:34.048 –> 00:43:37.988
You know, I didn’t really know I
would enjoy this as much as I did.

00:43:38.208 –> 00:43:40.848
And just giving them the opportunity
and giving them a little

00:43:40.848 –> 00:43:44.613
push and stuff really helps.
I was also nervous,

00:43:44.673 –> 00:43:47.333
and it’s becomes
easier and easier.

00:43:48.113 –> 00:43:52.803
I’m the French translator and
voice for WordPress Podcast,

00:43:53.908 –> 00:43:59.448
that was started four years
ago now, by Javier Casares.

00:43:59.508 –> 00:44:04.683
It it was in Spanish only for three and
a half year and then he started to add,

00:44:05.943 –> 00:44:11.608
English. Then someone, a friend
of him and me now,

00:44:13.028 –> 00:44:16.648
started to do the voice and
translation and voice in Catalan,

00:44:17.508 –> 00:44:22.233
Josep Morán. And then, I said,
oh, then I could do the French.

00:44:23.253 –> 00:44:29.378
And, since we have more languages,
German and others are coming

00:44:30.308 –> 00:44:31.648
even Esperanto.

00:44:32.238 –> 00:44:35.923
But I think that
also helped me,

00:44:36.303 –> 00:44:39.423
to feel more and more confident
doing that every every week,

00:44:39.423 –> 00:44:40.083
you know.

00:44:41.503 –> 00:44:46.318
And if you ask me why and if it
is still enjoyable to do it,

00:44:46.318 –> 00:44:49.528
yes, because I learn
everything that has been

00:44:49.528 –> 00:44:53.783
done in the Make Teams for the week
the weekly news of the Make Teams.

00:44:54.233 –> 00:44:57.913
So, usually, I cannot follow
everything. You know? Yeah.

00:44:57.913 –> 00:45:01.928
Yeah. Really. Well, yeah, I’m
mostly in the Community Team,

00:45:02.888 –> 00:45:05.548
a little bit in the DEIB
group and Sustainability.

00:45:06.008 –> 00:45:12.293
But then, I learned what happens in
other teams, like core design themes.

00:45:13.553 –> 00:45:18.113
So that’s really interesting because,
you know, I just translate,

00:45:18.113 –> 00:45:23.548
but this text is often about the new
features in, getting in the Gutenberg,

00:45:24.168 –> 00:45:28.428
plugin, that the features that
are going to be added to the next

00:45:29.273 –> 00:45:33.213
major version of WordPress. So,
usually, I’m very curious.

00:45:34.393 –> 00:45:38.073
I installed the Gutenberg
plugin to be able to test.

00:45:38.073 –> 00:45:42.648
Like, before 6.5, I wanted
it to have the typography features.

00:45:42.648 –> 00:45:47.388
And before 6.6, that is going
to be released now, next week.

00:45:48.313 –> 00:45:53.353
I wanted the Grid block,
so I guess it’s like yeah.

00:45:53.353 –> 00:45:56.313
So it’s very, still I mean,

00:45:56.313 –> 00:45:59.798
I enjoy doing it because
I learn and I love to learn.

00:45:59.798 –> 00:46:03.638
And at the same time, it helped
me to become, more at ease with,

00:46:04.278 –> 00:46:06.723
microphone even if
the sound is still not.

00:46:06.963 –> 00:46:12.083
There’s always a shhh sound that I
need to learn about and improve.

00:46:12.083 –> 00:46:18.788
But, yeah, to be more at ease with my
voice and, you know, to not be nervous,

00:46:19.648 –> 00:46:23.728
like, oh my god. People are going
to hear my voice. Yeah.

00:46:23.728 –> 00:46:27.823
So what? Yeah. And
for a lot of people,

00:46:28.523 –> 00:46:32.778
not being an English native is
also a problem because they I

00:46:32.858 –> 00:46:34.378
I don’t know if you had
that on your show.

00:46:34.378 –> 00:46:36.298
People say oh, but
what about my accent?

00:46:36.298 –> 00:46:39.018
I don’t speak English well
and stuff like that.

