25 Feb 2026
WordPress Planet
WPTavern: #206 – Jonathan Desrosiers on WordPress Sustainability, Community Engagement, and Release Strategies
[00:00:19] Nathan Wrigley: Welcome to the Jukebox Podcast from WP Tavern. My name is Nathan Wrigley.
Jukebox is a podcast which is dedicated to all things WordPress. The people, the events, the plugins, the blocks, the themes, and in this case WordPress sustainability, community engagement and release strategies.
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So on the podcast today, we have Jonathan Desrosiers. Jonathan has been involved with WordPress for almost two decades, both as a user and a contributor. He's a principal software engineer at Bluehost, where his role sees him sponsored to work on WordPress through the Five for the Future program. Over the years, he's become a Core committer, and has spent many hours thinking about how to enhance the contributor experience, and make it easier for people to get involved in the project.
In this episode we discuss how WordPress releases might become more impactful by synchronizing them with flagship community events like WordCamps and State of the Word. A recent experiment of combining a major release with a live event spark some excitement, and Jonathan shares insights on the logistics behind such synchronized moments, the challenges posed by international holidays, and regional scheduling, and the broader vision for connecting releases with community gatherings.
We also get into the challenging landscape of the WordPress community, how it's recovering from the effects of COVID, the struggle to rebuild local Meetups, and efforts like mentorship and educational initiatives to bring in new contributors, particularly from younger generations.
Jonathan reflects on the importance of making release moments engaging and fun, akin to the anticipation of a new TV series or software launch, and the role of AI and open source in empowering a new wave of builders.
If you're interested in how release cycles, community events, and contributor onboarding are involved in WordPress, or what the future might hold for the platform and its community, this episode is for you.
If you're interested in finding out more, you can find all of the links in the show notes by heading to wptavern.com/podcast, where you'll find all the other episodes as well.
And so without further delay, I bring you Jonathan Desrosiers.
I am joined on the podcast by Jonathan Desrosiers. Hello.
[00:03:06] Jonathan Desrosiers: Hi, how are you?
[00:03:07] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, good. Jonathan's joining me again. Most recently, I think we were at WordCamp somewhere. I can't exactly remember where, but I was chatting with him and Joe Dolson if memory serves. And a very different conversation to be had today because Jonathan has been mulling over how we can make releases impactful, and also how we can bind those to community events, particularly flagship WordPress events like WordCamps, things like that.
Before we begin that conversation, Jonathan, I wonder, it's a bit of a banal question, but people like to have the context of who you are. So would you mind just, very quick potted bio. Just tell us who you are and what you do in the WordPress space.
[00:03:44] Jonathan Desrosiers: Sure. So my name is Jonathan Desrosiers. I am a principal software engineer at Bluehost and I am sponsored there, the majority of my time is sponsored to contribute back to the WordPress project through the Five for the Future program. And so I've been there, probably since 2018, I think. And I've been a Core committer for almost eight years now.
I've been involved as an accredited contributor for 13 years now. And so I've been involved with WordPress for over a decade in many ways, contributing, but also as a user for almost, geez, almost two decades now I think. And so, I just had that realisation, it's been a really long time. It's been almost 20 years that I've been at least using WordPress in some way.
But week to week I do a lot of thinking about contributor experience, how we can automate things, or how we can make our processes more clear so that more people can participate. And just generally making sure that everybody has what they need to be successful. And whether that's mentorship, or they have blockers they need, certain people to come together and discuss, and get a consensus or understanding, you know, how the sausage is made in some way.
[00:04:56] Nathan Wrigley: I think it's fair to say that you are very much connected to the WordPress project. I think it's the fulcrum of your working life, and you are working at a very high level as well. So Core committer, things like that.
Now, in the recent past, it was probably, I want to say December in the year 2025, we had a kind of strange event happened. Not strange in the sense of weird, but strange in the sense of different, unusual. A release of WordPress came out and it coincided with an actual event. Now, in this case, it was State of the Word. So there was a bunch of people, and I believe they were gathered in New York. I could be wrong about that, but I think it was in.
[00:05:33] Jonathan Desrosiers: It was in San Francisco.
[00:05:35] Nathan Wrigley: San Francisco. Okay, there we go. Thank you for the correction. It was in San Francisco and the idea was that the release of WordPress would go out and it would be bound to this event. And there was this almost, how can we describe it? It was almost like television, basically. It was being filmed and streamed live all over the place. And there was this feeling of a big red button. There was a lot of people gathered around and they all sort of leaned in and pushed a big red button, and the release of WordPress came out.
Now, I don't know if the button actually did anything or if it was really sort of smoke and mirrors. I like the idea that the button actually did signal the release, but I don't know if that's the case. But the point was, there was a little bit of theater put into it. There was this idea that, okay, we've got this live event which lots of people will be watching. We've got a release which we need to do, which lots of people will be looking forward to. Why don't we sort of combine the two things?
And so it was a bit of PR really. And it also felt a bit like sort of marketing, and I'm going to use gimmick in the real sense of the word. So not like gimmick as in something pointless, but gimmick as in something different, unique. Something to draw your attention and grab you in. And I think the idea has been proposed that in the year 2026, the flagship events, the flagship WordCamps, so I'll list them in order in which they're happening.
So we've got WordCamp Asia, and then we've WordCamp Europe, and then we've got WordCamp US. The three releases of WordPress during 2026 will happen in tandem with those events. Now, why? Why would we want to do this?
[00:07:12] Jonathan Desrosiers: Yeah, so I don't think it was intentional, but the schedule just happened to coincide. You know, we were working on 6.9 and we realised, oh, the release date is the same as State of the Word. And so, I can't remember who originally had the idea, but it was mentioned that it would be really neat to just be able to publish it live at the event and celebrate that.
I guess the main reason behind it is just that, the more I'm involved in open source, the more I realise that the code and the license and all those things are important, but the most important thing underneath any open source project is the community that's involved with it. And what better way to celebrate our achievements and our accomplishments when we get together in different ways.
And so, typically that's in Slack or social media, right? We celebrate a release and we share the posts and say what we're excited about. But we also get together at different events and we do the same thing, right? We talk about what we're excited about, what we're working on, what's coming, or what we think should change in certain ways. Why not just do that at the same time and create even a more ultimate celebration, right? Another community moment where people have another opportunity to feel involved in something greater than them.
[00:08:25] Nathan Wrigley: Do you have any notion that this is going to be carried forward? I mean, I know that there was obviously a bit of serendipity in how it happened. The coincidence of timing and things like that. But do you have every confidence that this will happen, that Asia will get a release, Europe will get a release, and the US will get a release. In the year 2026, do you think that's going to actually occur?
[00:08:46] Jonathan Desrosiers: We will see. So as the proposed schedule is for this calendar year, right? There's three releases. Unfortunately, it's tough because the people planning WordCamps don't plan around our software's release cadence, right? They plan around budget, regional holidays, travel factors, weather, cost of venues and availability.
And so, you know, it's not reasonable for the Core team and the people working on releases to say you have to have an event in a certain month, right? And so this year, some people may not have noticed, but WordCamp Asia is in April this year, which it's been in February so far in the previous editions. And WordCamp Europe is in June, which it's traditionally usually in.
And so that's not a big enough gap to have another major release. And so the proposed schedule is saying, let's release during WordCamp Asia, let's release during WordCamp US, and then we'll release again at the end of the year around State of the Word. We don't have a date for State of the Word yet, but it's around where we think it might be.
And likewise, creating a schedule for releases is incredibly hard because if we don't release in the first week of April, for example, then I believe the whole month of April has major religious holidays scattered throughout it in different areas of the world. And if we released in March, that was way too soon because we started the alpha phase of 7.0, that starts when the previous release is branched, like it's separated from the primary branch in the code base, and that happened in like November.
But there's US Thanksgiving, there's Hanukkah, there's Christmas, there's New Year's, right? A lot of people in the community take the majority of December off, and so that's like a washed month, right? And so we would've had essentially four weeks until the feature complete point of the release. So that was too soon. And so it's just as hard to plan the release schedule in a way that doesn't negatively impact everybody as best as possible as it is to plan these major events.
And so I can't say that it will be a guarantee going forward. We're trying it out this year to see how it goes and what we can learn from it. We felt that the State of the Word was successful and it was exciting. It was unique in its own ways. And so we want to try, continue trying this this year and see how it goes.
[00:11:06] Nathan Wrigley: Gosh, the piece that you just said there about the religious holidays and what have you, that really opens up a really interesting discussion. Because it is quite likely, I imagine, that the listenership to this podcast probably never gave that any thought, that this kind of international calendar, be it a religious calendar or maybe just a vacation calendar in certain parts of the globe would really impact when the release can happen.
Because there are people who are committing to the project, and they tend to be in certain jurisdictions. And so if there are people who are on, I don't know, a week long holiday, nationally, in a specific jurisdiction, and they typically are a large part of the team that are committing in various different respects, that's important, but probably something that many people would not have thought about.
Now, in terms of these releases then, is the idea, well, I'll backpedal a little bit. It occurred to me that quite a lot of the people who may be involved in releases are the very kind of people who would find themselves also at some of these flagship events. Now, obviously it's not going to be 100%, maybe it's 25% of the people who are release leads and part of the teams that are committing here, there, and everywhere.
I was worried that there'd be people on airplanes, people trying to land and orientate themselves in the country that they've landed in in the same period of time when they would've been heads down, in their office, in their study, figuring out the bits that might be broken with the upcoming release. Is that a thing? Is that part of the jigsaw puzzle of this?
[00:12:32] Jonathan Desrosiers: It definitely is, yeah. With any release, there's no time of the day where everyone on the planet is available to work on something, right? And so another part of this is that, in a way it forces us to have a major release in different geographic areas so that everywhere on the globe there's a WordPress release that they may be able to participate in, right?
And so, likewise with travel, right? So when we assemble a release squad, we have to think, okay, it's based in, for example, this one was planned to be released at WordCamp Asia in India. So we want to make sure we have a mix of people that are in different areas of the world. And not just so that there's always people around to respond to things throughout the entire cycle, but we also want to have people that are present and not present at the event that are participating. And maybe the wifi is completely unusable or maybe something happens, right? So it's good to have people that are there and not.
And that was part of the announcement too, is that we tried to underscore the point that it would be great if everybody could go to WordCamp Asia, but traveling is not a requirement to participate in the release at all. And that's a good thing, because it's good to have people in multiple areas, multiple time zones.
With WordCamp Asia, once contributor day ends, it's the beginning of the US daytime, right? And so those contributors can sign off and there's people around to help carry that torch and continue on if there's any follow-up issues or anything that needs to be investigated.
And so, yeah, that's also a consideration is how, I guess we can call it global coverage, right? Like, how can we ensure we have global coverage so that there are people with the right skill sets, and right availability, and right knowledge, to be able to take on certain tasks or responsibilities or perform investigations, whatever may need to be done as part of that release process.
[00:14:26] Nathan Wrigley: I, like you, am really in the weeds of the WordPress project. I obsess about it in a way that's probably not all that healthy. I'm very well aware of when the next release is coming up. I'm usually fairly aware of what is going to be in that release. But I imagine most people using WordPress, it's probably a bit of a surprise. You know, they open up WordPress one day and either it has updated. If it's a point release, probably it's a more manual thing, if it's a major release, I should say, but if it's a more minor release, maybe things have updated in the background during the course of the night and what have you.
But I'm thinking of TV series now. So when a successful TV series has a new season, there's all this fanfare and buildup and you know it's coming. You see the commercials, you see the adverts. And the moment that TV series comes around, you are excited, you're ready to go. And I remember back in the day, this is going back a long time, when Firefox would make a release, they sort of did this thing like, I don't know, every 18 months or something like that. Not like now where it's every couple of hours it seems, that browsers update themselves.
But when it went to, I don't know, 3.6 or something like that, there was this big fanfare, this big moment. Everybody took stock and what have you. And are you trying to encourage a bit of that? Are you trying to create a bit of razzmatazz and drama and intrigue and awareness and all of that around the release, and make it feel like an important thing, which with the best will in the world, it kind of has not been more recently? Most people, it just updates. There's no fanfare whatsoever. But we can leverage it to make it important, significant, fun, interesting.
