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Today — 27 June 2026Main stream

Representing the University at UCISA Women in Tech 2026: My takeaways and reflections

I was pleased to have a talk accepted at the annual UCISA Women in Tech (WiT) conference. I went to Newcastle for a day of talks, workshops and networking. I left with a better understanding of the WiT community , and a reinforced appreciation of the need for inclusivity in Higher Education.    

UCISA is an industry body supporting digital professionals working in the education sector. I have been actively involved in UCISA since 2022 when I helped set up the UCISA UX Group and became co-chair of this UK-wide community of practice. I’ve organised many UCISA UX events but had not attended one of UCISA’s flagship annual conferences, the Women in Tech event, until this year. My presentation about our project on staff profiles resonated with attendees, I learned a lot about diversity and representation in the sector from attending the other talks and I enjoyed connecting with other Higher Education professionals over shared inclusivity challenges. Here, I reflect on my highlights from an interesting day.

Sharing our staff profiles work piqued interest from other universities

As well as the clear focus on inclusivity, one of the themes of this year’s WiT was real-world applications and problem-solving. I felt our staff profiles project spoke to this theme, so I submitted a talk to share what we learned from research and the steps we have taken towards finding a new profiles solution.

My session was well received – perhaps unsurprisingly, colleagues from other institutions shared the same concerns and challenges in designing a profile solution that showcases staff in the best light, keeps them findable in searches, and yet remains easy for staff to update. I valued the chance to make new contacts, exchange ideas, and learn about other institutions’ diverse approaches to the ‘profiles problem’. I resolved to stay in touch as we take steps towards implementing a profiles solution at the University, recognising just how universal this need is across the Higher Education sector, and seeing an opportunity for meaningful collaboration.

Read more about the staff profiles project in the blog post series:

Collected blog posts about staff profiles project

Results of a 2025 WiT survey revealed risks and opportunities

One of the core activities of the UCISA WiT committee is to regularly collect data to understand diversity within IT departments across the FE/HE sector. At the conference, WiT committee co-chairs Christi Hopkinson and Katie Wilde shared a preview of the results of the 2025 survey, completed by more than 200 respondents from 66 institutions, with 74.5% of the respondents identifying as female. Several findings stood out from the preliminary report in terms of risks and opportunities.

There’s a risk of retention due to barriers to progression

Responses to a question about progression routes revealed significant proportions of respondents had started in IT in the following areas:

  • First/Second Line Support
  • Application Support
  • Business Analysis
  • Project Management
  • Web Development

Responses to a follow-up question about the roles respondents were currently working in showed continued representation in these areas, which indicated a degree of stasis when it came to progression in the sector. Areas where women were underrepresented included:

  • Infrastructure
  • Security
  • Enterprise Architecture
  • Senior Management.

The survey results showed a third of respondents had considered leaving their institutions or the sector, citing pay, workload and progression as popular reasons motivating them to think about moving on. Common blockers to progression included:

  • Lack of available higher-grade roles
  • Promotion structures tied only to management, not technical excellence
  • Career pathways not transparent
  • Women having to ‘prove more’ to progress

There’s potential to be gained by investing in non-technical skills

Most respondents cited the following skills as important for the roles they were currently in as well as for progression:

  • Problem solving
  • Communication
  • Analytical skills
  • Customer service
  • Business analysis
  • Strategic thinking

This spread of skills reinforced the value of focusing training and development on non-technical abilities to complement technical skills, and to ensure expertise was appropriately directed to deliver on broader institutional goals.

There’s room to improve on diversity, inclusion and discrimination

Responses to questions about inclusion and belonging revealed positives and negatives about the workplace respondents were part of.

On the positive side:

  • 79% felt valued as part of a team
  • 67% felt they were treated fairly and equitably

On the less-positive side:

  • Only 34% felt the leadership reflected diversity in the workforce
  • 41% felt there were opportunities for careers advancement
  • 46% felt their organisation supported under-represented groups
  • 47% were satisfied with their organisation’s diversity initiatives

The spread of these numbers provided a clear steer of areas to focus on to achieve less exclusive, and better-balanced IT workplace.

Achieving inclusivity starts with individuals and requires thinking beyond statistics

The survey data gave a snapshot of the current state of inclusivity in the sector, however, anecdotes from individual presenters painted a more vivid picture of what inclusivity could look like. The WiT programme included several women sharing stories of their induction into tech and reflecting on their individual progression routes. It was refreshing to see the diversity of pathways they had taken and interesting to hear about what they had learned along the way, and their tips for success.

Monica Jones, Chief Data Officer at the University of Leeds acknowledged that career progression paths rarely run smoothly, and advised setting personal goals and milestones to work towards, to be best-prepared for promotion opportunities when these came up. Julia Lloyd, College Manager – Business and Law, at the University of the West of England, emphasised the benefits of ‘quiet leadership’ and shared tips to create space for different voices – such as thoughtful structuring of meetings, design of communication channels and rewarding contributions over confidence. A joint talk ‘The Not-So IT Crowd’ from Catriona Blair, Joanna Addison and Sasha Titus from the University of Kent, and a session by Amber Mothersille from the University of Northampton emphasised the value of non-technical skills in technical roles – recognising the need for empathy, trust-building and adaptability to strengthen teams and build excellent digital services.

Breaking barriers requires breaking old biases and habits

A final takeaway from attending the WiT event was a call-to-action to question the way we work – specifically to foster inclusivity by making room for new ways of thinking and for fresh perspectives.

In an interactive exercise led by Katie Wilde, we considered five roles necessary for the operation of successful teams (the Navigator, the Connector, the Builder, the Challenger). In a period of honest reflection, we shared the roles we naturally adopted in team settings, and the roles we tended to overlook or disregard. Going through this exercise was a good leveller as well as a reminder to make room for diversity in everyday team settings instead of relying on familiarity.

The day closed with a thought-provoking talk on male fragility, delivered by Jake Dovey, a UCISA mentor. Drawing on personal anecdotes experienced through his involvement with UCISA, Jake’s talk described instances where men had overreacted defensively to being challenged and where women had inadvertently softened situations to avoid potential conflict and ‘keep the peace’. Jake challenged the women in the room to recognise these instances going forward, and prompted a call-to-action for all to recognise these harmful patterns and call them out to collectively help break the disruptive cycle.

