Who Is the Nashville Scene?

WHO IS THE NASHVILLE SCENE?

For a quarter-century, the Nashville Scene has been many things: an opinionated guide to a growing city, a source for information and informed analysis of the arts and current events, a thorn in the side of bullies and blowhards. One thing it has never been is predictable. Each week in print — and every day on its heavily traveled news, food, music and arts blogs — the Scene scans the city from Bordeaux to Brentwood, from Inglewood to Antioch, from Belle Meade to Berry Hill, seeking the latest developments in Nashville at a time our civic profile has never been higher. The Scene has cultivated a reputation as a single stop where newcomers interested in Nashville can get their bearings, and natives and longtime residents can stay abreast of their rapidly changing city. Looking for new restaurants, nightlife options and developing districts? You’ll find the latest updates in the Scene and its wide social-media portfolio. Hungry for serious, in-depth coverage of education, governance, public transportation and housing? The Scene’s award winning journalists bring their institutional knowledge of the city to bear on these issues and countless others — in witty, engaging and often irreverent style. Print journalism is alive and well: You just have to provide content people want to read, and trust their intelligence and curiosity. Nashville is at once the biggest small town in America and the next great city of the 21st century. Both deserve a paper that reflects its excitement, enthusiasm and optimism, while speaking truth and providing a forum for new ideas and challenging times. The Nashville Scene is that publication. Keep up with all the latest news and events — and everything else! — at nashvillescene.com.

 

The Nashville Scene is a Platinum Sponsor of WordCamp Nashville. Follow us!

Meet Ninja Forms

The heart and soul of WordPress is community, and WP Ninjas is a company dedicated to enriching that community. We believe the success of each of us as individuals is tied indivisibly to the sum of all of us in the WordPress space, and we are dedicated to doing our part to make the WordPress ecosystem the most incredible place a person can be on the web. Developer, user, freelancer, agency, you’re all what makes the WordPress world go ‘round.

We’re a company of 8 WordPress enthusiasts located in Cleveland, Tennessee. We’re a hodgepodge of developers, happiness ninjas, content writers, tinkerers and thinkers that stumbled together to make something cool built around the ideas of our founders and the needs of our community.

We’re best known for our flagship product, Ninja Forms: WordPress’ easiest and most flexible form builder. We also produce Ninja Demo, the first complete demo solution for WordPress. Additionally, we’re dedicated to building a trove of WordPress knowledge, news, tips and tutorials via our Ninja Forms and WP Ninjas blogs and newsletters.

What is our mission? In the words of our CEO, James Laws:

We have a very clear and simple mission statement, which is to “Help others be successful”. Specifically, our goal is to contribute to the WordPress community through providing top tier content, resources, and products that are easy to use and well documented both for our users and WordPress developers.

We invest heavily in a free plugin for the community that meets a basic need. We do monetize that offering, but in doing so we offer a marketplace for folks to contribute to WordPress in a way that they might not otherwise be able. I love to see developers get their start in Ninja Forms, and I especially love that we’re directly benefiting over 600,000 WordPress users through Ninja Forms.

We hope you enjoy WordCamp Nashville, and we certainly hope you enjoy Ninja Forms! If you haven’t seen us around, check us out at over at Ninja Forms and WP Ninjas. Whether you need a great form builder, topshelf WordPress guides and tutorials, or just some cool WordCamp swag, we’re here to serve. See you in Nashville!

Meet Jetpack

Launched in 2011, Jetpack is an essential plugin for developers, bloggers, and marketers alike. Jetpack brings many of the most popular WordPress.com features to self-hosted WordPress websites, along with a number of tools exclusive to the plugin.

Jetpack provides a free image CDN, botnet protection, uptime monitoring, centralized plugin updates via WordPress.com, and much more! All of Jetpack’s features are free, and we’re proud to offer support to everyone who uses the plugin. If you upgrade to the Premium and Professional tiers, you’ll also enjoy added peace of mind with backups and spam protection, and top-notch WordPress support from our experts.