[00:16:04] Jonathan Desrosiers: Yes and no, right? Like, we want to celebrate the community and the work we're doing now. I actually would love it if we could get to a point where we're releasing every, I don't know, every week or every month even, right? Not have to wait every three or four months. There's some value in having that penultimate moment, right? Of, we've worked for three months on this. But there's also aspects of the world where we expect things faster and more instant and waiting for the patch that you submit in January to be released in April is not really, like maybe you lose interest in contributing in that time, right? So there's many different things like that.
Some things that you mentioned really resonated with me as far as awareness of what's coming or like what's been done. In a way, the fact that users are not so aware of what's being added or what their site has updated to, it's a sign of the success of auto updates and how seamless those are.
Because for a little while I've been considering, when you update WordPress manually, you're redirected into the about page in the dashboard, right? And every release, there's a new about page that's designed, it works hand in hand with, we call them the micro sites, which is like a wordpress.org's landing page that showcases the release. And it just explains all the features that have been added.
But you only see that if you either go to the about page manually or you manually click update when you're in the dashboard. And a site might have many administrators that only the person that actually updates will see it. And so I've been thinking about ways that we can make users more aware that their site is updated. Or maybe that's not the important part, but maybe it's just the important part to make them aware of the new features that are available to them, right?
Maybe we put some type of a widget on the dashboard where we link off to a Learn WordPress page that teaches you about how to use the Notes feature that got added. The other thing too is you mentioned about the TV shows advertise when they're coming up, right? Maybe we need to do a better job of advertising what's coming up and encouraging people to opt in early and test.
And in a way a more rapid release cycle leads to that because many of the browsers have different feature flags and they build features out in different branches, and you can actually opt into testing a specific feature and that would get turned on, but maybe not all the other things that they're working on until it's ready.
And so maybe we need different ways for people to get involved testing, or trying things out earlier to understand what's coming, but also to give us valuable feedback, how it works on their site, what breaks, what it doesn't interact with. All of that is very valuable feedback, and we should always be striving to get more testers and more awareness around what's coming because it creates new feedback loops that are valuable for different reasons.
[00:18:58] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, it's kind of interesting, and what I'm about to say, I am sure that a significant proportion of the listeners to this podcast will say, no, Nathan, we don't want this. But here's a proposal then. Here's an idea. And again, I'm going to hark back to the TV series.
The TV series, typically when they've started advertising between other television programs, that TV series has been made, the footage has been shot, the graphics have been done. It's basically ready to roll. And then they parcel all that up and then they release little snippets of what's coming so that you can prepare yourself and get excited.
I kind of wondered if something like that in the dashboard, akin to the about us page, but in the run up to the release. So all the graphics have been made. We know basically what's going to drop in this release. Now it may get tweaked here and there at the edges, but we know what's coming. I've always thought that would be a really nice idea.
I would love to see that. And I realise a proportion of people would think, no, we really don't want that. But I think that's a perfect opportunity to get people drawn into, oh, this is coming. Collaborative editing, that's about to happen is it? Gosh, that's really interesting.
And then this call to action could be dropped in, but we need some testing around the edges of it. We've got the bare bones of it, but we need some more eyeballs on it and what have you. So that proactive demonstration of what's going to happen rather than the reactive, your site has been updated, here's what there is, which is already there. This is more of a here's what's coming, get excited, get involved, yada yada.
[00:20:29] Jonathan Desrosiers: In some ways the feature branch model that I described lends to that, right? Because then it's not, here comes this feature and then, oh, actually we left it out of this release, right? It's its own thing that's being worked on. And then when it's released, it's released, and it's here. But it doesn't make it any less, any worse off than other things that are shipping in the release, right? Because it's its own thing, and it's its own, it has its own criteria to be ready, in a state that we're comfortable with shipping it and supporting it forever because of backwards compatibility.
And so yeah, I think that what you're describing is essentially what I was describing, a little bit more detail. And there's of course a lot of nuance there around how often do we do that? We have a lot of parts of the release process that need to be automated before we can even consider that. The different parts of the block editor are, many of it is managed as packages, NPM packages. And so a lot of those are so interconnected, it's a little difficult to release just one feature because they're all being updated at the same time.
And so like there's some architectural things to think about around that. Like, how do we compartmentalize things better to be able to do that? Make sure we don't accidentally include something that's not ready but when we intended to include a certain feature. There's a lot to unpack there and I don't know that we'll ever get there just because of the sheer size of the project and how, backwards compatibility, how long we've been around.
But I think that training users that auto updates are important to have enabled that are quality, you know, not shipping things that break people's sites as much as possible, even though it's unavoidable because of how flexible WordPress is.
After 6.9 came out, I was looking into some of the data because I had this gut feeling that 6.9 was being updated to, slower than other releases. And so for a little while I was looking at that. And after about a month, I was like, okay, this is just a hunch. Let me go and actually look at the data around this.
And so what I noticed was actually the opposite. When I looked at, I created 5% thresholds for the percentage of total WordPress sites. And when I looked at the data, I realised that for the last 10 releases, let's see here. So every major version of the last six to eight releases has passed 35% of all WordPress sites in two days or less. And also every one of these columns as far as percentages is increasing.
And so WordPress 6.9 reached the 50% threshold of all WordPress sites in 10 days, and that's four days faster than 6.8, which was the next fastest. And currently we're approaching 65% threshold of all WordPress sites. And only six other releases have done that so far. All of them are the most recent ones, except for 4.9, which we all know had a waiting period for Gutenberg. And the only release the past 70% was 6.8.
And so I'm interested to see how this trend continues because it's showing an acceleration of adoption for each new major version of WordPress. They're getting installed faster, by more people. It's a sign that we're shipping stable software. People are more confident. People are opting into auto updates for major versions. And in general, it's just a quality sign that we're doing something right here. And so how can we lean into that more?
[00:23:52] Nathan Wrigley: Okay, let's pivot a little bit. Let's sort of bind community, we did touch on this a minute ago, but let's spend a little bit of time binding the community to these kind of things because right at the start you mentioned that really the community is the underpinnings of your interest in the WordPress space. The code is obviously tremendously important, but without the community there is no code basically.
And so we've got these events. We're trying to create interest around the WordCamps and the releases at the same time. But just looking back over the last period of time, let's go for year, two years, something like that. I don't know what your spidey sense is telling you, but my spidey sense is telling me that that community portion, it's sort of slowly but surely, it feels like it's withering away slightly.
I'm not really picking up on like this angry mob of people who are stamping their feet and shouting, I don't want anything to do with the WordPress community and then disappearing. I mean maybe there's a few of those, probably, somewhere. But I don't get a sense of that. I just get this sense of sort of, somebody's pulled the plug out of a bathtub and it's slowly sort of draining away.
Attendance down at WordCamps. Meetups struggling to sort of get the numbers that they had several years ago. And so it would feel like at the moment, you would have to be watching the news fairly closely, especially right now. So at the beginning of February, 2026 is when we're recording this. There does seem to be a push from the senior leadership to make WordPress Meetups and things like that, a much more central part.
And then there's this whole broad spectrum of educational initiatives as well going on. So we've got WP Campus Connect, we've got the Credits Program and a whole smorgasbord of other things which is happening.
So there's no question there, really, what I'm just trying to do is give you the opportunity to bind the two things, the WordPress community and the software, and really just talk about whether you've noticed the same thing as me, where there's this slow, withering of the community. And maybe this is a part of just sort of getting it all back together, making events like this a bit more fun and interesting.
[00:26:02] Jonathan Desrosiers: Yeah. I think there's a few things there to call out. The first observation I've had over the last year is there's a palpable excitement to build with WordPress again. I'm noticing there's a renewed enthusiasm. People, they want to move on from certain things, and they want to get back to building experiences and tools and things on the WordPress platform.
But there's also, I think we're dealing with some, in some ways, a long tail COVID effect, right? There was obviously, you know, a lack of in-person events for a while, and during that time a lot of the people who were keeping Meetups alive and WordCamps alive, they moved on, or burnt out, and chose not to return after. And so there was a break in that pipeline of, usually there's a lead doing that and there's other people learning under them, and then they move up and take over. And that was totally disrupted and I think that we're still trying to rebuild that.
I think that it manifests differently in different areas too. So for example, the APAC WordCamp community is very strong and they have lots of WordCamps. But in the United States, there was one WordCamp that wasn't WordCamp US last year, I think, Montclair. And I lead the Boston WordPress Meetup and so finding speakers is difficult. Getting people to come out is difficult as well. And I think those are partially just larger societal shifts where it's harder to get people to come out to certain things. And we just have different preferences as far as how we consume information or learn.
But I'm still not sure why the difference in the geographical areas, and I think it may have to do more with, APAC is a more emerging market when it comes to WordPress, right? Like their community, especially in certain areas has been growing and is much newer than it is in the US. And so I think that they're growing their communities for the first time in many ways, right? But in the US it's the second or third or fourth time that we're growing those communities or revitalising those communities. And the form that that needs to take, I think is a little different. And I'm not clear on what the holdup is there.
But I do know that a big factor of that is to get new people involved with WordPress and interested in WordPress, and that's why some of the priorities that Mary Hubbard published, and one of them in particular is education and awareness and all of those different things that work together in the form of the WP Credits program, mentorship programs. There's been the contributor mentorship programs that happen every few quarters in WordPress over the last few years.
And we've seen some really great contributors who were mentored in that program, and then the next time the program happened, they mentored, and then they became a team lead, and then they served on release squads. And so we've seen some really great contributed journeys through those paths.
[00:28:53] Nathan Wrigley: I'll just sort of run through with you the kind of things that I've noticed in my part of the world. So I think COVID is an enormous part of it. It upended so many ordinary things in life. So, as an example, you know, people obviously, they ceased going out, and then that pattern of not going out became habituated. People didn't go out because that's not what you do.
And in the UK we have this institution called the pub, which I'm sure you've heard of. And it used to be that prior to COVID, the pub was the real centerpiece of many communities. You know, towns, suburbs, what have you. Everybody would coalesce around the pub and that was very important. Since the pandemic, a lot of those institutions, they don't really function in that way anymore. You know, there isn't the throughput, there isn't the footfall and so they go out of business.
And the same, I presume is true in the WordPress space. You know, we're trying to encourage people to get up, leave their home, spend money on transportation. Obviously there's the time cost, the sunk cost of time and what have you as well. It's difficult, but it makes me more sanguine that it's not just like, it's not just a WordPress thing, you know, it's the whole of society.
But like you said, I get the feeling that the WordPress community has begun to address it. And the way it's being addressed is through these educational initiatives. Trying to get a throughput of younger talent. So get them at the school age, get them at the university age, and then hopefully they will have an interest. They'll get a flavor of what it means to be involved in these Meetups and things like that and hopefully take those on.
It's a laudable goal. I hope that it has the capacity to transfer. You know, so in a decade's time we can look back and say, look what happened. This young blood emerged. I think it's yet to be seen. I think certainly in the area, the locale where I am, the United Kingdom, we don't see evidence of that yet. Maybe in the US that would also mirror.
But from everything that I've learned and the people that I've talked to for this podcast and events in Asia and places like that, that seems to be a really different picture. There seems to be a real thirst for solutions like WordPress. Because there's a direct kind of career path there. You know, you can pick up a free piece of open source software, crack open a laptop and get going and start to sell your services far and wide. And so again, there's no question there, just observations that I hope these initiatives bear fruit. But it'll be interesting to see. Only time will tell.
[00:31:16] Jonathan Desrosiers: I think at the root of what we're dealing with is that people are motivated by what they see as valuable, right? If they're not going out to events, so they're not engaging with the community, they don't recognise or feel that it's valuable to them in some way. And so we're having to reprove why communities are valuable, why open source is valuable, why you should care.
And then the other aspect of it is, you know, overall project sustainability. We can't just keep getting older. We need to have a balance of new, younger people that get involved as well.
And so one way to lean into getting younger is obviously, like you said, to approach people at schooling age, right? Or university, and teach them about open source. Show them how to contribute, how to be a part of a community, and why it's valuable. But we have to be really careful because we need to be prepared to, I've written in the past that we need to be prepared to activate these contributors, right?
So it's one thing to make them aware of this, but it's another thing to make sure they're properly supported and we give them pathways to grow. We give them clear criteria to be successful, clear projects to work on, so they understand what they're doing and what they're trying to accomplish.
And I think that this is one thing that is also a benefit of having the releases coincide with these major events because new people are getting together already, so why not use that opportunity?
One of the goals that every table lead and every organiser of a Contributor Day has is to ensure as many contributors see, realise their work over the finish line. And so on the Core team that's a patch that someone tests gets committed, or a patch someone writes gets committed to WordPress, right? How can we make that more valuable, where it's not just ending when they leave Contributor Day?