Final thoughts – WiT26 was less about women and more about inclusivity

WiT26 delivered a packed programme which encouraged me to think outside my work in UX and more broadly about the joint responsibilities we all have in creating and fostering an inclusive work environment. I came away with recommendations of books to read and concepts to learn more about, and a heightened awareness of embedding inclusive practices in my day-to-day work and activities. I am keen to see the full results of the WiT 2025 survey and to remain part of the WiT community going forward.

 

Yesterday — 26 June 2026Main stream

Studying ITIL Foundations: What I learned and what I questioned

Working in information technology, I have been aware of ITIL for a while but had never formally studied it. I attended a three-day training course and passed the ITIL Foundation exam. Here, I share my reflections and my review of ITIL.

ITIL (Information Technology Infrastructure Library) originated in the 1980s, developed by an agency of the UK government as a way to standardise IT service management practices. It’s now owned by AXELOS and used globally across a range of industries, including Higher Education. The University of Edinburgh uses ITIL to structure aspects of organisational governance as well as many of its processes. I was curious to learn about ITIL as I felt it would help me make sense of the way some things work within ISG.

Read more about ITIL:

ITIL website

I studied the ITIL 4 Foundation course, which covers concepts like the Service Value System, value co-creation between provider and consumer, the four dimensions of service management, guiding principles, and key ITIL practices like the service desk, service request management, incident management and change management. Going through the course and completing the exam, I came away with several reflections about ITIL and its application to modern digital services.

First rule of ITIL: It’s not supposed to just be about IT (but it mainly is)

For a discipline with IT in its title, it was surprising to learn that ITIL is actually intended as a more generic service management framework, supposed to be applicable to non-technical as well as technical services. ITIL’s IT roots were clear, however, as many of the examples intended to ground the abstract concepts related to management of very traditional technical services, and it was hard to visualise practices like deployment management applied to non-technical realms. Conversely, it was difficult to visualise ITIL flexing to be applicable to the management of emergent technical services, such as machine or AI-based services with rapidly evolving operating models.

Service dominant logic, continuous improvement and systems thinking were familiar

Many of the ITIL artefacts are expressions of service value, based on a fundamental concept that value from a service can only come if it is co-created. In other words, if a service is not used, it cannot create value (no matter how good it is). I’d previously learned about Service Dominant Logic, (described in 2004 as a marketing concept by Stephen Vargo and Robert Lusch), so it was interesting to make the connection between these two disciplines. Whereas Vargo, Lusch and others focus on value dimensions, and the interplay between operand and operant resources, however, ITIL delineated service value through models like the Service Value System and the Service Value Chain.

Continuous improvement was another key ITIL focus, but guided by artefacts like Service Level Agreements and practices like Service Request Management, and motivated by efficiency and compliance focused targets rather than user-focused improvement drivers like UX or CX.

Systems thinking was another thread running through ITIL, however, it seemed limited in its use to describe sequences of inputs and output from different activities in value streams – without inclusion of Soft Systems Methodology (described by Peter Checkland in 1989), universally useful as a way to diagnose problems.

ITIL’s terminology tended to overwhelm the logic and the purpose

Naming things is hard and changing the names of things can lead to even more confusion. When it came to the words used in ITIL, it seemed that those who developed ITIL had thought long and hard about what to call the models, processes, practices and so on. For the uninitiated coming to ITIL fresh, however, it was natural to question why things were named in certain ways and to forget and mix up the terms, as well as question the absence of certain concepts. There seemed little scope to mould the rigid ITIL glossary to real-life scenarios, instead it seemed at risk of institutions trying to fit ITIL rather than the other way around.

Considering this conundrum, I was reminded of work I began a while ago to reduce jargon in Drupal, and of my ongoing work to shape the Web Sustainability Guidelines to be universally applicable. In both instances I had learned of the difficulty in choosing the right words and phrases to meaningfully describe abstract concepts, and therefore could appreciate the length of time it could take small changes to take effect in such a well-established standardisation mechanism as ITIL.

Read about my work on Drupalisms in this blog post:

De-jargoning Drupal – working with the community to open up Drupal’s terminology

Read about my work on the W3C Web Sustainability Guidelines in this blog post:

Shaping the future of the sustainable web: The advent and development of the W3C Web Sustainability Guidelines

 

Drupal In A Day: What we learned (and what we still want to learn): reflections from the UX team

Drupal In A Day (DIAD) is an in-person training event, designed as a beginner-friendly hands-on introduction to Drupal, the open-source content management system. When the University hosted DIAD, several of the UX team took the chance to attend.

As content management systems go, Drupal is one of the mainstays. It’s been around for 25 years and is particularly famed for its robustness, reliability and flexibility – so much so it’s trusted to power websites of enterprises, governments and higher education institutions around the world. It’s open-source so there’s no proprietary lock-in – the functionality, features and innovation available in Drupal comes from a thriving worldwide community of contributors – as individuals, agencies and organisations.

One of the best places to learn about what Drupal is, what it stands for and what it aims to achieve is the blog site of its founder, Dries Buytaert.

Dries Buytaert blog

In 2025, Hilmar Kári Hallbjörnsson taught the first Drupal In A Day on the final day of DrupalCon Vienna.  Hilmar had been teaching Drupal to students at the universities of Reykavik and Iceland for many years and felt strongly that teaching Drupal to new generations, to inform them of its capabilities, and to inspire them of its potential was something the Drupal community needed, as a way to nurture the longevity and sustain the future of Drupal. Through a tremendous effort, he made the first Drupal In A Day happen in Vienna in October 2025. It was very well-received, successfully establishing the Drupal In A Day format going forward.

Read more about the first Drupal In A Day in Hilmar’s blog post from 2025

Drupal in a Day: Vienna 

Hilmar travelled to Edinburgh to deliver Drupal In A Day with our own Web Development Team Manager, Gareth Alexander at the start of June 2026.  Nick (Senior Content Designer), Shlok (AI and UX Innovation Intern) and Hannah (Digital Content Style Guide Intern) from the UX team signed up for the event along with other LTW interns and staff from the wider University with an interest in learning about Drupal. Here, they reflect on their experiences of the day.