Everyone on the Jetpack team is excited to support the greater WordPress community through our global WordCamp sponsorship, as well as other initiatives like Jetpack.Pro, a growing database of WordPress professionals that brings together developers and users.

DWe’re excited to offer WordCamp participants a free 30-day trial of Jetpack’s paid subscriptions! If you love it (we think you will), get 15% off the regular Premium or Professional rate — just enter the code 15for16. Learn more at Jetpack.com/WordCamp.
(Get 15% off Jetpack Premium or Professional – just enter the code 15for16. Learn more at Jetpack.com/WordCamp.)

Things to do in Nashville & in Germantown

This year’s WordCamp Nashville is already turning out to be bigger and better than ever. Along with the move from just a one-day event to two solid days of WordPress goodness, this year’s event moved from the Nashville School of Law in south Nashville closer to the heart of the city at redpepper and Deavor located in Historic Germantown.

Germantown has seen tremendous growth over the past few years, and there are many bars, coffee shops, restaurants, and sights for you to explore within a short distance of the venue. What’s more, Germantown is about a 5 minute (maybe 10 if you’re unlucky) Lyft ride away from downtown and all it has to offer.

pointerWant to easily find all these spots? Check out our custom Google Map – you’ll find all these spots and more pinned there.

Coffee

There are three excellent, local coffee shops located in Germantown. The first is Barista Parlor located at 1230 4th Ave N. This isd Barista Parlor’s third location in Nashville—the other two are located in East Nashville and The Gulch (two other hot parts of town). Barista Parlor goes to great effort to show off their high-tech brewing equipment, so you’re bound to come away impressed as you watch the baristas make your drink.

The second coffee shop you might want to check out is Red Bicycle Coffee & Crêpes located at 1200 5th Ave North in Suite 104. The crêpes here are exceptional, and they don’t just serve them up for breakfast. There are plenty of different options to choose for both lunch and dinner.

Last but not least, Steadfast Coffee, located at 603 Taylor Street, is also a great spot to get coffee and a bite to eat. Unlike Barista Parlor, Steadfast Coffee keeps their counter top lines clean, sleek, and Euro-esque.

Restaurants

Germantown contains a wide array of dining choices all situated within a few square miles of each other. Even before its recent explosion, two Nashville institutions called Germantown home.

The first of these, Monell’s, serves up arguably the best Southern, family style breakfast around. You can’t go wrong choosing Monell’s for either breakfast or dinner. They’re also now serving late night breakfast on Saturdays from Midnight–3:00 a.m. The Mad Platter is the other restaurant native Nashvillians think of when someone mentions Germantown. They’ve been serving up New American cuisine since 1989.

Now that we’ve covered “classic” Germantown spots, there are loads of new kids on the block that are turning the area into a foodie destination. The oldest of the newer restaurants to call Germantown home is City House, helmed by recent James Beard Award winning chef, Tandy Wilson. 312 Pizza Company (Chicago Style Pizza), 5th & Taylor (American), Butchertown Hall (more meat than Arby’s), Cochon Butcher (Butcher & New Orleans Sandwiches), and Rolf and Daughters (New American/Mediterranean) all opened within the past four years. You might want to call ahead to see about reservations for a few of these places.

Bars

The bar scene in Germantown tends to focus itself around many of the restaurants listed above. With that said, there are a few extra opportunities for craft beers and cocktails around the area. For beer lovers, you have a choice between a local craft brewery, Bearded Iris Brewing, that opened within the past year, and one of WordCamp Nashville’s sponsors that recently passed the one-year anniversary mark in the neighborhood, Jack Brown’s Beer & Burger Joint. For fans of fancy cocktails, Tempered Café & Chocolate transforms from a chocolatier into an absinthe bar and cocktail lounge known as The Green Hour after 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights.