00:46:39.018 –> 00:46:43.933
And I want to inspire people to
to say that it’s not a problem

00:46:43.933 –> 00:46:49.028
and you don’t need to be, ashamed,
at least to have a second language,

00:46:49.028 –> 00:46:51.288
you know, it means
that you learn it.

00:46:51.428 –> 00:46:55.288
Yeah, you know, that’s
interesting because when I edit,

00:46:55.348 –> 00:46:59.143
a lot of people
that have, you know,

00:46:59.143 –> 00:47:00.763
English isn’t their
first language.

00:47:01.223 –> 00:47:04.823
One of the things is I was
talking to somebody and said that

00:47:04.823 –> 00:47:06.908
must take a lot of
editing. And I said, no.

00:47:06.908 –> 00:47:11.948
Really, it doesn’t because
there’s a certain nuance in that.

00:47:11.948 –> 00:47:14.713
This is one of the things I love
about audio is when you listen

00:47:14.713 –> 00:47:17.693
to audio and you’re not actually
looking at somebody talking

00:47:18.633 –> 00:47:24.938
is when somebody is looking for a word
that they can’t quite you know,

00:47:24.938 –> 00:47:27.998
because, yeah, they don’t speak English.
It’s not their first language.

00:47:28.938 –> 00:47:38.193
Leaving in that process of discovering
that word shows the talent

00:47:38.193 –> 00:47:40.513
they have on being able to
speak in that language.

00:47:40.513 –> 00:47:42.508
There’s something about,
So I wouldn’t you know,

00:47:42.508 –> 00:47:47.388
if they maybe repeat something a
couple three times, I don’t cut that out.

00:47:47.388 –> 00:47:51.263
I leave it there because that
shows that they’re making that

00:47:51.263 –> 00:47:54.063
effort to come on and
speak in English.

00:47:54.063 –> 00:47:55.503
And I’m to tell
you the truth,

00:47:55.503 –> 00:47:59.848
I’m constantly amazed when every
anybody from any other country

00:47:59.848 –> 00:48:05.703
comes in on our show, and they’ll say,
well, my English isn’t perfect.

00:48:05.763 –> 00:48:10.003
I say, well, your English is
a lot perfect than if I tried to

00:48:10.003 –> 00:48:13.178
speak your language and stuff. I
said, you’re doing a great job.

00:48:13.178 –> 00:48:16.058
Just relax and don’t worry
about so it there is.

00:48:16.058 –> 00:48:20.218
There’s you gotta let people
work through it and not try to

00:48:20.218 –> 00:48:23.003
make something perfect and let
them know it doesn’t have to

00:48:23.003 –> 00:48:27.083
be perfect because people are
understanding. You know?

00:48:27.083 –> 00:48:31.438
You’re making a huge
effort to do something that a lot

00:48:31.438 –> 00:48:36.878
of people can’t do. So. And about that,
you are learning Portuguese right now.

00:48:36.878 –> 00:48:40.103
Right? Oh, I’m not
even gonna try to talk.

00:48:40.103 –> 00:48:44.203
The you know, I’m it’s
a little easier to understanding

00:48:44.263 –> 00:48:48.368
than to speak. They have so
many weird little sounds.

00:48:48.428 –> 00:48:51.548
I mean, they have sounds that
when I try to make those sounds,

00:48:51.548 –> 00:48:56.183
they don’t sound quite right.
They’re the word doesn’t come.

00:48:56.323 –> 00:48:58.163
So I’m slow.

00:48:58.163 –> 00:49:03.863
It it’s a very, very slow
process and stuff, but people are very,

00:49:05.988 –> 00:49:08.388
what do I wanna
say? You know,

00:49:08.388 –> 00:49:13.463
as long as you don’t expect anybody to
speak English, you get it figured out.

00:49:13.523 –> 00:49:17.683
You know? And sometimes it’s just do
a little bit of back and forth and stuff,

00:49:17.683 –> 00:49:21.203
and you communicate
and stuff as long as you don’t

00:49:21.203 –> 00:49:25.798
make that expectation on them.
And, so we’re doing well.

00:49:25.798 –> 00:49:29.478
It’s gonna take us some
time. Let me tell you. No.