And so I've been thinking about all the different logistics and helping to coordinate with the WordCamp Asia team and the 7.0 release team to make sure we're prepared for that final day. And one of the things I've been thinking about is the release process itself. One of the best, lowest friction ways to get involved with WordPress in the actual release process. And you don't need any experience contributing to really take part in it. And that's when we get to a point where we say, okay, here's the zip file of what we think we're going to ship, go test it.
And so people will take it, and they install it on their server and they say which version of PHP they're using, and how they installed it and what they did and, you know, it worked. And the majority of that though is just looking for problems. And when problems don't come up, we just don't do anything with all the information that people are dropping, right? And there might be 50 people at a major release. We call them parties, but at the release parties that are dropping information. And again, if there's no red flags, that information just largely goes away.
But, how can we rethink that and make that effort more meaningful, and also create a pathway for them to continue contributing in some way past that moment? And having everybody in person is a great way to have pilot programs for different approaches, because there can be someone that briefs a set of contributors on what we're going to try this time, here's what we want to do, give us feedback on how you felt it went. Everybody that's involved in the squad and doing the release can say, oh yeah, that actually was really helpful and better than what we do before.
And these newer individuals that are learning also have fresh perspective. And so having them participate in these, I guess I'll call them experiments of such, but just these processes and things that we are considering, it helps get that fresh opinion and perspective on why things are working and why things aren't and helps us just improve.
[00:35:04] Nathan Wrigley: I've got three children and they're all of a certain age now, they're certainly no longer small. You know, they're basically adults. And it's really fascinating looking at the kind of things that engage them. I think they've just grown up in a different era. The diet of the kind of things that excite them is very different to the kind of things that excited somebody of my generation, just because, you know, they've had the whole world in their pocket ever since they were born.
And having that dialogue with the next generation, and trying to figure out what it is that they want and that they desire. And even things like open source. So when, I was already an adult before the internet began to be put into everybody's homes, and people started to own personal computers and things like that. And so I was ready to receive that message of open source right at the start. And it became really obvious to me, oh, that's a really clever way of making software.
But now of course we've got this landscape of closed platforms. Everything's free at the point of use, but everything's not free in any way, shape, or form. You can think of the siloed platforms that I'm talking about. My children have been raised with those and so just even making the argument about open source is hard enough.
So I think what I'm really advocating for is, obviously we've got to shepherd these people in, but at the same time, I think we have to be willing to let go of a lot of the things that we think the project is. We think the Meetup should contain. We think the WordCamp should maintain. Because at the end of the day, we're competing for eyeballs and if we don't make it, I'm going to use the word exciting, if we don't make it exciting, they're just not going to show up.
And I feel that's a piece of the next five, six years, trying to figure out what excites these people. Because unless we do excite them, I fear the Meetups are going to be empty and there'll be a certain throughput from the WordPress initiatives, Campus Connect and what have you. But we need to make these things exciting, interesting, innovative, fun. But I don't have an answer to that.
[00:36:59] Jonathan Desrosiers: Yeah, you touched on something interesting that I've been thinking about quite a bit. I gave a talk last year about how to implement AI into open source communities while maintaining what makes them great in the first place, which is the human element, right? The community aspects of it.
And so I've been thinking a lot about just AI and how it's affecting us. And there's a few things that I'm really excited about with AI and those are empowerment and learning. And so you can have an AI model that digests massive amounts of information and summarises it in the specific way that you learn best, right?
And likewise, I'm noticing that people feel more empowered to try things themselves because they have more of an ability to distill a lot of information down into something that's digestible, right?
And so I feel that the tension between those two areas of closed and open is growing. Because when I was growing up, computers were just starting to be less than the size of a car, right? People were starting to have them in their house. But they were still at a point where, the computer went bad, you took it apart and fixed it. You didn't trade it in for a new one, right?
And so I feel like my generation, there was a level of, we had the tools, but we had to go out and build the things we needed ourselves in some ways, and experiment. And then there's been the generations between that and now where they pretty much had everything that they needed.
But AI is changing what we need, or what we want, and what ways we want it. And so now there's a new found need to build again in some ways. And in some ways it's kind of a circle, right? Because it's, the AI is making it easier to build, but it's also making you more aware you have to build. It's kind of like building against itself in certain ways.
But I'm finding that there's more of a willingness to do things on your own, try to tackle something you would typically need to hire a professional to do in the past. You know in many ways we need to lean into that because then that gets people excited. Oh, WordPress, I could use WordPress to build this, or I could use just the WordPress for just the database part of it and the REST API and have some type of application on it because it scales well and it caches or whatever it may be.
But I feel like people are starting to scoff at the walled gardens a little bit more, and I'm seeing that there's a resurgence in things like RSS. I'm seeing new RSS readers are popping up. People are leaning towards the Fediverse. People are blogging more, having their own website instead of just their business on Facebook, right? Because that can get taken away.
We saw with Twitter how they just chose to close their platform. And embeds no longer work in WordPress because they shut down oEmbeds. And I feel like it changes every month, but there's times where you have to log in to see a post, or you can't see a post, or you can see one post and then you can't see any more that's shared externally. Yeah, so it gives you more control.
[00:40:02] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, I think that's really interesting. And I also noticed that swing. Obviously, I don't have any broader data. I can only point to the things in my life, the little intuitions that I'm gaining. But I see the same thing. I see an interest in AI, so we'll just put that to one side for a moment. But in terms of the closed platforms, I do see that the people that I know who are significantly younger than me, they have intuitions around that, and they've kind of figured out for themselves that this is not great. It seems to be a vehicle to serve me ads, and I wonder what the incentive is for the stuff that I'm seeing, and maybe it's kind of pushing me off in one direction politically and all of that.
And yeah, this resurgence of RSS, of the blog. I know it's hard to talk about, but it's almost like we're doing some sort of archaeology in the internet space. We've gone back to something older. We kind of dug up the relics from the past and we found that they're still usable. They're still there.
It'll be so interesting. But I think if it was just the RSS and it was just the open nature of things, I think that's going to be a hard sell. But throw AI into the mix, this capacity for somebody with very little relationship with writing code who can get something credible out. Now, it may not be robust, it may have security problems here and there. The accessibility may be something that needs to be addressed and what have you. But who can argue with the excitement of it.
You know, you tell a computer to make a colourful website that's got rainbows and pictures of cats, and sure enough, two minutes later you have a website with rainbows and pictures of cats. And that wasn't possible until just a couple of years ago. And so I think we've got the tools. I think there's things that we can deploy. AI seems to be the primary one at the moment. Let's hope that that continues to be sustainable.
But that's interesting. That gives me some hope. And the way that you've encapsulated it, open source combined with things like AI. Trying to get Meetups back. Trying to combine it with educational initiatives. Trying to combine it with WordCamps and releases.
[00:41:52] Jonathan Desrosiers: You mentioned something that's important there in that it's very easy for someone to get something built that they need specifically, right? And I think that's where we're at right now where AI is, like I said, is empowering, but more on a personal level. Once you need to scale those things, that's when it gets difficult.
And it's a rollercoaster of, oh my God, there's going to be no software. And then, oh, look at all this crappy software that AI built. We are always going to have a job. And then it's like up and down all throughout time as new tools get released. And it definitely matches what I'm seeing is like the personal empowerment level, they could take that and run with it and build this really massive thing, or they could just build something that they just want, that does specifically what they want, that they haven't found out there that it accomplishes.
And I think that another aspect of that is I'm noticing that a lot of people that you may not have thought would try things in the physical world on their own are more likely to do so as well. So maybe changing their faucet, or doing a landscaping project or something. I feel like we've had YouTube tutorials, right, has been a big thing for maybe a decade, right? But I feel like AI has unlocked a new level of empowerment where people feel more confident to try things because of the knowledge that's available to them in different ways.
[00:43:09] Nathan Wrigley: The year 2026 is going to be punctuated by WordCamps. It's going to be punctuated by WordPress releases. Hopefully we will start to see the needle move on educational initiatives, and maybe some younger people joining in with the community.
That has been a fascinating chat, Jonathan. I really appreciate that, getting your insight into what I think we both hope is going to happen in the WordPress project. That it will still be relevant in 10 years time, and that there'll be children who are now, not old enough to be using computers, in a decade, they'll be coming on podcasts like this, and hosting podcasts like this, and being involved in the community that we love so very much.
Where can we find you, Jonathan? If people want to talk to you and have a bit of a natter, where's the best place to locate you?
[00:43:48] Jonathan Desrosiers: My website is just jonathandesrosiers.com. I'm desrosej pretty much everywhere on the internet. I try to keep it consistent and easy. And you can also, of course, find me in the wordpress.org Slack.
[00:44:01] Nathan Wrigley: I will link to all of those in the show notes. So if you go to the wptavern.com website, search for the episode with Jonathan Desrosiers, you'll be able to find all of the links probably at the bottom underneath the transcript and the preamble. Go and have a look down there and hopefully we'll be speaking soon. I'll probably see you in Mumbai in a few weeks time. Take care, Jonathan.
[00:44:21] Jonathan Desrosiers: Thank you. Look forward to it, and hopefully I see your listeners there as well.
On the podcast today we have Jonathan Desrosiers.
Jonathan has been involved with WordPress for almost two decades, both as a user and a contributor. He's a principal software engineer at Bluehost, where his role sees him sponsored to work on WordPress through the Five for the Future program. Over the years, he's become a Core committer, and has spent many hours thinking about how to enhance the contributor experience and make it easier for people to get involved in the project.
In this episode we discuss how WordPress releases might be made more impactful by synchronizing them with flagship community events like WordCamps and State of the Word. A recent experiment of combining a major release with a live event sparked some excitement, and Jonathan shares insights on the logistics behind such synchronized moments, the challenges posed by international holidays and regional scheduling, and the broader vision for connecting releases with community gatherings.
We also get into the changing landscape of the WordPress community, how it's recovering from the effects of COVID, the struggle to rebuild local Meetups, and efforts (like mentorship and educational initiatives) to bring in new contributors, particularly from younger generations. Jonathan reflects on the importance of making release moments engaging and fun, akin to the anticipation of a new TV series or software launch, and the role of AI and open source in empowering a new wave of builders.
If you're interested in how release cycles, community events, and contributor onboarding are evolving in WordPress, or what the future might hold for the platform and its community, this episode is for you.
Useful links
Mary Hubbard on the importance of education - Big Picture Goals for 2026
25 Feb 2026 3:00pm GMT
Open Channels FM: AI Sidekick Features for WooCommerce Merchants
Co-host Katie Keith asks if WooCommerce will ever get a built-in AI assistant like Shopify's Sidekick. James LePage explains that while it's not in core just yet, all the building blocks are nearly here, and soon, adding a custom AI agent to your WooCommerce store could be as fast as installing a plugin. Here's a […]
25 Feb 2026 12:32pm GMT
HeroPress: Finding autonomy through WordPress

Ovaj esej dostupan je i na hrvatskom jeziku.
Dieses Essay ist auch auf Deutsch verfügbar.
I started working with WordPress in 2020. I joined a digital agency and was at the start of my professional career. I had freshly completed a developer bootcamp where we learned about web development concepts and the basics of JS, HTML and CSS. I was initially hired as a frontend developer, but soon expanded my role to UX design and WordPress.
Overcoming prejudice
Initially, I was hesitant about working with WordPress. In some developer circles, it was looked down upon. I thought someone might think less of me for using such a basic tool instead of doing the real thing, since coding was considered the "proper" way to build things.
After some initial resistance, I managed to let go of my prejudice and started enjoying it. The process involved designing the website in Figma and then implementing it via WordPress. Although I like to write code, I always thought of myself as more of a visual person than a coder, so this felt quite satisfactory.
In the Agency we worked mostly with Elementor, and even though there were some trade-offs when using it, I still remember how glad the benefits made me feel. I could implement scroll animations and various custom effects just by adjusting a couple of settings. It was great!
Shift in perspective
As time progressed and I became more fluent in WordPress, I stopped thinking only from a design and frontend perspective and started seeing the bigger picture. Besides getting familiar with SEO, I began to understand the relationship between design decisions, business goals, and real-world constraints.
I also realized that I no longer had to wait for someone else to finish the project. Design didn't end at handoff, and implementation didn't end at developing the frontend. I could take a project from an initial idea to a finished, high-quality website all on my own. WordPress made that possible without requiring me to become a backend specialist.