Hot Chicken

For some, no trip to Nashville would be complete without eating some of Nashville’s namesakes hot chicken. The closest place to get your fix is Helen’s Hot Chicken at 1801 Jefferson Street. Alternatively, you can head out north of the heart of the city to Prince’s Hot Chicken Shack —the originator of the fiery fowl. There is also Hattie B’s not too far away in the Midtown area close to Music Row and Vanderbilt University.

Sites

There are a few historic sites and parks within a short walk from the venue. The first is the Bicentennial Capitol Mall. This park offers great views of downtown and 19 acres of walking history to explore. Attached to the Bicentennial Mall is the Nashville Farmer’s Market, home to many restaurants and food vendors. Another exciting point of interest located in the area is First Tennessee Park—the home of the Nashville Sounds AAA baseball club. The Sounds made the playoffs for the first time since 2007, so they might be playing on September 16, 17, and 18 depending on how their first series plays out.

Hopefully this listing helps you explore some of the exceptional sites, sounds, and tastes Nashville has to offer. While we want you to get your fill of WordPress knowledge, we don’t want you to leave town without making some kind of memory outside of the event.

 

Photo credit: wareagle90 via flickr

After Party @ Family Wash!

The WordCamp Nashville 2016 after party is the place to be once you’ve finished up a full day of WordPressing! Head across the river (less than 2 miles) to the Family Wash on Main Street in East Nashville for a chance to connect over drinks & appetizers with everyone you met during camp. You’ll want to take advantage of this opportunity to talk one-on-one with your favorite speaker, find out more from our sponsors about what exciting new developments are happening in their businesses, and make the professional connections you might have missed during camp.

This year’s after party sponsor is WP Ninjas, the makers of Ninja Forms, which is lovingly developed right here in Tennessee. The ninjas will be out in full force, and they’ll be bringing along some exclusive after party swag! Ninja Forms is celebrating the release of version 3.0 of the plugin and wants the entire WordPress Nashville community to join in on the festivities!

The Family Wash is an East Nashville institution famous for their live music and iconic shepherd’s pie. Now in their newer, improved location, the WordCamp after party will take advantage of the large “FishBowl” room (still Shyster Free!), front patio and coffee area. Free parking is included in the venue lot, across the street at Center 615 and in the church lot “two doors” down on the west side of Bolton’s Hot Chicken (Note: do not park in spots marked “Bolton’s”).

The after party will officially start at 6pm, so you’ll have a few minutes to head back to your hotel room to freshen up, or grab one last cup of coffee before trekking across the river. We can’t wait to see y’all there!

The Family Wash
http://www.familywash.com/
626A Main Street
Nashville, TN 37206

Content Connects Launches New Packages

Ask any developer or digital marketing agency – lack of content is the biggest delay in launching a website. Lack of content drives website designers crazy because knowing the most important elements and top-level navigation pages should shape the design – not the other way around.

Digital content, whether text, images, icons, videos, and infographics on a website or social media posts and email campaigns, connect a company to its audience and prospects. Aiming to save money, many SMBs and soloprenuers try to create their own website content.

But doing this well is much harder than it sounds, and doing it poorly racks up costs of its own. Lost business because the company’s message is muddy. Low conversion rates because calls to action are missing. Lost time because the content attracts the wrong customers.

Crafting the right content using tone, language and style that reflect your company and speak to your audience demands a shift few businesspeople can make.

You must not think like business owners or marketing directors and think like potential customers. That’s because content is not – repeat, NOT – about you. It is about your audience.

SMBs often aren’t sure where or how to start but this is what Content Connects does every day.

So I put together packages tailored to give SMBs some low-cost ways to get on track and am rolling them out for WordCamp Nashville 2016. Participants will have until Monday, Oct. 3, to grab their slots before broader, more public promotion of the services. Better still, #wcnash attendees will get a coupon code for 30 percent off.