00:49:29.478 –> 00:49:33.243
I think people appreciate when people
are trying to make the effort.

00:49:33.295 –> 00:49:36.495
Yeah. Exactly. Yeah.
Yeah. That’s it.

00:49:36.505 –> 00:49:39.920
It’s not important if you mistake,
like, masculine with feminine

00:49:39.960 –> 00:49:44.920
Yeah. Yeah. That’s it. Or
conjugate correctly. It’s okay.

00:49:46.088 –> 00:49:52.233
And, once, there was an American
who told me I had a I mean,

00:49:52.233 –> 00:49:55.548
I said, what about my French accent?
And he said, oh, it’s charming.

00:49:56.248 –> 00:50:01.018
That’s good, It is charming. I
don’t event need to try to improve Yeah.

00:50:01.848 –> 00:50:05.593
Thank you. It was, Brian from
WP Sessions. Oh, okay.

00:50:05.593 –> 00:50:10.973
That was, nice to hear because,
yeah, I always you know,

00:50:11.638 –> 00:50:14.298
in the French speaking part
of Switzerland where I live,

00:50:15.798 –> 00:50:20.613
we’re a bit self conscious about
I mean some people, not everyone,

00:50:20.833 –> 00:50:24.533
about the Swiss accent when
we speak with, people in France.

00:50:25.233 –> 00:50:28.518
You know? There was a lot of
humorists when I was young.

00:50:28.518 –> 00:50:31.498
I remember one, he was always
making fun of the Swiss accent.

00:50:31.878 –> 00:50:38.113
Yeah. That’s even I know
that some people just try to hide it,

00:50:38.653 –> 00:50:42.173
and even myself at the six
months ago, like, more now,

00:50:42.173 –> 00:50:46.498
in October last year when I started
with WPpodcast translation,

00:50:46.498 –> 00:50:49.538
a WordPress Podcast.
And I said, okay.

00:50:49.538 –> 00:50:52.098
Do I try to speak like
someone from Paris,

00:50:52.098 –> 00:50:58.563
or do I keep my own Swiss Geneva
accent, which is a bit different?

00:50:58.863 –> 00:51:02.783
But at the same time, it
came back naturally. Yeah.

00:51:02.783 –> 00:51:09.968
And also, It’s not, very much,
I mean, it’s not that strong.

00:51:10.428 –> 00:51:13.023
And in every region
of France, anyway,

00:51:13.023 –> 00:51:18.703
there are different accents per
region. So it’s just like another region.

00:51:18.703 –> 00:51:21.043
So. I love accents.

00:51:21.378 –> 00:51:27.138
I absolutely love I feel
bad if somebody loses it or

00:51:27.138 –> 00:51:32.423
something because I think that
that brings that’s where

00:51:32.423 –> 00:51:36.503
you’re from and stuff. And I
even when we do our show,

00:51:36.503 –> 00:51:41.078
I’ve only done a few of them where I let
them do it in their native language.

00:51:41.698 –> 00:51:43.378
I listened to
the entire show.

00:51:43.378 –> 00:51:47.773
I don’t understand a word they’re
saying, but the language,

00:51:47.913 –> 00:51:51.913
I just love listening to another
language because there’s some

00:51:52.153 –> 00:51:57.978
I honestly believe after hearing many
languages, and I shouldn’t say this,

00:51:57.978 –> 00:52:01.838
but no wonder people I’m amazed
they learn English because

00:52:02.613 –> 00:52:06.473
every other language sounds so much
more beautiful when I listen to it.

00:52:06.933 –> 00:52:11.148
Yeah. Languages are beautiful,
but even English. Yeah. Yeah.

00:52:11.148 –> 00:52:15.728
I like I love that as well. The,
like, the cultural richness it brings.

00:52:15.868 –> 00:52:20.523
And, yes, I know the show
you are talking about.

00:52:20.523 –> 00:52:24.523
You had three or four for now. Like
Yeah. Communities around the world.

00:52:24.523 –> 00:52:30.138
Yeah. And, yeah that’s nice. You
had in Spanish, Dutch, Serbian?