Delivering complete value
These insights changed my role more than any job title ever could and encouraged me to start freelancing. I took part in bigger, team-oriented WordPress projects, but I also worked on smaller ones where I was responsible for the whole process, from the initial "get-to-know-you" interview with the client to the final approval. I came to understand how design decisions influenced performance, how content structure shaped SEO, and how visual complexity affected load times and maintenance.
As I gained more experience, the scope of my work expanded. I was no longer just a designer or developer. Over time, I started to understand the business side of projects as well. It became clearer how a website fits into a broader strategy, how it supports client goals, and how decisions influence long term value. WordPress allowed me to develop a more strategic mindset. It helped me move from purely operational work toward strategic thinking. That broader business perspective became just as important to me as the technical execution itself.
The feeling of being able to provide a complete product to the client and own the entire process felt exciting because it satisfied my need for autonomy.
First time I truly felt responsible for the entire outcome was while developing a full hotel website from start to finish. Publishing the site felt different. Since working in a team is a collaborative activity, there is always sharing of responsibility, giving each other support and feedback. This is why this felt different. It was only me. It was not a contribution. It was owning the project from start to finish. Seeing the site live, functional, and in real use made this shift clear. It felt exciting to be able to deliver the full outcome.
Even if WordPress is not suitable for every use case and even if there are certain trade-offs, for someone like me, who wanted to feel autonomy and experience delivering a product from the initial idea to completion, WordPress was the right tool. It didn't just teach me how to build a website or implement SEO. It taught me how to deliver real value to a client.
Conclusion
If I had to summarize what WordPress changed in my life, it would be that it helped me become more autonomous. It allowed me to take responsibility for entire projects and deliver complete value to clients, from idea to finished product.
It also exposed me to a much larger number of real-world projects, clients, and challenges. That volume of experience shaped my growth more than any single tool or role. More projects meant more conversations, more constraints and more responsibility.
In that sense, WordPress wasn't just a tool for me. It helped me evolve from a designer and developer into a more complete professional. Someone able to understand problems, deliver outcomes, and think beyond individual tasks.
Pronalaženje autonomije kroz WordPress
S WordPressom sam počeo raditi 2020. godine, na samom početku svoje profesionalne karijere. Pridružio sam se digitalnoj agenciji nakon što sam završio developerski bootcamp na kojem smo prošli osnove web razvoja te rad s JS-om, HTML-om i CSS-om. Isprva su me zaposlili kao frontend developera, ali se moja uloga ubrzo proširila na UX dizajn i WordPress.
Suočavanje s predrasudama
U početku sam bio skeptičan prema WordPressu. U nekim developerskim krugovima na njega se gledalo s visoka. Imao sam dojam da će netko pomisliti kako radim s lakšim alatom, umjesto da radim stvari "kako treba", kroz čisti kod.
Nakon početnog otpora, ta se percepcija promijenila. Počeo sam uživati u procesu. Prvo dizajn u Figmi, zatim implementacija kroz WordPress. Iako volim pisati kod, uvijek sam sebe doživljavao više kao vizualni tip nego kao klasičnog programera. Ovakav način rada mi je prirodno odgovarao.
U agenciji smo najčešće koristili Elementor. Imao je svoja ograničenja, ali prednosti su mi bile važnije. Mogućnost da relativno brzo implementiram animacije na scroll, razne interakcije i custom efekte, bez kompleksnog kodiranja, bila mi je konkretna vrijednost.
Promjena perspektive
Kako sam postajao sigurniji u WordPressu, prestao sam razmišljati isključivo iz dizajnerske ili frontend perspektive. Počeo sam sagledavati širu sliku. Postalo mi je jasnije kako su dizajnerske odluke povezane s poslovnim ciljevima i potencijalnim ograničenjima koje svaki projekt nosi sa sobom.
Također sam shvatio da više ne moram čekati druge da završe svoj dio posla. Dizajn nije završavao primopredajom, a implementacija nije stajala na frontendu. Mogao sam projekt iznijeti od početne ideje do potpuno gotove web stranice, bez da budem stručnjak za backend. WordPress mi je to omogućio.
Isporuka cjelovite vrijednosti
Ta promjena utjecala je na moju ulogu više nego bilo koja titula. Potaknula me da se krenem baviti freelancingom. Radio sam na većim timskim WordPress projektima, ali i na manjima gdje sam samostalno vodio cijeli proces. Od prvog razgovora s klijentom do finalnog odobrenja. Počeo sam razumijevati kako dizajnerske odluke utječu na performanse, kako struktura sadržaja oblikuje SEO i kako vizualna kompleksnost utječe na brzinu učitavanja i održavanje.
Međutim, kako sam postajao iskusniji, širio se i opseg mog rada. Više nisam bio samo dizajner ili developer. S vremenom sam počeo razumijevati i poslovnu stranu projekata. Postalo mi je jasnije kako se web stranica uklapa u širu strategiju, kako podržava ciljeve klijenta i kako odluke utječu na dugoročnu vrijednost. WordPress mi je pomogao razviti strateški način razmišljanja. Pomaknuo sam se od operativnog izvršavanja zadataka prema razumijevanju šireg konteksta i donošenju odluka. Ta šira, poslovna perspektiva postala mi je jednako važna kao i sama tehnička izvedba.
Prvi put sam stvarno osjetio punu odgovornost kada sam samostalno razvio kompletnu web stranicu za jedan hotel, od početka do lansiranja web-a u produkciju. Osjećaj kada je stranica napokon otišla online bio je drugačiji. U timu uvijek postoji dijeljenje odgovornosti, podrška i zajedničke revizije. Ovdje je sve bilo na meni. Nije to bila samo kontribucija, nego vlasništvo nad cijelim procesom. Vidjeti tu stranicu online, za mene je jasno označilo tu promjenu.
Iako WordPress nije rješenje za svaki projekt i ima svoja ograničenja, meni je omogućio upravo ono što mi je tada bilo važno: autonomiju i mogućnost da isporučim cjelovit proizvod, od ideje do realizacije. Nije me samo naučio kako izraditi web stranicu ili optimizirati SEO, nego kako klijentu isporučiti stvarnu vrijednost.
Zaključak
Ako moram istaknuti jednu stvar koju je WordPress promijenio u mom profesionalnom razvoju, rekao bih da mi je omogućio veću autonomiju. Dao mi je prostor da preuzmem odgovornost za cijeli projekt i isporučim potpunu vrijednost, od inicijalne ideje do finalnog proizvoda.
Uz to, otvorio mi je pristup većem broju stvarnih projekata, klijenata i izazova. Količina iskustva koju sam tako stekao oblikovala je moj rast više nego bilo koja pojedinačna uloga ili alat. Više projekata značilo je više različitih razgovora, ograničenja, odgovornosti i drugačijih prosudbi.
U tom smislu, WordPress nije bio samo alat. Bio je to način rada koji mi je omogućio da izađem iz okvira dizajnera i developera te razvijem sposobnost razumijevanja problema, preuzimanja odgovornosti i razmišljanja šire od pojedinačnog zadatka.
Autonomie durch WordPress finden
Ich habe 2020 angefangen, mit WordPress zu arbeiten. Zu dieser Zeit stand ich am Anfang meiner beruflichen Karriere und trat einer Digitalagentur bei. Kurz zuvor hatte ich ein Developer-Bootcamp abgeschlossen, in dem wir Web-Grundlagen sowie die Basics von JS, HTML und CSS gelernt hatten. Ursprünglich wurde ich als Frontend Developer eingestellt, aber meine Rolle erweiterte sich schnell in Richtung UX Design und WordPress.
Vorurteile überwinden
Zu Beginn war ich unsicher, ob ich mit WordPress arbeiten wollte. In Teilen der Entwickler-Community wurde es nicht besonders ernst genommen. Ich hatte das Gefühl, man würde mich weniger ernst nehmen, wenn ich mit einem "einfachen" Tool arbeite, statt alles klassisch zu programmieren, da Coding als der "richtige" Weg galt.
Anfangs habe ich mich dagegen gesträubt, mit WordPress zu arbeiten, aber mit der Zeit begann ich, die Arbeit damit zu genießen. Der Prozess bestand darin, Websites in Figma zu gestalten und anschließend mit WordPress umzusetzen. Obwohl ich gerne Code geschrieben habe, sah ich mich immer eher als visuellen Typ. Diese Arbeitsweise lag mir daher besonders.
In der Agentur haben wir hauptsächlich mit Elementor gearbeitet. Natürlich gab es Nachteile, aber für mich überwogen die Vorteile. Scroll-Animationen und individuelle Effekte ließen sich durch wenige Einstellungen umsetzen. Das fand ich sehr überzeugend.
Perspektivwechsel
Mit wachsender Erfahrung änderte sich mein Blickwinkel. Ich dachte nicht mehr nur aus Design- oder Frontend-Sicht, sondern begann, Zusammenhänge zu erkennen. Neben SEO verstand ich zunehmend, wie Designentscheidungen mit Geschäftszielen und realen Rahmenbedingungen verbunden sind.
Mir wurde auch klar, dass ich nicht mehr auf andere warten musste, um das Projekt zu Ende zu bringen. Design endete nicht mit der Übergabe, und die Umsetzung nicht beim Frontend. Ich konnte ein Projekt von der ersten Idee bis zur fertigen Website eigenständig führen, ohne Backend-Spezialist zu sein. WordPress machte das möglich.
Ganzheitlichen Mehrwert liefern
Diese Entwicklung beeinflusste meine Rolle stärker als jede offizielle Bezeichnung. Sie war auch der Impuls, als Freelancer zu starten. Ich war an größeren Teamprojekten beteiligt, übernahm aber auch kleinere Projekte, bei denen ich für den gesamten Prozess verantwortlich war - vom ersten Kennenlerngespräch bis zur finalen Freigabe.
Ich verstand, wie Designentscheidungen die Performance beeinflussten, wie Inhaltsstrukturen sich auf SEO auswirkten und wie visuelle Komplexität Ladezeiten und Wartbarkeit beeinflusste.
Mit wachsender Erfahrung erweiterte sich auch mein Aufgabenbereich. Ich war nicht mehr nur Designer oder Developer. Ich begann, die geschäftliche Seite von Projekten zu verstehen: wie sich eine Website in eine übergeordnete Strategie einfügt, wie sie Unternehmensziele unterstützt und wie Entscheidungen langfristigen Wert beeinflussen. WordPress hat mir geholfen, strategischer zu denken und mich von rein operativer Arbeit zu lösen. Diese geschäftliche Perspektive wurde für mich genauso wichtig wie die technische Umsetzung.
Ein vollständiges Produkt liefern und den gesamten Prozess selbst tragen zu können, war für mich besonders wichtig, weil es meinem Bedürfnis nach Autonomie entsprach.
Der Moment, in dem ich erstmals die komplette Website eines Hotels eigenständig von Anfang bis Ende entwickelte, markierte einen Wendepunkt. Die Veröffentlichung fühlte sich anders an. Ich arbeite gern im Team, da man dort Feedback erhält. Doch hier trug ich die volle Verantwortung. Es war kein Beitrag zu einem Projekt, sondern die vollständige Verantwortung für das Ergebnis. Die Website live zu sehen, machte diesen Schritt für mich sehr deutlich.
Auch wenn WordPress nicht für jeden Anwendungsfall ideal ist und gewisse Kompromisse mit sich bringt, war es für mich das richtige Werkzeug. Ich habe dadurch nicht nur gelernt, wie man Websites baut oder SEO umsetzt, sondern auch, wie ich echten Mehrwert für Kunden schaffen kann.
Fazit
Wenn ich zusammenfassen müsste, was WordPress in meiner beruflichen Entwicklung verändert hat, dann ist es vor allem die gewonnene Autonomie. Es gab mir die Möglichkeit, Projekte von der ersten Idee bis zum fertigen Produkt eigenständig umzusetzen und echten Mehrwert zu schaffen.
Zudem arbeitete ich an einer größeren Zahl realer Projekte mit unterschiedlichen Kunden und Anforderungen. Diese Erfahrung war für meine Entwicklung wichtiger als jedes einzelne Tool oder jede Positionsbezeichnung. Mehr Projekte bedeuteten mehr Gespräche, mehr Rahmenbedingungen und mehr Entscheidungen.