In brief, the options include:

  • Content Audit – with one page rewritten, technical analysis of up to 1000 pages and posts, home page and navigation recommendations, custom reports with top three priorities and a 45-minute phone consultation (with screen sharing) to discuss findings.
  • Content and Writing Coaching – with detailed review with markup and comments of three to five writing samples (depending on length), a writing assignment and a 90-minute consultation with review and feedback on writing samples, tips, pointers, best practices and ideas shaped to meet your goals.
  • Content Strategy – a detailed 3-month plan with an editorial calendar, blog post topics (and links to resources tailored for your business), social media posts and ideas for two platforms, and a 60-minute consultation in person or over phone with screen share.
  • Bio Package – Two professional bios using existing resumes, LinkedIn profiles, supplementary information provided plus 30-minute interview with each person. One round of revisions. Minimum length of 300 words; maximum length of 400 words.

The standard price for each package is $499 and each is worth at least $750 based on hourly rates. WordCamp participants with the code will pay about $350 with the discount. The discount code will be 30wcn2016.  

Watch @ContentRocks on Twitter for the announcement that the sign-up page is ready. You can also shoot me an email at pcoyle@content-connects.com for more information.

Interview with Brady Nord, Bluehost’s Sr. Director of Product

5 WordPress Questions with Brady Nord, Bluehost’s Sr. Director of Product

As a champion of all things open source, Bluehost takes its commitment to WordCamp seriously. We sat down with Brady Nord, the company’s senior director of product, to talk about his involvement with WordPress, Bluehost’s relationship with the platform, and the important role of WordCamps.

How did you personally get started with WordPress? I decided to get involved with WordPress because it provided me a way to control my content and scale at the same time. Back when I first started, I knew very little about how websites worked. The fact that I could control so much of my web presence right out of the box was impressive. In hindsight, I attribute the majority of my technical background from learning WordPress in the early years.

What is a big hurdle facing WordPress today? One of the biggest challenges is there are still so many people who don’t know how websites work. That holds many customers back, and WordPress ends up being their guinea pig. Because of this, people leave the platform for reasons beyond WordPress’s control. The platform is trying to accommodate beginners and establishing itself as an enterprise solution.

How would you describe the relationship between Bluehost and WordPress? Bluehost is a great platform for WordPress users to grow with because we have spent the last decade building tools that help WordPress websites succeed. Very few companies have the volume of WordPress customers that we do and even fewer understand what it takes to support them. I was impressed as a customer long before working here — and now I’m even more impressed — by how much the employees care about the WordPress community. A lot has been said about the unique nature of WordCamps.

What, in your opinion, makes this community noteworthy? In the seven years I have been involved in WordCamps, I have not seen another community or conference where people are so devoted to the vision and cause. People travel all around the world on their own dime to attend these WordCamps, and they do it frequently. It’s not a conference that is attended once a year. I’m amazed by the commitment of so many to attend.

What upcoming WordPress changes are you most looking forward to? I am really excited to see where the investment in Javascript and front end developers leads the project. I think bringing more Javascript talent into the community will provide some fresh perspective on the experience and, hopefully, help new users interact with the framework better. Obviously, that goes hand in hand with the rest API, which I’m equally excited about. To learn more about Bluehost, visit the web host’s blog.

Faces of WordPress: Bonita Kolb

bonitakolbName: Bonita Kolb

Employment: Author

Primary website:
www.bonitakolb.com

Twitter handle: @bonitakolb

How were you first introduced to WordPress? My publishers, Routledge and SAGE, request that all authors maintain websites. In other words, we are now required to participate in marketing our books. Knowing nothing about websites I luckily found information about WordPress online and decided to save money by developing my own site. I used the videos produced by WordPress and had my site live in a couple of days.

What do you like about it? WordPress is a system where you can learn as you go. You can start with a single page and then have the site grow as you gain skills. When you want to add features you can always find a video clip and written instructions to show you how.

What do you do with WP now? I use my website to promote myself as an author and keynote speaker. The site is also where I post my blog. I use Publicize to send my blog out to my other social media sites.

How has the WP community (local and beyond) helped you? Being new to Nashville, I have not attended a WordCamp here, but I have attended local WordCamps and also WordCamp US in Philadelphia. I am always impressed that the most gifted developer is always willing to answer the most basic question!