Nick’s reflections 

I attended this training to bring my understanding of Drupal up to date. The last time I set up a Drupal site was in the early 2010s, and a lot has changed since then. With Drupal providing the backbone to EdWeb 2, I wanted to get to grips with some of the terminology and concepts that underpin conversations within our team about what our central CMS can do. 

I was particularly interested to learn more about Drupal CMS, a new service that helps you set up a Drupal site more quickly and with less need for technical understanding. 

After getting the required software set up on my laptop (thanks Kirsten), I clicked along with Hilmar and Gareth as they walked us through the various sections of Drupal CMS. We worked through steps to create a new content type and we created different Views to display the same content. We tweaked image formats. We also learned how to attach tags to a piece of content and how these tags can act as a filter for overview pages. 

By the end of the day, I hadn’t suddenly become a Drupal expert. But I did have a better understanding of how EdWeb 2 works behind the scenes. In particular, I felt like I knew more about how EdWeb 2 takes the content you enter when you create a page and presents this in different ways elsewhere on a site. 

Alongside that, I would now feel more confident in setting up a new Drupal CMS site, and I now have a better understanding of what this system offers in comparison to other ways of operating a website. 

Finally, the day gave me a better sense of how the community aspect of Drupal is central to how this project keeps going. Hilmar and Gareth emphasised that there are various events in the calendar where people working with Drupal can meet up and collaborate. That’s a powerful message: that anyone is invited to learn more, become part of the community and contribute to how this system works. 

Shlok’s reflections

Before starting my internship, Drupal was a completely new concept to me. I did not really know what a content management system was, how Drupal worked, or why it was used by universities and other large organisations. Because of that, Drupal In A Day was a really useful introduction for me. 

I thought the format worked well because going through everything in one day helped keep a flow of information. It was quite intense and sometimes fast-paced, but that also meant we were able to cover a lot of concepts in a short amount of time. I would say I was able to follow around 70% of the session, which felt like a good start considering Drupal was completely new to me. 

One of the parts I found most useful was the introduction to Drupal itself. It helped me understand what Drupal is, what a CMS is, and why the University uses it. I learnt that Drupal is valued because it is stable, secure, flexible and open source, which makes it suitable for large and complex websites like those used by universities. This helped me understand why Drupal is still used by many major institutions. 

I also found it interesting to learn about the Drupal community and the different ways people can work with Drupal. Before the session, I assumed Drupal was mainly for developers. However, I learnt that people can build careers around Drupal in different ways. Some roles involve coding and development, while others focus more on design, content, user experience, training or project work. That helped me see Drupal as more than just a technical platform. 

One point that really stood out to me was when we were told that Drupal has a steep learning curve at the start. This was useful to hear because it made the difficulties I was facing feel expected. Since many people find Drupal challenging in the beginning, it was reassuring to know that not understanding everything straight away was normal. It made me feel more comfortable continuing to learn. 

During the practical parts of the day, I learnt about some of the basic Drupal features, such as creating and managing content pages. At first, this was quite confusing because the concepts were new to me. However, as the day went on, I started to become more comfortable with the terminology and the way Drupal is structured. 

Another part that I found very helpful was the follow-up assignment where we had to build something from scratch. After learning so much in one day, I think it was important to have a task that allowed us to apply what we had learnt. It helped me consolidate my knowledge, see which parts I had not fully understood during the session, and become more comfortable with Drupal before starting work on my internship prototypes. 

One thing I would have liked to learn more about was the command line and the use of terminal commands. We touched on some setup and development processes, but I think spending more time on what the commands do and how they fit into the Drupal workflow would have helped me. I would also have liked to learn more about the coding side of Drupal, especially how to build custom Drupal modules. This is particularly relevant to my internship because my work is focused on AI and innovation within Drupal. 

If I could suggest one change, it would be to make Drupal In A Day into a two-day or three-day format. The first day could stay mostly the same, giving everyone a broad introduction to Drupal. The second day could be a slower guided session where participants build something with support from the instructors, similar to the assignment we were given afterwards. A third optional day could focus more on coding and custom module development for those who want to explore the technical side further. 

Hannah’s reflections 

I signed up for the Drupal in a Day training with very little knowledge of the CMS beyond working with existing EdWeb 2 sites, such as when creating prototypes of Style Guide pages or writing blog posts. So, I was interested in increasing my knowledge of Drupal as well as gaining the ability to build a site. Before the training began, I was unsure how well I would follow the instructions as a beginner, but Hilmar, Gareth, and all of the members of the Drupal community who were present at the training were extremely helpful, informative, and patient when it came to giving assistance at points where I was confused or behind. 

Once I had overcome a technical error with my laptop and decided to use Drupal Forge, I was able to follow along with the instructions being provided and replicate the Artist biography pages that Hilmar and Gareth were demonstrating. The course was fast-paced and detailed, and while maintaining this pace was a challenge, it made the course engaging and the product of the day felt like a genuine accomplishment. 

With the knowledge that I gained throughout the training, I feel that I have a strong foundation that will allow me to continue to develop my skills in building a Drupal site further in the future. In particular, I think the example site that we were creating during the training was incredibly useful in that it allowed us to try out several different aspects of building a site with Drupal, such as different content types, tags, and images, as well as exploring some different design options as well. 

I was impressed to learn about how community centred Drupal is, and that contributions and developments to Drupal are made by users and members of the community. Gareth and Hilmar’s explanations of how this works really helped me to understand why Drupal is as adaptive and intuitive as it is (such as in its security and bug fixes), which is that these developments are a direct result of user experience. Furthermore, Gareth and Hilmar also emphasised the flexibility of Drupal, due to the ability to install ‘recipes’ that customise the functionality of sites that you are building. 

Overall, I think Drupal in a Day was an extremely useful and practical training session that has equipped me with the skills to build a basic site and further develop these skills whenever I have the chance.  

Emma’s reflections

When it comes to Drupal, I am largely self-taught – pretty much everything I know has been gleaned from reading, attending/watching sessions from Drupal events, and (predominately) pestering people in-the-know with my questions. When Drupal In A Day came to the University, I pondered whether I should attend. I’ve contributed to the community since 2022. I’m on the Drupal leadership team. Surely I should know Drupal by now? I took a split second to reflect and realise that you never fully know Drupal. There’s always something new to learn, something to challenge what you thought you understood, or something to clarify an area you weren’t quite sure about. Conscious of not taking a space away from a complete Drupal beginner, I opted to sit in on the event, to follow along, while working on other things.