In diesem Sinne war WordPress für mich nicht nur ein Werkzeug. Es half mir, über die Rolle des Designers und Developers hinauszuwachsen, Probleme zu verstehen, Ergebnisse zu liefern und über einzelne Aufgaben hinauszudenken.
Edo's Work Environment
We asked Edo for a view into his development life and this is what he sent!

HeroPress would like to thank Draw Attention for their donation of the plugin to make this interactive image!
The post Finding autonomy through WordPress appeared first on HeroPress.
25 Feb 2026 7:00am GMT
24 Feb 2026
WordPress Planet
Open Channels FM: How Instant Access to Information Has Changed Patience and Learning
A reflection on the internet's impact on patience and learning. It highlights how instant answers have reshaped our experiences, often sacrificing depth for speed in knowledge acquisition.
24 Feb 2026 1:01pm GMT
23 Feb 2026
WordPress Planet
Matt: Claude & Sonos
Tonight was one of my most surreal Claude Code Sundays. To make a long story short, I pointed Claude Code at my Sonos setup in Houston: "All 29 Sonos speakers were running on WiFi with SonosNet completely disabled. They had accumulated ~89 million dropped packets across the system. That packet loss is why groups kept falling apart - Sonos grouping requires tight sync between speakers, and the WiFi was too congested to deliver it."
We had a wild rollercoaster where at one point it bricked several of my devices (green LED), got mixed up on some groupings being a home theater, and sent me all around the house plugging things in to ethernet or not. At one point, I was certain I'd have to redo everything from scratch. Then we came back and everything worked, I asked, "What song should we play to celebrate this accomplishment?"
Ha - has to be "The Chain" by Fleetwood Mac. Seems fitting given we just spent the evening fixing one. Want me to queue it up on the Gym/Office?
It then failed horribly at trying to play that song, then, because it thought the speakers were re-meshing, it tried to play it on outdoor speakers, which would have surprised my neighbors at midnight. I ended up picking the song manually, and I must say it's quite nice. I see why it's easy to fall in love with these things, because the variable positive reinforcement slot machine cowboy hacking is honestly more fun than if it had just gotten it right on the first try.
23 Feb 2026 7:58am GMT
21 Feb 2026
WordPress Planet
Gutenberg Times: Interactivity API, WordPress 7.0 Beta and Telex updates — Weekend Edition 358
Greetings from snow-covered Munich - or at least it was when we left Friday for Salzburg, Austria, with a one-hour delay after our locomotive engineer got caught in the city's snow-induced chaos.
Have a fabulous weekend!
Yours, 
Birgit
Developing Gutenberg and WordPress
This week, WordPress 7.0 Beta 1 is ready for your testing on a staging or local site, please, not your live site. You can jump in via the WordPress Beta Tester plugin, a direct zip download, WP-CLI, or instantly through WordPress Playground in your browser.
The most important feature coming to WordPress 7.0 is real-time collaboration, when more than one person can edit a post or page. Even for a single-person blogger this might be helpful when the proofreading buddy and the photographer can also be involved in editing different parts of a post.
The final release is scheduled for April 9, 2026. Bugs go to the Alpha/Beta support forums or Trac - your testing genuinely shapes what ships. The release post also has an overview of the other features coming to WordPress 7.0, there are quite a lot.
Gutenberg 22.6 RC1 is also available for testing. Once released it introduces a new Icon block, lightbox support for the Gallery block (a personal favorite of mine), and renames the Verse block to Poetry. Next to improvements to the Navigation overlay and block visibility controls, it also features a new approach to revisions with visual change tracking and block awareness. The final release is planned for February 25, 2026.
The latest episode is Gutenberg Changelog #126 - Gutenberg Releases 22.3, 22.4, 22.5 and WordPress 7.0 with special guest Carolina Nymark, author at fullsiteediting.com and long time contributor.

Plugins, Themes, and Tools for #nocode site builders and owners
Content for AI is a hot topic for news sites, especially since they rely on those ad views and sponsored posts, and AI is pulling snippets from their content. It's a tough situation, and many sites are working hard to keep AI bots from crawling their pages. But here's the thing: AI really loves quality, long-form content. If your site serves up unique, quality stuff for humans, then it's also going to catch the attention of AI systems looking to help users with their questions.
If your site fits the bill, Maddy Osman has put together 9 Steps to Prepare Your WordPress Site for AI Search Engines as a practical guide for the era of ChatGPT and Google's AI Mode. The good news: WordPress already has most of what AI systems need. You'll learn to write answer-first content, use structured blocks, add schema markup, and manage your robots.txt - small, actionable tweaks that help your site surface in both traditional and AI-generated search results.
Jamie Marsland built a plugin for block theme to manage beautiful sticky header variations. He demos it in the video This Sticky Header Trick Makes WordPress Sites Look Incredible! If you are interested in the free plugin you get it on the website.
Building Blocks and Tools for the Block editor.
Carolina Nymark published two companion lessons on her Full Site Editing resource site. The Block Bindings API guide walks you through connecting dynamic data-post meta, custom sources, and more-to core blocks like paragraphs, images, and buttons, potentially saving you from building custom blocks altogether. In her Block Hooks API lesson, she shows you how plugins can automatically insert blocks into templates and patterns using PHP filters, with practical examples including WooCommerce and context-aware placement.
In the latest article on the WordPress Developer, I show you exactly How to add custom entries to the editor Preview dropdown. Using the PluginPreviewMenuItem component from @wordpress/editor, you can extend the Preview menu with your own options - the tutorial walks you through building a "Social Card Preview" to show how to add an entry and serve up a modal for content.
Paulo Carvajal dives deep into Building Dynamic Lists and Collections with data-wp-each on WP Block Editor. The data-wp-each directive from the Interactivity API lets you build reactive lists - product catalogues, task lists, feeds - that update automatically when state changes, no manual DOM manipulation needed. You'll learn how to coordinate PHP server-side rendering with JavaScript-derived state and implement advanced patterns like filtering, sorting, and pagination following WordPress best practices.
Ryan Welcher gave a talk at WordCamp Sofia titled From Static to Dynamic: Mastering the Interactivity APIn the Interactivity API. With the arrival of the Interactivity API, WordPress offers a native, declarative way to add client-side behavior to blocks using directives like data-wp-on-click, data-wp-bind, and data-wp-context. Developers can define reactive behavior, state management, and side effects-all while staying in the WordPress stack. The talk's recording just appeared on WordPressTV. It's a well-rounded introduction to the Interactivity API with real-life examples.
AI and WordPress
Semiha Kocer shares the latest Telex updates from WordPress.com's AI-powered block creation tool, launched last August. The two headline features are
- upload reference images - a Figma mockup, a screenshot, or even a napkin sketch - alongside your prompt to guide complex layouts.
- download your block, edit it in your favorite code editor, and bring it back into Telex seamlessly.
This week, Jonathan Bossenger explored the WordPress Studio MCP server, which connects WordPress Studio with AI tools via MCP. He set up MCP in VS Code and then used an AI agent to generate a custom block theme for a small coffee shop selling beans and accessories.
Ray Morey reported on WordPress.com's launches of a Built-In AI Assistant That Works in Editor, Media Library, and Notes. She notes that in the block editor, users can make plain-language requests - adjust layouts, swap color palettes, rewrite copy - and see changes render in real time. Notes users can tag "@ai" for fact-checks or edits, and the media library gets image generation and editing too. Morey adds that the feature, powered by Google's Nano Banana models, is available on Business and Commerce plans.
Questions? Suggestions? Ideas?
Don't hesitate to send them via email or
send me a message on WordPress Slack or Twitter @bph.
For questions to be answered on the Gutenberg Changelog,
send them to changelog@gutenbergtimes.com
21 Feb 2026 12:52pm GMT
Matt: WordPress, AI, plugins, future of software engineering
Yesterday I was on the WP-Tonic podcast, and my colleague Adrian Laboş did a great summary of the key points, which I'll share here:
AI security audit wave incoming: Expect AI tools to flood WordPress core and the 70,000+ plugin ecosystem with both improvements and newly discovered security vulnerabilities, requiring infrastructure to triage at scale.
Avoid vibe-coding compliance surfaces: For payments, fraud, and regulated commerce flows, prioritize battle-tested WooCommerce and vetted extensions over bespoke AI-generated code.
Reposition plugins around durable differentiation: If AI collapses "nice-to-have" features (e.g., basic image manipulation), shift value to workflow ownership, integrations, compliance, performance, and support.
Agencies gain leverage, not obsolescence: AI tools give motivated technical people 10-100x capability increases, meaning agencies can serve existing clients far better rather than being replaced by DIY site builders.
Sell outcomes, not hours, as an agency: Client expectations will compress delivery timelines; adapt pricing to value-based packaging and use AI internally to raise throughput and QA coverage.
Design for agentic usability: Strengthen APIs, WP-CLI, and machine-friendly interfaces so personal agents can safely operate WordPress tasks without brittle UI automation.
WordPress Playground enables AI verification: Spinning up fully containerized WordPress instances in 20-45 seconds inside browsers allows AI to test code across 20+ environments simultaneously, fundamentally changing plugin compatibility testing.
Benchmark AI outputs against WordPress-specific evals: Adopt WordPress block, plugin, and site-generation evaluations to catch "small file" failures (readme, headers, packaging) that break deployments.
Prioritize compatibility testing by real-world co-install patterns: Reduce factorial plugin-combination risk by sampling tests based on which plugins are commonly used together and automating those paths.
Plugin directory needs editorial curation: With submissions accelerating toward 100,000+ plugins, WordPress will introduce editorial spotlights on newer plugins with excellent code/design to balance discoverability with marketplace openness.
Improve plugin discoverability without freezing innovation: Curate "trusted" and "high quality" signals while preserving pathways for new entrants to earn distribution through measurable excellence.
Plan for uneven economic diffusion: Even with today's models, enterprise adoption lags consumer usage; build internal enablement and governance now so teams can scale impact as tooling matures.
Learning to learn beats domain expertise: When advising students/parents, the most future-proof skills are curiosity-driven learning, command of language, and study of classics/philosophy/ethics rather than specific technical domains.
WordPress 7.0 promises AI integration: The upcoming release will feature "lots of fun AI stuff" and represents one of the most exciting technology years in Matt's career since starting in the industry.
I had no idea that today Anthropic would release their security thing that does exactly what I said.
The best thing you'll read about AI engineering today is Chris Lattner's take on Claude's C compiler implementation. To steal Techmeme's headline: "Claude's C Compiler shows AI elevates the role of human judgment and vision; it's a milestone, but closely mirrors LLVM/GCC, and hard codes things to pass tests." The entire post is important, but this paragraph is particuluarly profound:
As writing code is becoming easier, designing software becomes more important than ever. As custom software becomes cheaper to create, the real challenge becomes choosing the right problems and managing the resulting complexity. I also see big open questions about who is going to maintain all this software.
To bring this back to WordPress: While I was in another meeting today, Claude Code with Opus 4.6 completed a cleanroom implementation of the ACF plugin in about 45 minutes. It was about to go off and implement all the pro features, but I stopped it because it would be a tremendous waste of tokens. The entire point of open source is collaborating on a shared goal rather than reinventing the wheel every time.
We've seen a slow version of this play out over the past decade, where every single web host that offers WordPress also spun up some sort of proprietary website or ecommerce builder. Bless their hearts. None has caused Shopify any lost nights of sleep. With countless person-years of development and who knows how many tens or hundreds of millions of dollars spent, I think we can now safely say that all of these efforts have had at most a marginal impact on their businesses, while the benefits of WordPress have continued to compound.
The thought experiment of whether those same resources had been used to make WordPress better is left as an exercise for the reader.
It does mean that competition is fiercer. You have to differentiate yourself on performance, customer service, reliability, design-things that are hard, but that's capitalism.
It's really important that in the plugin directory, we figure out how to make it easier for people to collaborate and build things together, rather than make a thousand versions of the same thing.
21 Feb 2026 12:04am GMT
20 Feb 2026
WordPress Planet
WordPress.org blog: WordPress 7.0 Beta 1
WordPress 7.0 Beta 1 is ready for download and testing! This beta release is intended for testing and development only. Please do not install, run, or test this version of WordPress on production or mission-critical websites. Instead, use a test environment or local site to explore the new features.