00:52:30.198 –> 00:52:35.338
I think those are the three and or
did I do oh, and I did Portuguese.

00:52:35.443 –> 00:52:38.163
I did. Yeah. I did
one. But, yeah,

00:52:38.163 –> 00:52:41.523
I’m gonna I’ve been trying to
get some groups together to do

00:52:41.523 –> 00:52:43.358
some more of those because
I really want Yeah.

00:52:43.678 –> 00:52:47.618
I really wanted to do the French one.
We have been talking about that.

00:52:47.998 –> 00:52:51.138
But I wanted to bring people from
different countries together.

00:52:51.863 –> 00:52:55.863
And that was difficult to
have someone from

00:52:56.183 –> 00:53:01.248
Canada and Belgium and at the same
time. You know? Yeah. Yeah.

00:53:01.248 –> 00:53:05.668
I even reached out to someone in
Togo that, a Meetup organizer.

00:53:05.968 –> 00:53:09.623
So let’s see. I would really
love to do that on your

00:53:09.623 –> 00:53:14.423
show and maybe do a, like,
a collaboration between you and

00:53:14.423 –> 00:53:17.808
your and mine that we could publish
at the same time also. Yeah.

00:53:17.808 –> 00:53:19.408
Yeah. That’d be
great. Yeah. Yeah.

00:53:19.408 –> 00:53:23.383
I will do that even if there’s
there are less people than I

00:53:23.383 –> 00:53:26.423
initially thought.
Yeah. And yeah.

00:53:26.423 –> 00:53:31.918
So, any other thing you want to
say or maybe do you have any

00:53:31.918 –> 00:53:36.238
upcoming project or what
things that I mean,

00:53:36.238 –> 00:53:39.413
the future what is the future
like on your project side and

00:53:39.413 –> 00:53:41.273
on WordPress side
in your opinion?

00:53:41.813 –> 00:53:45.013
You know, it’s for
my project, it’s just,

00:53:45.653 –> 00:53:49.708
we’re at a point where we have
twelve shows now for the podcast

00:53:49.708 –> 00:53:53.408
channel and I think I’m, you know,
I’m pretty set at that.

00:53:53.408 –> 00:54:00.013
We have a, you know, diverse topics.
So, covering a lot of things.

00:54:01.273 –> 00:54:04.288
I have a few other
things in work.

00:54:04.508 –> 00:54:09.648
I’m going to be, adding my
blog back into the site.

00:54:09.708 –> 00:54:11.948
I’m looking
at some of this,

00:54:12.428 –> 00:54:17.073
metaverse stuff that’s going on that
I don’t still don’t understand,

00:54:17.133 –> 00:54:20.273
but, how to reach out more in
that, looking at some other,

00:54:20.948 –> 00:54:22.788
interesting search
stuff for the site.

00:54:22.788 –> 00:54:26.148
So there’s there are different
things project wise that we’re

00:54:26.148 –> 00:54:28.068
just gonna grow
out, DotheWoo.

00:54:28.068 –> 00:54:31.253
I’ve really focused
and zeroed in on that.

00:54:31.793 –> 00:54:35.153
The project itself, I just,
yeah, I’m excited about it.

00:54:35.153 –> 00:54:42.118
I just I’m getting a blog post
ready to put out in, in a while,

00:54:42.178 –> 00:54:45.318
and I call it, rethinking
the WordPress way.

00:54:46.003 –> 00:54:50.083
And I it kind of it
encapsulates I mean, in a nutshell,

00:54:50.083 –> 00:54:55.718
it says what I think about
the future and now with WordPress.

00:54:55.778 –> 00:54:58.038
Everybody uses that term.

00:54:58.098 –> 00:55:02.438
The WordPress way is talking
about something we’re stuck on

00:55:03.133 –> 00:55:05.773
and or it’s the old
way or you know,

00:55:05.773 –> 00:55:09.133
people and some people love it
and some people criticize it,

00:55:09.133 –> 00:55:12.088
and it’s kind of is how
you perceive it yourself.