The day combined practical exercises with general Drupal knowledge. Hilmar and Gareth began with the basics, covering key parts of the process to get started and familiarise with Drupal – like setting up DDEV, using Drupalforge and creating a Drupal.org profile. As the day went on, it was great to see quick progression to experiment with some of Drupal’s flagship modules, especially Drupal Views which holds huge power for presenting and displaying structured content in a range of adaptive ways.

Drupal CMS, Drupal’s low-code product provided the playground for learners. Having worked on Drupal CMS since it began, I found it heartening to see it being used to introduce Drupal to new audiences, to help them learn what Drupal has to offer and to help them start ideating on how they might use it. Adopting a UX perspective, I tuned into comments from fellow attendees about Drupal CMS, noting observations to follow up and logging areas for UX improvement to carry forward in my ongoing Drupal UX contributions.

Reflecting on the day as a whole, it helped attendees achieve what is often the hardest thing about Drupal: Getting started. All too often people new to Drupal can find it overwhelming, and they find when everything is possible it’s hard to choose a direction. Drupal In A Day sets learners on a path to start discovering Drupal and making it their own, in other words, planting a seed from which the community can continue to grow.

Before yesterdayMain stream

What we learned from Power BI training

In May, Mel and Nick from the UX team attended two days of Power BI training with QA. The training covered the basics of using Power BI Desktop and, through a mix of instructor-led and independent exercises, gave us a chance to transform data and build visualisations.

Mel’s reflections

Before the training, I’d only ever experienced Power BI from the other side, seeing polished dashboards and interactive visuals without really understanding how they were built. By the end of the training, I felt much more confident using Power BI and excited to start applying it in my work.

Learning through doing

The sessions suited the way I learn best: having a go, clicking around, experimenting and working through exercises rather than just watching demonstrations. Having the training in person made a big difference, as we could troubleshoot problems together and ask questions whenever we got stuck.

I also appreciated the pace and structure of the training. Our instructor, Jason, talked through each step clearly and acted as a guide throughout, explaining not just what to do, but why we were doing it. His knowledge of the system really came across and the sessions felt approachable rather than overwhelming.

Movie datasets solidified my understanding

The most enjoyable part of the training for me was working with the movie dataset. We pulled together information from sites like Box Office Mojo and Rotten Tomatoes to consider how data from multiple sources can be combined to tell a richer story. In doing so, the relationships between datasets, transformations and visualisations became much clearer.

This was  the point where I had the “eureka” moment of understanding how all the different pieces of the puzzle connect together within Power BI.

Keen to keep the Power BI momentum going

Since the training, I’ve been keen to build on what I learned by applying Power BI to real project work. I recently used it to explore qualitative survey data relating to digital design tools, using techniques from the training to clean and organise the data. The training materials proved especially useful, particularly the exercise workbook, which gave me something practical to refer back to.

Working with a familiar dataset made the process feel much less intimidating. It was rewarding to apply what I’d learned so quickly in a real project context.

Nick’s reflections

I thought this training was excellent. I’d seen Power BI dashboards before but didn’t know what you have to do behind the scenes to create them. I attended this training to learn a bit about how Power BI works and improve my skills around working with data more generally.

How Power BI can support UX work

I was interested to see how Power BI could support our work in the UX Service. We work with data that supports our administration of training sessions and our online course Effective Digital Content. We also sometimes deal with sitemaps and analytics, which can include a daunting amount of information. All of this data needs to be tidied up and visualised so we can quickly understand it and use it. While we can do some of that in Excel, spreadsheets have their limits and I wanted to find out what Power BI has to offer.

What we learned

The training involved clicking through activities with our instructor Jason. I found this was a good way to get to grips with the software, and I gradually built up a rough conceptual model of what was going on within Power BI.

In the session, we learned how to:

  • ingest data from sources such as spreadsheets and webpages
  • combine data from different sources
  • tidy up data
  • do operations on data
  • visualise data

In person training worked well

Doing the session in person meant we got to catch up with colleagues in our department while completing the training. It also made it easy to get pointers when something didn’t work. We could quickly ask a colleague to help with the minor problems that inevitably crop up when you’re learning to use a new piece of software.

I came out of the training with an appreciation of what Power BI can do, and a better understanding of how it works. I’d recommend this training to any colleagues at the University who are interested in learning more about working with data.

Reflections on one year of the new Effective Digital Content online course

It’s been a whole year since we launched the new and refreshed Effective Digital Content online course. To celebrate the one-year anniversary I thought I would reflect on how the year has gone, share a bit more about what we’ve learnt along the way, and what is coming next.

If you are keen to read more about the development of the course up until the launch date, you can take a look at our previous series of blogs.

Effective Digital Content blog series

Over 350 people have completed the course in the last year

The aim of the Effective Digital Content course has always been to share content design best practice across the vast University web publishing community. We are really happy that so many people have successfully completed the new version of the course, particularly given the new workbook element which we appreciate comes with an additional time investment. It shows a real willingness from the web publishing community to learn more about how to create effective web content.

As a result, over 350 Digital Badges have been issued under the University’s Digital Badge scheme ‘BadgEd’. Again, this is a real positive in terms of showcasing continuing professional development within our publishing community and we’ve seen people sharing their badge with their networks on LinkedIn.

Effective Digital Content badge details

The Effective Digital Content badge logo issued under the University of Edinburgh Digital Badge scheme.

The Effective Digital Content badge logo.

The course workbook – reaping the rewards of trying something new

We’ve written in previous blogs about the decision to add the new workbook element to the course. For us this was very much a case of trying out something new, as it wasn’t something that had been explored in previous versions of the course.

The workbook idea was born out of a wider project to rethink our content design training approach. The key premise of the workbook is to provide a chance for people to apply the course principles to their own context and receive feedback from someone in the UX Service.