How to Test WordPress 7.0 Beta 1
You can test WordPress 7.0 Beta 1 in any of the following ways:
| Plugin | Install and activate the WordPress Beta Tester plugin on a WordPress install. (Select the "Bleeding edge" channel and "Beta/RC Only" stream.) |
| Direct Download | Download the Beta 1 version (zip) and install it on a WordPress website. |
| Command Line | Use this WP-CLI command: wp core update --version=7.0-beta1 |
| WordPress Playground | Use a 7.0 Beta 1 WordPress Playground instance to test the software directly in your browser. No setup required - just click and go! |
The scheduled final release date for WordPress 7.0 is April 9, 2026. The full release schedule can be found here. Your help testing Beta and RC versions is vital to making this release as stable and powerful as possible. Thank you to everyone who contributes by testing!
How important is your testing?
Testing for issues is a critical part of developing any software, and it's a meaningful way for anyone to contribute - whether or not you have experience. Details on what to test in WordPress 7.0 are available here.
If you encounter an issue, please share it in the Alpha/Beta area of the support forums. If you are comfortable submitting a reproducible bug report, you can do so via WordPress Trac. You can also check your issue against this list of known bugs.
Curious about testing releases in general and how to get started? Follow along with the testing initiatives in Make Core and join the #core-test channel on Making WordPress Slack. WordPress 7.0 will include new features that were previously only available in the Gutenberg plugin. Learn more about Gutenberg updates since WordPress 6.9 in the What's New in Gutenberg posts for versions 22.0, 22.1, 22.2, 22.3, 22.4, 22.5 & 22.6.
What's new in WordPress 7.0?
WordPress 7.0 boasts numerous upgrades in the editing and admin experience, delivering enhanced real time collaboration, refined customizability, new dashboard styles, and an expanded developer toolbox for people who create, design, and build with WordPress every day.
Working as a team just got easier with the ability for multiple users to edit together in real time, while visual revisions allow a visual comparison between page versions, adding agility to the creation and review process. Working with patterns has been simplified, making layout updates and content changes more intuitive, while view transitions smoothly move you from screen to screen as you click.
New and improved blocks and design features in 7.0 make sites more customizable, with video embed backgrounds in the Cover block, a responsive-enabled Grid block, and new Icons, Breadcrumbs and Heading blocks. An updated Navigation block makes menu changes easier and more reliable in fewer steps. Responsive, mobile-friendly controls in 7.0 allow you to hide or reveal blocks based on screen size, while client-side media handling speeds up media processing. The Font Library screen for managing installed fonts is now enabled for all themes, so site editors are always able to browse, install, and organize fonts.
For developers, it's now easier to build modern experiences while staying aligned with Core principles. The new WP AI Client in WordPress 7.0 brings a layer into Core that allows leveraging of AI models from any provider within the WordPress framework. This means plugins and themes can tap into any AI model to expound on its endless options. 7.0 offers even more versatility with the Client Side Abilities API that introduces a standardized way to register and run "abilities" in the browser, supporting richer, more consistent workflows. Additionally, 7.0 introduces PHP-only block registration with auto-generated inspector controls, adding a new dimension to block creation, while Block Bindings updates for pattern overrides expands support to custom dynamic blocks, giving block creators more options.
Needless to say, this release offers a wide range of flexibility to creators, teams and developers, while bringing a visual refresh to the admin experience you know and love with a fresh default style.
Work together in real time
Building on the momentum started in WordPress 6.9, the ability for teams to create and edit together is more refined and robust in 7.0. With this version of WordPress multiple users can edit and collaborate on the same post or page in real time, with data syncing and stabilized notes for smoother teamwork and a more streamlined editing and review process.
- Real Time Collaboration: Teams can now edit posts and pages together live from multiple locations, with offline editing and data syncing enabled, and a new default HTTP polling sync provider with options for plugins or hosts to include websocket support. With this collaborative content creation workflow, teams can brainstorm more effectively and boost productivity. For the beta period, real-time collaboration is opt-in in order to get broader feedback and testing.
- Notes: 7.0 introduces real time syncing of notes that helps facilitate collaboration, a keyboard shortcut for new notes, and a series of quality-focused fixes that bring more stability to the Notes feature.
A Refined Admin Experience
WordPress 7.0 gives the wp-admin experience a boost with a fresh default color scheme, and a cleaner, more modern looking dashboard, while keeping the interface familiar. The upgraded dashboard enhances the editing experience with new visual revision comparisons, and smooth transitioning between screens.
- Visual Revisions: Working with revisions is even better in 7.0 with the added ability to make visual comparisons to revision versions within the editor.
- View transitions: Cross-document view transitions in the dashboard offer visual continuity with seamless movement from screen to screen.
Customizing content with ease
Creators have more flexibility in 7.0 with new tools for content and design, enhanced editing controls, and attention to mobile friendliness.
- Responsive Editing Mode: Block visibility is now more responsive and mobile-friendly, with the ability for blocks to be displayed or hidden based on screen size.
- Pattern Editing and contentOnly interactivity: WordPress 7.0 introduces pattern-level editing modes, a tree view for buttons and list blocks, and the ability to opt out of the default content only mode. The new Spotlight mode helps you isolate content in patterns and notes, while the Isolated Editor mode can be used for editing symbols and reusable pieces like synced patterns, template parts, or navigation.
- Block supports and design tools: 7.0 includes text line indent support, text column support, aspect ratios for wide and full images, dimension width and height support, and dimension presets, tools and controls.
New blocks and design options at your fingertips
7.0 delivers a series of new and improved blocks and block features, a streamlined navigation workflow, and more versatile design options like video embeds as section backgrounds.
- Navigation Block: Navigation workflow is now more intuitive and clear, with improved editing and presentation. 7.0 introduces customizable navigation overlays as template parts, including mobile version overlays that can be hidden or revealed based on custom breakpoint settings.
- Heading Block: Heading levels are now available as block variations, giving more control over page hierarchy and design.
- New blocks: 7.0 makes building pages more diverse with new Breadcrumbs and Icons blocks.
- Cover block embedded videos: Video embeds can now be used as a background in the cover block, opening up opportunities for sleeker and more creative designs.
- The Grid block is now responsive-enabled allowing grid-based layouts to adapt more smoothly across screen sizes.
- The Gallery block now has lightbox support that lets the user click through and view each gallery image.
Developer's toolbox
Working with WordPress on the backend is now more robust for developers, with new and enhanced API features that support flexibility and lay a foundation for future advancements. The Client Side Abilities API provides a client-side registry for WordPress capabilities that allows you to tap into new and innovative website options. WordPress 7.0 offers even more by introducing the Web Client AI API to Core, enabling access to generative AI models in one central interface.
- Web Client AI API: The new AI client and API acts as a command center for accessing and communicating with generative AI models, with providers remaining external to WordPress Core, and Abilities API integration.
- Abilities and Workflows API: With the new client side abilities package users have access to new and hybrid abilities, filter and search functionality for abilities, and an improved command palette and UI.
- Blocks and patterns created on the server: WordPress 7.0 boasts the ability for PHP-only blocks and patterns to be generated server-side and auto-registered with the Block API.
- DataForm: Introducing a new details layout, new controls (combobox, adaptiveSelect), and updated trigger for panel layout (dedicated edit button). Additionally, the initial iteration for validation is complete: all controls have support, and all layouts display error messages.
- DataViews: DataViews has a new activity layout, and a foundation has been laid to be able to register 3rd party types in future releases.
- CodeMirror update: CodeMirror has been updated to version 5.65.40, aiding more flexible extensibility and library options.
Media processing in the browser
WordPress 7.0 introduces Client-side media processing, leveraging the browser's capabilities to handle tasks, like image resizing and compression, for smoother image processing. This enables the use of more advanced image formats and compression techniques, and reduces demand on the web server; providing a more efficient media handling process for both new and existing content, and supporting smoother media workflows.
With so many options and enhancements in WordPress 7.0 Beta 1, this is still only the beginning. You can expect future releases to be even better.
Just for you: a Beta 1 haiku:
As sun kisses moon,
Beta 1 ignites in bloom…
Seven-oh lands soon.
Props to @ellatrix, @jeffpaul, @annezazu, @chaion07, @zunaid321, @audrasjb, @mukesh27, @ankit-k-gupta, @oandregal, @westonruter, @karmatosed, @bph for reviewing and collaborating on this post!
20 Feb 2026 3:39pm GMT
WordCamp Central: Introducing WordCamp Mukono 2026: Sustainable Growth, Building a Lasting WordPress Future
The WordPress community in Uganda is pleased to introduce WordCamp Mukono 2026, scheduled for March 13 & 14, 2026, at Murs Country Resort, Kigunga, in Mukono, Uganda.
Guided by the theme "Sustainable Growth - Building a Lasting WordPress Future," WordCamp Mukono 2026 will bring together over 300 attendees including WordPress users, contributors, code wranglers, developers, designers, educators, and business owners to explore how sustainable practices can strengthen the WordPress project, local communities, and the broader open-source ecosystem.
A Focus on Sustainability and Long-Term Impact
The 2026 theme reflects a growing emphasis within the WordPress project on sustainability not only in technology, but also in people, communities, and contribution pathways. Sessions and discussions will focus on:



- Sustainable WordPress businesses and client practices
- Long-term community building and leadership development
- Performance, security, and maintainable WordPress solutions
- Inclusive contribution and mentorship in open source
- Content, accessibility, and responsible digital publishing
- AI tools and practices for both individuals and businesses
- An Educational track for Students and Educators
The program is designed to support both new and experienced WordPress users, offering practical insights alongside opportunities for deeper engagement with the WordPress project.
This year includes a lot of Community building activities, programs and strategies to support and grow open source communities.
Strengthening the Local and Regional WordPress Community
WordCamp Mukono has become a key gathering point for WordPress users in Mukono, Uganda, and the wider East African region. The 2026 event continues this trajectory by prioritizing local voices, first-time speakers, and contributors who are actively growing WordPress adoption through education, translation, support, and community leadership.
By hosting the event in Mukono, the organizing team reinforces WordPress's mission to democratize publishing and ensure that open-source opportunities are accessible beyond major urban centers.
WordCamp Mukono 2026 will be hosted at the spacious and prestigious Murs Country Resort in Kigunga, Seeta, Mukono Municipality. The venue offers a variety of amenities and services that make it a beautiful home for WordCamp Mukono.
Accommodation Options at WordCamp Mukono



WordCamp Mukono has spoken to several hotels and Accommodation options around the Host venue including the host venue itself and Accommodations have been made available for all attendees.
Details have been shared on the website. Feel free to secure your pick as you see fit.



An Official, Community-Led WordPress Event
WordCamp Mukono 2026 is an official WordPress event, organized by a dedicated team of local volunteers and run as a non-profit. Like all WordCamps, the event is built on the principles of openness, inclusivity, and collaboration.
Over two days, attendees will participate in talks, workshops, and networking opportunities designed to foster meaningful connections and long-term contributions to WordPress.
Get Involved



Calls for speakers are open to any one with a brilliant idea they would want to share, and the sponsor call is also open. An event of this magnitude can only be made possible by the many generous individuals who contribute to open source and community initiatives. The volunteer call is now closed, and the event is already taking shape.
Ticket Sales are now open for this great experience and are the main talk on the streets. Community members from Uganda, the East African region, and beyond are encouraged to take part and contribute to an event focused on building a sustainable future for WordPress. Have no excuse! Book your space now!
Community partners are also allowed to sponsor people to get this great experience by buying a ticket for them. Sponsoring them fully or partially. Contact the Team for details
More details can be found on the official WordCamp Mukono website and on WordCamp.org as they become available. Kindly also check the Blog Section for live updates on the event.
20 Feb 2026 9:48am GMT
Open Channels FM: Communicating Transparently Around Challenges
Communication isn't just about communicating around the good things, the shiny things.
20 Feb 2026 9:33am GMT
19 Feb 2026
WordPress Planet
Open Channels FM: How AI Is Changing the Way Developers Work
The rise of AI tools is revitalizing programming for developers, making coding enjoyable, but also increasing workload and emphasizing the need for visibility in contributions.
19 Feb 2026 2:58pm GMT
Open Channels FM: An Inside Look at Building Consistent Brand Experience in the Digital Ecosystem
In this episode, Adam Weeks interviews Jessica Malamud, who discusses Elementor's significant rebranding efforts to better reflect its innovation and community engagement, focusing on elements like design, storytelling, and brand consistency.
19 Feb 2026 11:04am GMT
Matt: WP & AI Updates
There's so much fun stuff happening, first the new assistant launched on .com, covered by TechCrunch and in this video.
Also some cool Claude stuff launched.