Did learning WP lead to any significant professional, personal, creative changes in your life? Tell us how! Through my website I have received comments from readers of my books in many other countries. It is always rewarding to an author to know that someone has found their books helpful.

What would you tell a brand new user? Don’t be afraid to make mistakes. Everything that you screw up can be undone. Someone else has already made the mistake and can help with the correction. While professional help would improve my website, with minimal technical skills I have a website that does what I need it to do.

Anything else we should we know? While I have been an author of marketing textbooks for years, I plan on introducing a line of short eBooks that I will self-publish. I am glad I already have the website developed to use as a marketing platform.


Do you use WordPress? Do you live in the Middle Tennessee area? If so, we want to feature you and your story of how WordPress makes your work awesome. Submit your story here.

Faces of WordPress: Shelby Webb

Apple-pic-smallName: Shelby Webb

Employment: Holistic Nutrition Consultant

Primary website: webbwellnessconsulting.com

Twitter handle: @webbwellconsult

How were you first introduced to WordPress? I began with a wordpress.com site, then moved over to wordpress.org in 2015.

What do you like about it? I like that WordPress is intuitive as I knew nothing about websites before I started my own.

What do you do with WP now? I use wordpress as a blog for my holistic nutrition consulting business.

How has the WP community (local and beyond) helped you? Free plugins and forums have been absolutely critical. They have helped me teach myself how to do all the basic things.

Did learning WP lead to any significant professional, personal, creative changes in your life? Tell us how! It definitely helped me spread my message about holistic health, and the more I learn, the more exposure my website gets.
What would you tell a brand new user?

Definitely use the free resources available to you online so that you can learn about plugins, etc. You can definitely learn this!


Do you use WordPress? Do you live in the Middle Tennessee area? If so, we want to feature you and your story of how WordPress makes your work awesome. Submit your story here.

For out-of-towners

If you’re travelling into town from outside the metro Nashville area, we did a little legwork on hotel accommodations and transportation. We’ll be following this up with parking and venue neighborhood information ASAP, but for now, here’re our team’s travel recommendations. Feel free to comment here with questions or find us on Twitter & Facebook. We’re monitoring things and will field your questions as best we can

Accommodations

Here are the recommended accommodations for WordCamp Nashville 2016. We highly recommend making reservations from your favorite reservation app, as we found prices considerably lower than those posted via the hotel itself.

Millennium Maxwell House Nashville
2025 Rosa L Parks Blvd, Nashville, TN 37228 Map
(615) 259-4343
Website
Transportation: 7 minutes via car, walking not recommended
Located north of downtown, this hotel is an affordable alternative to staying in the heart of downtown. You can get your honky-tonk on quickly via shuttle or ride-sharing. Taking your car downtown after the camp is not recommended, as parking prices are shocking and unpredictable.

DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel
315 4th Ave N, Nashville, TN 37219 Map
(615) 244-8200
Website
Transportation: 8 minutes via car, 20 min walk via 5th Ave
A pricier alternative, this hotel is located in downtown proper within walking distance of downtown attractions. If you have a car, keep in mind the price of parking, which is not included in the room cost. Both lines of the free Music City Circuit bus also pass the hotel.

airbnb
While we can’t make any promises about individual properties, airbnb is really popular in Nashville and there are lots of interesting places to stay. One of our planning team members has a listing that we love. Find out more about their space on airbnb or instagram.

WordCrash
If you haven’t checked out our post about WordCrash, check it out!

Transportation

Music City Circuit
Nashville runs a free downtown circulator bus that has two lines: Blue and Green. This is the cheapest way to move around downtown without walking. The Blue Line goes down Broadway (honky tonks!) to the Riverfront, and the Green Line goes down Demonbruen St to The Gulch (great places to eat). On weekends, the Blue and Green Circuits operate every 15 minutes from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. and every 30 minutes from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Website
Route Map (PDF)

Lyft
Lyft is offering new users a free ride up to $20 using the code WCN16.