Practical application of the course principles with the opportunity to gain valuable insights from the UX Service was something we had seen work really successfully in our Content Improvement Clubs (our regular meet ups for anyone who publishes web content at the University). The task of delivering this at scale given the ratio of UX Service team members to web publishers was quite a daunting task, but one which I’m pleased to say has been a great success.

Over the last year 350 people have completed the workbook and received personalised feedback from the UX Service on their submission – no mean feat from either side!

We’ve had positive feedback about the personalised workbook feedback

We are so pleased with how the workbook has been received and the effort people have taken in completing it. We’ve seen people updating and improving their web pages as they complete the workbook exercises and in response to the tailored feedback we provide. It has been really rewarding to help facilitate and see tangible positive change in this way.

Here’s what a couple of people who have taken the course have said about their experience of completing the workbook.

I enjoyed completing the workbook as it allowed me to reflect on the various aspects of the course. Receiving feedback on the workbook was a great addition and not something I’ve had in other training courses I’ve completed.

Whilst time-consuming, this was very valuable as it really enabled engagement with the material, enhanced my learning and I feel confident in updating the web page I am responsible for now. The feedback was helpful too, thank you.

We’ve gained valuable insights from reviewing the workbooks

The UX Service have also found it incredibly useful to hear directly from publishers through their workbook answers. The process of reviewing and responding to each submission has provided invaluable insights which can help us to enhance the training we provide by responding to topics and areas which we know are most relevant.

Since the launch, we’ve also made further improvements to the workbook activities as well as the course modules in response to feedback we’ve received.

Taking on the task of reviewing each workbook has been a significant new workload for the team and we’ve been on quite the learning curve. However, we are pleased with how collectively we’ve taken on the challenge and the feedback turnaround times we’ve managed to sustain.

We are evolving and refining our processes to keep up with increasing demand

As demand for the course continues to grow from colleagues across the University, we are looking at ways to refine and automate some of the administrative processes involved in receiving and logging workbook submissions. This is to ensure we can continue to provide tailored feedback to an even larger number of people across the University.

We are developing the course for the Short Courses platform

Following a showcase of the course at the UCISA UX Community Day in September 2025, we received interest in the course from the wider Higher Education sector, with colleagues from other UK universities requesting access to the course content, so that they could apply the concepts to content publishing in their respective institutions.

In response, we are currently working with colleagues to deliver a proof-of-concept course for the Short Courses platform by summer 2026. You can read more about how we are repositioning the course for an external audience in Emma Horrell’s blog.

Repositioning Effective Digital Content as a short online course: A product approach

How to take the course 

If you’d like to take the Effective Digital Content course, you can find more information on our course page, including a link to enroll through People and Money.

Effective Digital Content 

Why enterprise brands are backing WordPress in 2026

19 March 2026 at 15:15

Our recent event, WP:26, was a deep dive into the future—and I was completely fired up to see us gather technologists, publishers, and platform leaders to explore the key patterns shaping WordPress in 2026 and beyond. We packed an afternoon full of talks and discussions, covering the massive impact of AI, accessibility, enterprise publishing, and evolving web standards on the essential role of a CMS.

To cap off a day of critical insight and conversation, we hosted a truly amazing final panel discussion, ‘Why we’re backing WordPress in 2026’, with an exceptional line-up of speakers.

Although Executive Director of WordPress, Mary Hubbard, was unable to attend live, she was kind enough to provide a video intro to kick us off:

“The question isn’t just which CMS should we use; it’s ‘which platform can and will evolve with us?’ WordPress’ enduring strength is its ability to adapt to changing demands and evolving organisational needs… What really sustains the platform is the ecosystem around it, the community, the contributors, and the organisations pushing it forward in production every day.” – Mary Hubbard, Executive Director, WordPress

The panel consisted of:

Meeting the challenges of enterprise publishing

The core of our discussion centred on how and why enterprise brands are actively choosing and investing in WordPress as their platform of the future. The conversation was grounded in the reality of the challenges faced by media companies in 2026—from managing content at a massive international scale to navigating a rapidly shifting technological landscape.

We heard first-hand accounts of how WordPress enables huge international publishing brands to meet these challenges. The consensus was clear: the platform’s adaptability, open nature, and robust ecosystem are its greatest assets when faced with the demands of an enterprise environment.As Gabriel Koen, SVP, Technology at PMC, noted:

“WordPress does a great job of staying modern… the fact that we’ve been able to build on top of it for almost two decades and still see it as the platform for the next several years is pretty remarkable.” Gabriel Koen, SVP, Technology, PMC

From Drupal to WordPress: The CERN example

One of the most compelling threads of the discussion—and something that really excited me—was the story of CERN, the birthplace of the world wide web, and their decision to embrace WordPress after moving from Drupal.

Joachim Valdemar Yde, Web Manager at CERN, provided amazing insight into how one of the world’s most significant scientific organisations chose to standardise on WordPress after a year-long, 14-requirement evaluation against alternatives like Wix and Squarespace. He stressed the importance of having a system that allows their users—scientists and researchers—to be content creators, not web developers.

The move by an organisation like CERN highlights a major shift: WordPress is no longer just a blogging tool, but a flexible, scalable, and future-proof enterprise platform ready for the next generation of web challenges.

Enterprise-grade solutions for what’s to come

The panel also addressed the essential role of enterprise-grade solutions and partnerships in preparing brands for the future. Steph Yiu noted a surge in new enterprise interest driven by AI, which I think is a really important shift:

“AI is forcing innovation across every business… We want to build on a future-proof platform. Closed just isn’t going to cut it for me anymore. I want to build on an open stack.” – Steph Yiu, CEO of WordPress VIP

This perspective underscored that enterprise adoption isn’t just about the open-source software itself, but also the world-class hosting, support, and strategic development partners that turn a flexible CMS into a mission-critical business platform. It’s the combination of the open-source core and the mature, robust ecosystem that provides true peace of mind for global brands.

The conversation also touched on the critical transition of AI from experimentation to production. Gabriel discussed using AI behind the scenes for content translation and processing vast print archives, while Umer shared News UK’s focus on leveraging AI to streamline print and digital publishing workflows to “take entire swathes of effort out of your business.”