James has a nice write-up of the other dozen things that are going on, it's fun to see the AI parts of WordPress moving at AI-speed. We just need to loop back to some of the older screens and give them some love.
19 Feb 2026 7:49am GMT
18 Feb 2026
WordPress Planet
WPTavern: #205 – Matt Cromwell on Redefining WordPress Product Growth in a Crowded Ecosystem
[00:00:19] Nathan Wrigley: Welcome to the Jukebox podcast from WP Tavern. My name is Nathan Wrigley.
Jukebox is a podcast which is dedicated to all things WordPress. The people, the events, the plugins, the blocks, the themes, and in this case, redefining WordPress product growth in a crowded ecosystem.
If you'd like to subscribe to the podcast, you can do that by searching for WP Tavern in your podcast player of choice, or by going to wptavern.com/feed/podcast, and you can copy that URL into most podcast players.
If you have a topic that you'd like us to feature on the podcast, I'm keen to hear from you and hopefully get you, or your idea, featured on the show. Head to wptavern.com/contact/jukebox, and use the form there.
So on the podcast today we have Matt Cromwell. Matt has been an influential figure in the WordPress ecosystem for many years. He co-founded GiveWP, led its growth, and continued his journey as part of the StellarWP leadership after it was acquired.
Recently, Matt has shifted gears, launching something new. It's called Roots and Fruit, and is an agency dedicated to helping WordPress product businesses thrive. In recent years, WordPress has gone through a period of flux. There's been shifting stats about WordPress's market share, tightening budgets, and increasing competition from both within and outside the.org plugin repo. Despite these changes, Matt remains optimistic about the opportunities for product makers, especially as WordPress evolves alongside emerging technologies like AI.
Matt starts off by sharing his background, his experience with GiveWP, and the unique perspective he gained navigating growth, crisis, and the challenges facing plugin developers. We then talk about how the WordPress product space has matured. Why building a plugin, or theme, and hoping users will simply discover it is no longer enough, and how focusing on the customer journey, branding, and marketing is more crucial than ever.
Matt is now positioning himself as a mentor and guide for solo founders and product teams, helping them prioritize growth efforts, refine their product experience, and avoid the scattered approach that many developers fall into. He brings practical insights from years of hand-on experience, and explains why a successful WordPress product business relies on process, diligence, and wise prioritization, not just code and hope.
If you are building digital products in WordPress, and want to learn how to make them stand out in a crowded, competitive ecosystem, this episode is for you.
If you're interested in finding out more, you can find all of the links in the show notes by heading to wptavern.com/podcast, where you'll find all the other episodes as well.
And so without further delay, I bring you Matt Cromwell.
I am joined on the podcast by Matt Cromwell. Hello, Matt.
[00:03:22] Matt Cromwell: Hi. Happy to be here.
[00:03:24] Nathan Wrigley: Matt and I have chatted many times. In fact, we were having a nice chat just before we realised that the time was going to get away from us. So we've diverted and pressed record. We were getting into AI, but we're going to park that because that's a whole different episode. Well, maybe not. Maybe there'll be bits of that leaking into this episode.
[00:03:39] Matt Cromwell: It'll come up.
[00:03:39] Nathan Wrigley: I'm sure it will. But as I say, Matt's been on the podcast before. He has had a significant sort of reshaping of his career in the recent past. And so we're going to talk a little bit about what the new direction is, and where he's going to be focusing his efforts in the near to long term.
But Matt, just before we begin, do you want to tell us a little bit about you and what you've been doing in the WordPress space these many years?
[00:04:01] Matt Cromwell: Absolutely. Thanks so much. I'm Matt Cromwell. I am was, it's hard to figure out how to introduce myself anymore. I was co-founder of GiveWP and sold that product in 2021 to Liquid Web and stayed on and came on the leadership team of what became StellarWP, and took all the things I learned from Give and got to apply them across lots of products, in an excellent learning journey.
Recently exited back this last fall, 2025, and went on a journey of discovering in what I want to do, and found that I could not prime myself away from the keyboard enough and decided that now's the time I get to invest my time and efforts and energy in the WordPress product ecosystem like I always have. So I built a new agency called Roots & Fruit, which I have basically said is your fractional chief growth officer agency. I just launched a couple weeks ago and it's going well. So that's what I'm doing. That's how I say it.
[00:05:02] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, I love the domain, by the way. The minute I saw that, I think I got where you were going without even having read a word. Roots & Fruit sort of says it all, doesn't it? It's the growth to the actual harvesting at the end. And so we will get into that.
Can I just ask you though, we'll begin this way because we've had several years now of flux in the WordPress ecosystem. You have charted the growth of many products in the WordPress space. You've been involved in them personally, and you've seen the journeys of other founders and what have you.
Do you have the same level of optimism that the Matt Cromwell, let's say from the year 2020, when everything was going gangbusters, that 35% went to 38%, went to 40%, and on it went. Do you have the same level of optimism? Do you think there still is fruit to be harvested in the WordPress space in 2026?
[00:05:59] Matt Cromwell: Absolutely I do. There's a lot of caveats in there, I have to say. Being at GiveWP, we had a unique perspective when it came to things like a pandemic. It was like an internal thing where we were afraid of becoming ambulance chasers, okay? Because, especially in the US, when a crisis would come, suddenly our sales would go through the roof. And it's because when bad things happen, people need to do fundraising. And the worst thing we wanted to do was start capitalising on trauma or things like that.
And so when COVID came along, we were like, woah, this is going to be significant. And it was. It was a very significant thing. But we had been through the motions, so we knew that it was going to have a downside on the tail end of it, sales-wise. And I think a lot of folks understood that conceptually as well. But we had experienced it a lot.
But what a lot of folks found out on the tail side of COVID was that the downside was worse than it was pre COVID. A lot of folks felt that, even GiveWP to some extent and several of the Stellar products were like, oh, we've leveled out, we've come down off of the COVID high, and actually it feels a little bit worse than it was before. Budgets got tight in terms of businesses and agencies, nonprofits, things like that. There's lots of circumstances to those things. But over the last year or so, a lot of product companies have started to see things start to slowly climb again.
But in the WordPress space, I think it's important that everybody also look at our ecosystem in the bigger ecosystem of just the web. On the web there are small to medium to large companies launching all the time with huge amounts of success. Just a couple years ago, nobody knew what Lovable was. Now it's a billion dollar company. Things like that do happen and they happen regularly. That to me means there is still lots of appetite for the kinds of solutions that we are trying to bring to the world through the web. And we can be part of that solution.
Now, the conversation you and I had a little bit before was more about like, what about WordPress and the threat or the opportunity of AI? I do think the way in which WordPress Core has been tackling AI and trying to bring tooling into WordPress Core is making sure that WordPress itself as a platform has not only a future, but it has a lucrative future. I think the way that they're going about it is really smart and really intelligent, and it is going to actually build the platform in a way that makes AI understand how to build with WordPress better than anything else out there.
WordPress is the most, one of the most documented, open source projects in the world, and it's been open source this whole time, and AI loves that kind of stuff. So it just has been able to scrape the WordPress database, the WordPress code, all the WordPress documentation over years and years and years. AI now knows WordPress really, really, really well. So I think there's lots of opportunity.
[00:09:07] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, no, it's really great because you covered a lot of ground there. I should say, dear listener, at this point, maybe go and have a look at Matt's domain. I mentioned it, but I'll just read it into the record. So it's Roots with an S. Roots and fruit singular, .com, rootsandfruit.com. So go and check that out. Maybe pause the podcast if you're at a screen and.
[00:09:28] Matt Cromwell: Singular and plural.
[00:09:29] Nathan Wrigley: Both. Yeah, you've managed to get all the goodness in there. Go and pause the podcast and have a little poke around and you'll get some intuition as to what Matt is doing over there.
I'm going to sort of sidestep a little bit though, because I want to frame this question slightly differently, and that is to, I'll frame it like this. I, as a consumer of WordPress things, I've spent the last 15 or so years pottering around, having a problem, then going to Google and discovering that there's typically a WordPress plugin or theme or what have you, for that. And then I go to their website and perhaps there's two or three websites that I might be juggling and thinking which one is superior for the needs that I have. And then I purchase something, you know, I go and I buy a premium version of something or maybe download the free version to give it a test.
But the point is, I have this really abstracted concept of what it is. I'm buying a commodity. So I buy the finished thing and it comes as a zip file, and I typically don't interact with a human being. And that's the interesting bit that I want to get into to begin with, is the human behind all of this, which was you for many years.
And so can we just explore that a little bit? What is the stuff that somebody like you, when you were with GiveWP, but maybe now the clients that you are going to be servicing, what is their day involved with? What do these people do? What are the anxieties they have? What is the stuff that makes up a plugin or theme developer's life and business?
[00:10:55] Matt Cromwell: Generally speaking, product folks are nerds, love to be behind the screen. And they like this kind of industry, specifically because they don't have to be the person dealing with the customer as much. That distance that goes between the screen basically, is something that gives them a sense of safety, where they get to focus on the work that they love and they enjoy, without having to deal with the noise of the people.
The exception to that are all the folks that are highly motivated to help with technical support. And I love those people. Those are my people. My focus as a founder was more on the customer support and marketing side of things, so I enjoyed being more of the face of things for our brands over the years.
But the allure there is both being able to have that separation from the noise of the public, but also having a little bit of the security of what might be called mildly passive income. And that's the big difference between folks who are running an agency and folks who love to run product. Agencies are service oriented folks. They have to be with the customer and the client all the time. You are paying for hours. You're being paid for the time that you put in, in many ways. With agency service work, there's ways to get away from just purely time-based charging, but by and large.
In the product space, you're not being paid for the time you put in. You're being paid for the product, and for the outcomes that the customer experiences. And that's what you bought Nathan, when you went and bought a utility or a tool or whatnot. You weren't looking to hire a person, you were looking for a specific outcome on your website, and you felt that that one product could provide you that outcome. And once you had that outcome, you're happy.
And that's exactly why product shops are, in my mind, have to be customer oriented first because all of the success, all of the success of the product, of the marketing, of the business, all starts with whether or not the customer is happy.
[00:13:05] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. We have this expression in the English language which is, a rising tide carries all boats. And essentially what it means is, when there's this sort of groundswell of growth, everything touching it grows. And I think we had that in all sorts of ways recently, over the last decade or so.
The mobile phone app ecosystem, that just was taking off and all the developers over there were doing incredibly well. Same with the WordPress space. Just year on year growth. And so there was this notion, which you reference on your website quite a lot, of build it and they will come. And that phrase essentially is, okay, I am one of those people. You said, nerds.
I'm going to build a product, and I have a complete expectation that I am part of that rising tide. I'm one of the boats. I'll build this thing, I'll mention it a few times on social media, and this thing that I've spent hours and hours doing will take off and I will be able to have some kind of passive income from it.
Now, I don't know when you started saying that those days were gone, but you are definitely saying those days are gone. Why are those days gone? What happened? What changed to make it so that the rising tide carries all boats analogy, possibly no longer fits?
[00:14:17] Matt Cromwell: It depends on the context. I mean, it fits in several different ways. But when it comes to product in the WordPress space nowadays, we used to depend so much on the wordpress.org plugin, or theme, directory as a primary outlet for discoverability. I want people to find that I exist and that I am a solution for their problems, and this is where you find me.
The plugin directory in particular, when we launched GiveWP, I think there were 30,000 plugins at the time, or approaching 30,000. And now there's over 60, and they are growing every day more or less. They grow and they shrink. They get rid of plugins too, actually. But that does increase the amount of surface area where you have to break through in order to be found. If you try to be an AI alt text generator right now, good luck. There are three dozen of those that got shipped yesterday. It's crazy.
But even more so than just the noise and the volume on the plugin directory, it's also that the consumers that are building their websites, they are not thinking about WordPress as much anymore. They're building with WordPress, but they kind of don't care that it's WordPress. They're just building a website. They have specific outcomes and they know that there are lots of products out there that can serve their needs, and they don't care if it's a SaaS, or a platform, or a plugin, or a theme. They don't care. They're just going to look for that outcome and they're going to plug it into their website in one form or another, if that solution is pluggable.
And that space, the SaaS space in particular, has gotten a lot more crowded and a lot more competitive for being applied directly to the WordPress customer. So we're not just competing WordPress to WordPress, we're competing WordPress to the rest of the whole world.