00:55:12.468 –> 00:55:15.748
For me, the WordPress way,
I’m telling people,

00:55:15.748 –> 00:55:18.468
why don’t we think of it as
what’s happening right now and

00:55:18.468 –> 00:55:22.473
what we’re doing moving forward? It’s
always gonna be the WordPress way.

00:55:22.473 –> 00:55:25.933
Whatever we’re doing and whatever
we’re innovating and changing,

00:55:26.473 –> 00:55:29.948
let’s grasp that and call it
the WordPress way because that’s

00:55:30.248 –> 00:55:34.488
really what it is. It’s how this
community and everybody that

00:55:34.488 –> 00:55:36.488
contributes moves this
project forward.

00:55:36.488 –> 00:55:41.193
So, yeah, I’m always
excited about the progress,

00:55:41.193 –> 00:55:44.368
and I’m always excited
to see, you know,

00:55:44.368 –> 00:55:46.628
all the people I’ve been
involved with, you know,

00:55:47.408 –> 00:55:55.123
the DEIB as much as I’ve been able to
in the community teams on Slack.

00:55:55.123 –> 00:55:59.943
But, I don’t I’m not able
to contribute in that way,

00:56:00.003 –> 00:56:02.468
but I tried to do it through
the podcast and stuff.

00:56:02.468 –> 00:56:07.588
And I’m just excited to, yeah, see
this community continue to grow,

00:56:07.588 –> 00:56:10.708
and I’m excited to see
getting some new faces.

00:56:10.708 –> 00:56:14.283
And we’re getting new faces
in here and there and stuff.

00:56:14.283 –> 00:56:18.203
And it’s just, just yeah. You just
keep going, and that’s like,

00:56:18.203 –> 00:56:20.843
like I said, that just keep
it the WordPress way,

00:56:20.843 –> 00:56:26.378
but make it not something set in
stone. It’s how we change. Yeah.

00:56:27.078 –> 00:56:31.180
Do you have any idea of the
future of WordPress?

00:56:31.180 –> 00:56:34.013
What is your opinion on that?

00:56:34.013 –> 00:56:36.928
You know, it’s really funny.
I’ve been asked that for years,

00:56:36.948 –> 00:56:43.598
and I always told some I always
tell them I don’t because

00:56:43.598 –> 00:56:48.283
I really I don’t know if
it’s I don’t think so much.

00:56:48.283 –> 00:56:51.663
Well, I’m always thinking of, you
know, what’s gonna happen stuff.

00:56:52.283 –> 00:56:56.448
I don’t really have any idea,
and that’s what I like about it,

00:56:56.448 –> 00:57:00.548
I think, is it’s
a bit unpredictable.

00:57:01.143 –> 00:57:05.143
I mean, you never know what is going
to, you know, what twist and turn.

00:57:05.143 –> 00:57:06.843
I mean, there’s things
that are laid out.

00:57:07.063 –> 00:57:13.018
So, you know, there’s a lot
of people that think, you know,

00:57:13.018 –> 00:57:16.378
things are a standstill, that
there’s too much change.

00:57:16.378 –> 00:57:21.053
I just I’m somebody that
there’s two parts of WordPress.

00:57:21.053 –> 00:57:24.913
There’s a tool, which I leave
in the hands of all the people

00:57:25.058 –> 00:57:27.378
that are really smart and
know what they’re doing,

00:57:27.378 –> 00:57:30.018
all these people that contribute
and put things together,

00:57:30.018 –> 00:57:34.038
and I don’t try to make it sound
like I have the answer for

00:57:34.233 –> 00:57:36.653
what is being done or
what should be done.

00:57:36.953 –> 00:57:42.073
The community, I think it’s still here.
It’s still gonna grow.

00:57:42.073 –> 00:57:44.138
You know, it’s
still gonna be here.

00:57:44.298 –> 00:57:49.978
Hopefully, it’ll, even become more
diverse. Things will change.

00:57:49.978 –> 00:57:51.678
You know? We’re always
gonna have challenges.

00:57:52.193 –> 00:57:54.533
So I kinda take it
a day at a time.

00:57:54.753 –> 00:57:59.233
You know, I know it’s gonna be here for
a while, probably quite a long time.

00:57:59.233 –> 00:58:04.518
What that looks like, I
absolutely have no idea. Yeah.