If you want to make a dent with AI, you have to take entire swathes of effort out of your business and I think that’s really where the fundamentals are for us at the moment. We’re still a print business and it’s a huge part of our revenue stream, although it’s sort of counter to the WordPress ethos, WordPress is where we do all of our authoring for our print content or certainly where we want to move all of our authoring for our print content alongside our digital content. So, a big part of what we’re working on at the moment is how we streamline workflows. – Umer Ehsan, Director of Technology – Content, News UK

The Future-Proof Platform for Enterprise

If there was one idea that framed the end of WP:26, it was this:

WordPress is the definitive, future-proof platform for the enterprise web.

The final panel discussion reinforced the core message of the day: WordPress is evolving, driven by an open community and backed by the world’s largest digital brands. The platform’s ability to evolve, adapt to modern challenges (be it AI, headless architecture, or new publishing models), and maintain a stable core is why we—and so many others—are backing it for 2026 and beyond.

The collective backing of the panelists, from the platform’s governing body to global publishing and scientific institutions, offers an undeniable picture of its long-term viability and central role in the future of the web.

For me, this event was a tremendous success. We dove deep into the patterns shaping WordPress, and I’m immensely proud that we’ve once again brought together such a vibrant, community-driven event. My sincere thanks go to our incredible panel—Gabriel, Umer, Joachim, and Steph—for generously sharing their time and such critical insights with us. It’s the passion and commitment of people like them that truly sustains the platform and continues to push us forward in production every single day. I couldn’t be more hyped about what we’ll achieve together in the years to come.

Ready to explore all the insights and research from WP:26? Access the full WP:26 Event Replay page here and download our supporting market analysis report, ‘WordPress in 2026: The dawn of the intelligent CMS’.

The post Why enterprise brands are backing WordPress in 2026 appeared first on Human Made.

Why accessibility is fundamental in 2026

13 March 2026 at 15:11

At WP:26, Human Made’s virtual event exploring the future of WordPress, much of the conversation focused on what’s changing across the web. AI is accelerating workflows, enterprise platforms are becoming more complex, and expectations around digital experiences continue to rise.

But in the middle of all that change, one session brought the conversation back to something more fundamental.

In a conversation with Rian Rietveld, we explored accessibility not as a compliance exercise or a checklist, but as a core part of how we design and build for the web. It quickly became clear that while the tools and technologies around us are evolving rapidly, the question of who we are building for remains just as important as ever.

Throwing off the shackles of compliance checklists, Rian delivered a clear and focused take on how accessible design fundamentally impacts your audience reach and revenue. Across an insight-packed 30-minutes, she guided us through the current state of WordPress accessibility, the awesome WP Accessibility Knowledge Base project she’s been working on, and—crucially—the highest-return investment teams can make today.

Read on to get the key moments and insights from Rian’s session.

From compliance to commercial reality

One of the most striking themes from the session was how quickly the conversation around accessibility is shifting. What was once framed as a compliance requirement is increasingly being recognised as a commercial imperative.

Excluding users with disabilities doesn’t just create a poorer experience, it actively limits your audience. As Rian pointed out, that audience is far from marginal. In fact, the cost of getting accessibility wrong is measurable, with billions in lost revenue each year in markets like the UK alone.

For teams building on the web, this reframes the challenge. Accessibility is no longer about meeting minimum standards or ticking regulatory boxes. It is about ensuring your product is usable by as many people as possible, not only because it is the right thing to do, but because it directly impacts reach, engagement, and ultimately, revenue.

Accessibility, AI, and search are converging

One of the most interesting parts of the discussion was how accessibility is increasingly intersecting with other concerns that teams are already prioritising, particularly around AI and search.

As highlighted throughout WP:26, machines are playing a growing role in how content is discovered, interpreted, and acted upon. Whether it is search engines, assistive technologies, or AI agents, all of these systems depend on the same underlying signals to make sense of the web.

Those signals are not new. They include things like semantic HTML, clear heading structures, meaningful labels, and predictable interactions. In other words, the same practices that have always underpinned accessible design.

What is changing is the level of importance. Accessibility is no longer a separate consideration running alongside SEO or AI readiness. It is becoming part of the same foundation. If content is not structured in a way that machines can understand, it becomes harder to find, harder to interpret, and ultimately less useful.

That convergence raises the stakes. Getting accessibility right is no longer just about supporting specific users. It is about ensuring content works in an increasingly machine-mediated web.

Actionable strategy: The highest-return on investment

If advising a digital leader, Rian shared the single highest-return investment in 2026: 

  1. Training people: Train your designers, content creators, and developers on how to build accessible products. Most accessibility is “just decent code, decent HTML.”
  2. Prioritise keyboard navigation: A website and all its functionality must be able to work with the keyboard only. This is the essence of accessibility and should be a non-negotiable testing priority.
  3. Contribute to the Knowledge Base: Rian encouraged the community to get involved with the WP Accessibility Knowledge Base to create one central source of truth for all WordPress accessibility documentation.

“If you create only for perfect people, people who have perfect eyesight, are clear of mind, can move their hands, are web savvy. Well, then you say, okay, only those people are allowed in my web shop and the rest of the people I don’t give access to and the rest of the people are quite a lot of people. So you have to take into account that you build for everyone, not only for perfect people.” – Rian Rietveld, Web Accessibility Specialist.

Ready to explore all the insights and research from WP:26? Access the full WP:26 Event Replay page here and download our supporting market analysis report, ‘WordPress in 2026: The dawn of the intelligent CMS’.

The post Why accessibility is fundamental in 2026 appeared first on Human Made.

AI: the impact on search, discoverability & strategy

19 March 2026 at 14:07

On 12 March 2026, WP:26 assembled the brightest minds in the WordPress ecosystem to explore the trends actively redefining the platform. From AI-driven workflows and the agentic web to accessibility and the future of search, we went beyond the surface to unpack what’s changing and what it means for building with WordPress at scale.

One of the most insight-packed sessions came from Alex Moss, Principal SEO at Yoast, who provided a focused examination of the search landscape’s rapid evolution.

From SEO to AI Search Optimisation: Catch up on the replay of the session and read on to get the strategic takeaways from our essential WP:26 session on AI’s impact.