[00:16:18] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, that's interesting. So my analogy, when I said a rising tide carries all boats, what I'm imagining 10 years ago is that there was a really nice looking harbor with a few little boats. And the tide came up and these little boats just bobbed along and they all rose up. Whereas now it feels like the harbor is just chockablock. There's boats cheek by jowl with other boats. They're slamming into each other. And instead of it being a gentle rise, it's stormy, clouds. The sea is choppy all over the place, and everything is sort of bumping into each other.
In other words, it's saturated. If you are going to be doing the alt text plugin for AI, well, there were six that came out this morning. There's going to be nine more by the time we close the doors this evening. Whatever it is that you are doing in the WordPress space, chances are somebody's already done it. They may already have an existing audience. They may already have paid subscribers.
So this all sounds very bleak. It sounds like we've got no way out of this. But your endeavor, what you want to turn your attention to in the years to come, is to persuade people that's not the case. So what is the rainbow? What is the shining light on the horizon? How would a plugin developer, a theme developer, somebody in the WordPress space, how do they cut through all of this and get noticed?
[00:17:28] Matt Cromwell: Yeah. A lot of things have changed over the years, but I would say the majority of things, when it comes to digital products, have not changed. And that's really the brass tacks of what it takes to be a winning product on the web in general. SaaS companies have known this for a really long time because they didn't have the obvious distribution channel of wordpress.org that we have.
So they knew if they were going to ship a product, they're going to have to market it a ton. In the SaaS space, there's very, very, very few just handy developers who are like, hey, I just built this cool thing, I'll just put it out there. And then all of a sudden it just goes off like crazy. It doesn't work that way, and they know it. And so they partner up with marketers.
And in the WordPress space, for way too long, we got lazy because we had the .org distribution channel. And we assumed that we could build it and people would come. And that's not like one hundred percent wrong. The directory is still a good tool, and it's still helpful, and I love the freemium model for products in general. But the thing that WordPress product folks in particular have to learn is to learn how to be a product business, not a code business.
And that's even more significant now that everyone is learning that code was never the product, because now nobody is building with code anymore. The humans do not build the code anymore. The machines build the code. And you'll find lots of marketers or CX folks who are building their own apps now as well because they're savvy enough to use the tools to be able to generate the code that they need and that they want.
[00:19:11] Nathan Wrigley: Can I just pause for a second there Matt, is that all right? Just because there's a couple of things that you said, and clearly for you it's common knowledge. You know, you've been in and out of this all the whole time. You painted a strong definition there between a product and code. What's the boundary between those two things? I mean, I think I can encapsulate, I just want to be clear that the audience know. What's the difference between product and code businesses, if you know what I mean?
[00:19:33] Matt Cromwell: Let's go back to when you said, I'm building my website and I have a problem that needs to be solved, and I see this plugin and it solves my problem. And I installed it, or I bought it and I installed it and it worked. That process that you went through, all of those things that you said, you never once said, I inspected the code to figure out if it was good enough or not. You never once said that. All of the things that convinced you to use that product had nothing to do with the code at all.
You went to the website and there was marketing involved that told you that we know what your problem is, and we know how to solve it. And there was a checkout experience that was calm and soothing enough and giving you enough confidence that they're not just stealing your money. Then you installed the product and there was a user experience involved that made you feel like it's actually going to solve your problem, and then it did actually solve your problem. All of those things cannot happen without code, but that is what a product does. And that's a product experience, is the whole entire customer journey that happens from discovery, to purchase, to adoption is what a product is actually made of.
[00:20:43] Nathan Wrigley: So I'm going to infer from that then that from the year 2026 and onwards, what you are saying is that the focus now needs to be on the product. More than ever, the product and the way that you market the product and the way that you pitch the product, and all of the things that wrap around the sales process and the discovery process of the product. That's where a significant amount of the effort needs to go once the code is in place. Have I parsed that correctly?
[00:21:11] Matt Cromwell: Yeah, I might even go at it from the perspective of the customer because you only understand the product when you look at that whole thing through the lens of the customer. If you think about everything from, oh, I can build that, I just need to pipe these APIs and do this kind of thing, and then you get the outcome, it's like, well that's not really what the customer's ever going to experience.
They're going to experience a website first. They're going to try to have trust first. Look at the whole thing through the customer lens and then you'll start to understand your product. I mean, you'll understand your brand in the first place. A lot of WordPress folks don't think about brand particularly well either. They just name it like Advanced Custom Fields. Now, I love that product. It's a great, but it's one of those things where like, let's just name it what it is. Okay, I guess.
[00:22:04] Nathan Wrigley: So this is really interesting. So presumably then, if product is the way forward, it feels like you have now kind of invented a new career angle for yourself where you are going to hopefully kind of helicopter yourself in, or be helicoptered in, to businesses who maybe have got this product bit missing. You know, there are bits of that they, I don't know, maybe they feel that they're weak on that, or that past endeavors haven't really worked out. Or maybe they're at the first step of that journey and they just want to try and figure out what direction they should point themselves in to have some success.
So that's kind of interesting. That's the role that you are going to be taking on in the future. And I can see you nodding. Dear listener, he's nodding away, so that's good. But, do you have like a one size fits all template here, or is the endeavor very much to be, okay, I'm going to go in, have a long listen, figure out how you differ from the other people that are on my roster? There's not really a question in there, but I'm kind of asking you how you are going to position yourself for the different clients that you're no doubt going to be taking on.
[00:23:06] Matt Cromwell: Yeah, yeah, Well, one thing I'll caveat a little bit is I'm trying to position myself towards two related audiences. The primary one, for the fractional CGO, is the teams. Product shops that are a team of people. A small team, medium sized team. They've built something, it's successful, they are paying employees, but they're looking for that next level up, in order to start growing into what they hope to be, more sustainable growth in the long term.
The other one is what I call the solo lab, where I am trying to position more towards solo individual founders who are by themselves and maybe just got their product out the door and are trying to grow from the ground up. That's more of like a coaching environment and it's a group environment and things like that. But both of them are, it's not that there's a, I don't believe really in playbooks. I don't believe in silver bullets. I believe in process and diligence.
And that's what I am trying to bring in both of those circumstances is I help the solo folks understand the type of activities that they have to force themselves to do. The solo folks typically are very dev oriented. They know how to build more things. And if you ask them to write a blog post, they're like, okay, I'll do that tomorrow and tomorrow never comes. You know, helping them to focus on the work that they have to do to grow their product.
While the teams, it's more generally about, they have founders who have done all the things. They have been the dev, they have been the HR lead, they have been the marketer, they have been the support guru. They've done all of it, and they're just tired. And they need the growth but there's just a missing gap. They need somebody to kind of put on the hat of, you are going to be responsible for finding growth in this team, so that that founder can focus more on other parts, the things that energise them more.
[00:24:59] Nathan Wrigley: I'm curious as to whether or not, when you were doing the busy work of being at GiveWP and then StellarWP, whether you drew the intuitions that you are now going to be helping people with. Whether you were aware of this in your head, or it was just the busy work that you were doing. You know, day in, day out, you do this task and over the decade or more that you were doing it, you just kind of perfected it. And, okay, when this thing arises, I do this thing. And when this thing arises, I do this thing.
Now I expect you're in that curious position where you are having to lift yourself away from the whole process, stare back at it, and sort of examine how you would do it with a third party. Again, there's no real question there, but I'm curious as to how different that is for you being the outsider, but relying on the insider knowledge that you must have acquired over time.
[00:25:49] Matt Cromwell: Yeah. I think that's one of the reasons why I felt a certain amount of confidence in moving in this direction is because I'm helping people that are in the position I was in years ago. I've been there and I have done that, and I have absolutely failed. And I don't have a perfect record or a perfect playbook, but I know what it's like, and I have done the hard work to see successes.
I think what also makes my experience a little bit unique is that I had the experience of GiveWP and I honestly, going into being acquired and working at Liquid Web, I had that whole feeling of like, what if I'm a one hit wonder? What if I like did a great job with Give, but I try to apply this anywhere else and it just is like, well you got lucky with Give, that doesn't work anywhere else? And it turns out that most of the things that I learned can be applied to other products with success as well. It does give me a fair amount of confidence that I do believe I can be helpful with these other shops.
[00:26:50] Nathan Wrigley: You're not sort of saying there's a formula, you know, that kind of snake oil mentality. But there are wise things to do and less wise things to do. Let's just put it that way. And by repeating the wise things over and over again, you give yourself kind of a fighting.
[00:27:05] Matt Cromwell: Yeah, and there's a process and there's also the ability to form smart priorities. That's, I think, a lot of what I'm trying to help provide is being able to help founders learn how to say no to a lot of things. Because sometimes, especially when it comes to anything that's growth oriented or marketing oriented, we see a million opportunities. And so then we start dabbling in all the things because we don't know what else to do.
We're like, oh, there's like, I can go and jump into Reddit and find a whole bunch of leads, or I can like spend a bunch of time on LinkedIn, or I could write a whole bunch of really good emails, or I can maybe do a paid ad campaign. And then we start doing just like a million small things. But that doesn't lead to growth, you know? So the ability to prioritise around growing rather than noise and activity.
[00:27:57] Nathan Wrigley: I think it's just really nice to be able to put down the scatter gun. You know, that thing that you're firing tiny pellets in a million different directions. But you put the scatter gun down because somebody says, put the gun down because that's not effective, and here's why it's not effective, and here's some things that you could do to try which might be more effective.
There's just something nice in listening to the words of wisdom coming out of somebody else's mouth who's obviously been there, done that. It's kind of hard to put that into words, but just knowing that somebody's got your back, and that somebody's been through that before. And the million, gazillion little things that you are trying without a great deal of success are things that you can put away and listen to your advice.
I feel that you've hit a real vein of, well, let's go fruit. You've got that in the title of your business. And the reason I say that, and I've said this in this podcast a few times before, it really does feel like there are an awful lot of people who have done the code side of things in our ecosystem. They are, as you've described, you know, you used the word nerd or something like that. They have built this thing with very little thought for the business side of it because WordPress, for many people, has been like this sort of hobby thing, this passive income thing, this side gig kind of thing. But they don't know how to do it. And I get email, no doubt you get email, and certainly will be getting email, about this kind of thing. And so I feel that there is a real undercurrent of people who hopefully will tap into your service. Let's hope so anyway.
[00:29:29] Matt Cromwell: Yeah, let's hope so. So far, so good. I've already secured a couple folks.
[00:29:33] Nathan Wrigley: In which case, we're sort of around the half an hour mark, which is exactly perfect. So I will just point the people to the domain once more. It is rootsandfruit.com. Go check that out. Where would we find you, apart from the contact us form, which no doubt exists on that website? Where might we find you elsewhere online, Matt?
[00:29:52] Matt Cromwell: I have been on LinkedIn a lot. So look for Matt Cromwell on LinkedIn. You can also look for Roots & Fruit on LinkedIn. That's kind of where I prefer, but I'm also on the nefarious x.com as learnwithmattc.
[00:30:06] Nathan Wrigley: Well, good luck with the new adventure, Matt. I really hope it works out well and, yeah, speak to you soon.
[00:30:12] Matt Cromwell: Thanks.
On the podcast today we have Matt Cromwell.
Matt has been an influential figure in the WordPress ecosystem for many years. He co-founded GiveWP, led its growth, and continued his journey as part of the StellarWP leadership after it was acquired. Recently, Matt has shifted gears, launching something new. It's called Roots and Fruit, and is an agency dedicated to helping WordPress product businesses thrive.
In recent years, WordPress has gone through a period of flux. There's been shifting stats about WordPress' market share, tightening budgets, and increasing competition from both within and outside the .org plugin repo. Despite these changes, Matt remains optimistic about the opportunities for product makers, especially as WordPress evolves alongside emerging technologies like AI.
Matt starts off by sharing his background, his experience with GiveWP, and the unique perspective he gained navigating growth, crisis, and the challenges facing plugin developers. We then talk about how the WordPress product space has matured, why building a plugin or theme and hoping users will simply discover it is no longer enough, and how focusing on the customer journey, branding, and marketing is more crucial than ever.
Matt is now positioning himself as a mentor and guide for solo founders and product teams, helping them prioritise growth efforts, refine their product experience, and avoid the scattered approach that many developers fall into. He brings practical insights from years of hands-on experience, and explains why a successful WordPress product business relies on process, diligence, and wise prioritisation, not just code and hope.
If you're building digital products in WordPress and want to learn how to make them stand out in a crowded, competitive ecosystem, this episode is for you.
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