00:58:05.778 –> 00:58:09.798
During the Switzerland Community Day,
we had a 22 years old,

00:58:10.098 –> 00:58:12.713
person who is teaching
WordPress, I mean,

00:58:12.933 –> 00:58:15.833
she’s learning to be a teacher
or something like that.

00:58:16.133 –> 00:58:20.233
And, with the question how to
attract the younger generation,

00:58:21.178 –> 00:58:25.018
she said it would be absolutely
a game changer if there were

00:58:25.018 –> 00:58:30.573
more influencers on short video, like
TikTok and YouTube shorts

00:58:30.573 –> 00:58:34.733
and Instagram, to talk about
WordPress like some, like,

00:58:34.733 –> 00:58:38.278
proprietary SaaS
platforms are doing.

00:58:38.278 –> 00:58:42.458
They’re actually paying influencers
to talk about their platform.

00:58:42.838 –> 00:58:49.433
So maybe a bit of this one is going to
end on short videos if you are okay.

00:58:49.573 –> 00:58:53.033
Yeah. Like, to promote. I will
try I will try it. You know?

00:58:53.668 –> 00:58:56.148
Like, yeah, promote
WordPress on,

00:58:57.508 –> 00:59:01.688
on the platforms where the younger
generation is. Yeah. Yes?

00:59:02.123 –> 00:59:05.083
So Yeah. Yeah. And I think
people need to do that and take

00:59:05.083 –> 00:59:08.763
more advantage of it that are, you know,
already producing content and that,

00:59:09.678 –> 00:59:14.498
works to move into that and stuff.
Yeah. We just gotta, you know yep.

00:59:14.558 –> 00:59:17.778
We gotta Yeah. We gotta get it
out there and much as we can.

00:59:18.003 –> 00:59:21.923
So I will take, like, your
best sentences and best tips

00:59:21.923 –> 00:59:26.388
from Bob and watch the full video
on, on long form or something.

00:59:26.388 –> 00:59:30.408
And, actually, it’ll attract people
to WordPress and not turn them away.

00:59:31.028 –> 00:59:36.643
No. No. No. No. Okay. So it has
been a pleasure to have you.

00:59:36.643 –> 00:59:39.763
We are now at one hour,
so I think it’s, yeah,

00:59:39.763 –> 00:59:43.888
it’s very nice to see
you every time, in person,

00:59:43.888 –> 00:59:45.888
and it has been very
nice to have you this,

00:59:46.528 –> 00:59:50.423
with for this conversation
with you. Well, thank you.

00:59:50.483 –> 00:59:55.283
Thank you to you and DotheWoo
dothewoo.com. Right? Yes.

00:59:55.283 –> 00:59:59.738
DotheWoo.io. Oh,
sorry. Yeah. DotheWoo.io.

00:59:59.738 –> 01:00:05.758
So I will, Actually, it we do own
DotheWoo.com too. So it’ll forward.

01:00:06.353 –> 01:00:09.653
Yeah. I think I
knew that. I mean,

01:00:09.873 –> 01:00:13.493
I was the dot com is like it
comes automatically. Oh, it is.

01:00:13.553 –> 01:00:17.118
Right. Yeah. And all
the the past episodes, I,

01:00:18.058 –> 01:00:24.373
I encourage everyone to listen to,
like, some wiseness that we can find,

01:00:25.073 –> 01:00:26.993
wisdom. Sorry. That’s
the English word.

01:00:26.993 –> 01:00:29.873
The wisdom we can find in some
of the episodes and some of

01:00:29.873 –> 01:00:33.858
the guests you had. So
thank you so much for everything

01:00:33.858 –> 01:00:37.558
you do for the community, and thank
you so much for this conversation,

01:00:37.618 –> 01:00:40.893
Bob. Thank you. And it was
an absolute pleasure,

01:00:41.273 –> 01:00:43.993
kicking off your podcast
on the push first show.

01:00:43.993 –> 01:00:48.318
So I really appreciate the invite.
My pleasure. Thank you so much.

01:00:48.538 –> 01:00:50.158
Bye bye. Bye.


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