Throwing off the shackles of buzzwords and new acronyms, Alex delivered a clear and focused take on how the arrival of AI has fundamentally impacted search, content discoverability, and content strategy for all of us. Across an insight-packed 30-minutes, he guided us through where the industry has been, what’s happening right now, what the future might look like, and—crucially—what actionable steps enterprise teams can take today.

Read on to get the key moments and insights from Alex’s session.

The generative shift: from clicks to decisions 

The native search experience has been disrupted by Large Language Models (LLMs), moving from a list of 10 links to a model of retrieval and generation that delivers conversational, contextual, and increasingly personalised answers. The focus for publishers is now shifting from maximising clicks to driving decisions and selections via AI agents.

The rise of GEO (Generative Engine Optimisation)

Alex introduced GEO, defining it as:

optimising content for generative AI search environments, like LLM-powered engines to make it discoverable, trustworthy, and authoritative.” Alex Moss, Principal SEO at Yoast.

The key takeaway? “Good SEO is good GEO”, because the core principles correlate.

Actionable strategy: The four pillars for SEOs

Alex detailed the four crucial areas to focus on this year, including:

  1. Editorial standards: Mediocre content will not survive. Content must be unique and human-driven, but it must also be machine-readable (e.g., concise conclusions, proper headings, lists, evidence, and citations).
  2. Discoverability and EEAT: The goal is to assist the AI agent in synthesising the answer. This structural shift requires adherence to the EEAT framework (experience, expertise, authority, trust) to ensure your brand is validated by the system.
  3. Data integrity: Structured data is more important than ever. Technologies like Yoast Schema Aggregation and Cloudflare’s /crawl endpoints are emerging to allow LLMs to ingest an entire site’s structured data at once, leading to greater efficiency and fewer hallucinations.
  4. Success Metrics: Clicks and impressions are becoming less valuable. Discovery is the new valuable metric, and SEOs need to update their reporting to track how the brand is being seen and cited across different LLMs.

If you’re one of those companies where if I go to the about page and read three sentences and I still don’t know what you do, that’s for the human. That’s not for the machine. Make sure that everything’s machine readable and make sure that everything’s concise, everything is structured well.” – Alex Moss, Principal SEO at Yoast.

Ready to explore all the insights and research from WP:26? Access the full WP:26 Event Replay page here and download our supporting market analysis report, ‘WordPress in 2026: The dawn of the intelligent CMS’.

The post AI: the impact on search, discoverability & strategy appeared first on Human Made.

The shape of the web in 2026

13 March 2026 at 14:25

At WP:26, Human Made’s virtual event exploring the future of WordPress, we asked a simple question:

What patterns are shaping the web in 2026?

To help answer that, Chris Reynolds, Senior Developer Advocate at Pantheon, stepped back from the day-to-day tooling conversations and looked at the bigger picture.

While many discussions about the future of the web focus on disruption, Chris framed the moment differently.

The web isn’t being replaced. It’s accelerating.

AI is speeding up how teams build and publish. Expectations around digital experiences continue to rise. And organisations are under increasing pressure to deliver faster, smarter, and more resilient platforms.

The question isn’t whether the web is changing. It’s how platforms and teams adapt to keep up.

The web is speeding up

One of the key themes Chris explored was the pace of change.

AI tools are dramatically lowering the friction involved in creating, editing, and shipping digital content. Teams that once spent hours drafting, revising, and formatting can now iterate much faster.

But that speed comes with new challenges.

When publishing cycles accelerate, the surrounding systems also need to keep up. Infrastructure, workflows, governance, and editorial processes all need to scale alongside the tools themselves.

It’s not enough to move quickly. Platforms need to support sustained velocity.

Rising expectations for digital experiences

At the same time, user expectations continue to climb.

Audiences expect fast websites. Accessible interfaces. Consistent experiences across devices. And increasingly, they expect content to be relevant and personalised in real time.

These expectations aren’t new, but they are becoming non-negotiable.

For organisations operating at scale, this means the bar for digital platforms keeps rising.

Sites must perform well under heavy traffic. Content needs to be delivered quickly across multiple channels. Editorial teams need workflows that allow them to publish at speed without sacrificing quality.

In other words, the web isn’t just bigger. It’s more demanding.

Why adaptability matters more than disruption

Chris offered a useful reframing of the current moment. Instead of focusing on disruption, he emphasised resilience.

Platforms that succeed over the next decade won’t necessarily be the ones chasing every new trend. They’ll be the ones capable of evolving steadily as the ecosystem changes around them.

That means:

  • supporting new technologies as they emerge
  • integrating with an expanding ecosystem of tools
  • adapting workflows without forcing organisations to rebuild everything from scratch

This kind of adaptability is often overlooked when people talk about digital transformation. But in practice, it’s what determines whether platforms can survive long-term.

WordPress and the long game

That perspective makes WordPress particularly interesting.

For more than two decades, the platform has evolved alongside the web itself. From blogging tool to full-scale CMS, and now increasingly into a flexible application platform.

Throughout those changes, its core strength has remained the same: adaptability.

WordPress doesn’t require organisations to abandon their workflows every time the industry shifts. Instead, teams can evolve their platforms gradually, integrating new capabilities while maintaining the stability they rely on.

That ability to change without constant reinvention is something many organisations are rediscovering as the pace of digital innovation accelerates.

A broader view of where the web is heading

Chris’ session offered an important reminder that while individual technologies may come and go, the underlying patterns shaping the web are remarkably consistent.

In 2026, the web continues to grow more connected. More interactive. More intelligent.

And organisations that succeed will be the ones building platforms that can evolve alongside those changes rather than constantly chasing them.

That perspective helped anchor the wider conversations throughout WP:26.

Across discussions about AI, accessibility, and enterprise publishing, one theme kept emerging: the future of the web won’t be defined by a single technology shift, but rather by platforms that can adapt to many of them.

And that’s a challenge the WordPress ecosystem has been quietly preparing for a long time.

Check out the rest of the WP:26 sessions to find out what the web has in store for enterprise teams in 2026.

The post The shape of the web in 2026 appeared first on Human Made.

#209 – Simon Pollard on Navigating the New Normal for WordPress Community and Events

18 March 2026 at 14:00
Transcript

[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, trying to navigate the new normal for WordPress community and events.

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 Simon Pollard.

Simon has been building with WordPress for many years. Originally from Devon in England, he’s worked as a professional web developer across locations, eventually landing at Illustrate Digital, where he’s been for six years.

Simon’s not just a coder. He’s been deeply involved in the WordPress community, not only organising, but helping to grow the Bristol WordPress Meetup from a casual get together in a pub, to a thriving, officially backed event with dozens of regular attendees.

Like many in the WordPress ecosystem, Simon wears multiple hats. He’s a musician, a devoted dad, and an accidental community leader who found himself at the heart of local WordPress organising. But COVID-19 changed all that.

In today’s episode, Simon explains what happened to WordPress Meetups during and after the pandemic. How vibrant communities fizzled out. How hard it was to bring people back. And the new challenges of connecting when traditional social media platforms no longer bring everyone together.

Simon talks about his own journey, how he paused on events, shifted his social life to music, and struggled to hand the Meetup keys to new organisers. Eventually, a call from an old friend drew him back and he was faced with the new reality. Smaller groups, fractured channels, and the question of how to keep the in-person spirit of WordPress alive.

We get into the irreplaceable value of real life connection, the warmth in the room, and the need to rethink what gets people to in-person events now. Is it hybrid events? Perhaps it’s music? Something beyond pure WordPress talks? We discuss what’s been lost, what still matters, and what it might take to build the new era of WordPress community in a distracted, always connected, world.

If you’re curious about the future of WordPress Meetups, if you felt the ebb and flow of community during the past few years, or if you just want to know how to find your people again, 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. Simon Pollard.

I am joined on the podcast by Simon Pollard. Hello Simon.

[00:03:42] Simon Pollard: Hello Nathan.

[00:03:43] Nathan Wrigley: Very nice to chat. Simon and I have met for the first time, just sort of 10 minutes ago. We’ve had a little bit of a chat. And as is so often the case, Simon has a musical instrument in the background. I don’t know what that is, but there’s definitely a thing there. WordPressers often have musical instruments.

[00:03:57] Simon: There’s more behind me as well. And randomly, I’ll bring in another fact, so I’m in a very casual band of predominantly mid forties internet developing type people. And, yeah, we’re all the same, we all play instruments. And randomly we all, without being connected in any way, can work in the same one building in Bristol, which is co-working in individual offices and we all found out we’re all in the same building. And that wasn’t how we met.

[00:04:21] Nathan Wrigley: I think probably anybody listening to this has figured out by your accent that you’re from the UK. And you mentioned Bristol just there.

[00:04:27] Simon: Well, Brizzle if I’m going to be correct.

[00:04:29] Nathan Wrigley: Right at the top of the podcast, we typically ask the guests to just give us a little potted bio, a moment or two just telling us who you are. And as it’s a WordPress podcast, just give us your background with WordPress, I guess, as well.

[00:04:40] Simon: Yeah, well, I’m from Devon originally, which the English people will pick up on the accent potentially. I try to hide that away, but every now and again a little bit of farmer will come out and it’ll be oh, argh. And then, yeah, so I was born in Devon, moved away into to Cheltenham, been to Cardiff and then ended up in Bristol and worked at various places amongst all of them.

Bristol was where I finally got my kind of proper web job, an actual proper official web job. And the first company I started used WordPress as one of the platforms, and that’s from where I started off my kind of professional career. Moved around a few places since then as developers do, but always kind of staying in the area. And then currently, I am now at Illustrate Digital. Been there for six years, joined at the start of 2020, so that was an interesting progression, we’ll cover that later.

During my time in Bristol, it was someone else who originally raised the idea of a Meetup for of WordPress devs to kind of meet up and have a chat. So myself and a few others met up with this one guy called Henry, and we just met at the pub, sat around a table and had a chat and said, what are you doing? What do you need help with? What would we like to talk about?

And it kind of progressed from being, so we had a few more kind of casual chats, managed to grow. I think there was about six of us met originally and we kind of grew a bit and then said, oh, should we try doing like talks and making it a bit more official? So we progressed onto that. Struggled to find speakers, which I think is the story of absolutely every Meetup is find someone to talk. So I ended up doing a lot of talks myself, which I didn’t mind, but there was only so many times I can involve cats and WordPress together in the same thing.

And then it grew a bit. The key point for me is we took on someone who was a project manager by trade, who was also a developer. And they created a Trello board, and then suddenly we got organised. And I don’t know how, we kind of reached out, I remember now as I’ve just literally spoken to Jenny Wong who works over at Human Made, and she was assisting and she said, you know, is there anything I can do?

And she came over, I was working in Bath at the time. So she came over in person, back in the day when you met in person. Came over to Bath and we sat down and had a coffee and a chat, and she gave me all the tips and advice she could to kind of help build the Meetup and get it bigger and try and get things working.

She also helped us get official backing. So we got the WordPress official backing for the Meetup, which is brilliant because that gave us funds. That allowed us to start hiring venues which is brilliant. So all the worry of paying for kind of costs or anything for the venues got covered by WordPress. We still reached out for sponsors, and the sponsors gave us money for food. Food is obviously a good tool to get people in as well.

It just kind of grew. And I’m not sure what made it grow or how it grew, but it just kind of fed through. But this was back in the day when social media was less run by maniacs and you were happy to post on Twitter and Facebook and it kind of grew from that. I already had quite a good Twitter following, so I just kind of shouted there all the time and tried to pull in everybody and anyone who isn’t at all connected to the internet.

We went to Facebook, I got a friend of mine, was a bit of a social media guy, he set us up several kind of media accounts and added his advice. And then, yeah, just kind of moved on, and we were getting in a good crowd. Towards the end of 2019 into 2020 we were getting say 30, 40 people coming along to the Meetup, which is really impressive.

So we’d fill out a room, we’d get catering in, that would all get done. We had an account, we were that kind of organised, so we had an actual bank account to put our sponsorship money in. We were in profit at one point. So it was crazy. It was just going, yeah, going really well. Lovely kind of gathering, it was just a nice thing. We ran monthly. The organising team grew to about six or seven of us, because there was so much to do. So there’s plenty of us involved.

And yeah, it was going great, all going along lovely. 2020 came about and then suddenly COVID, and that was it. It kind of stopped because it had to, and none of us had the appetite to do the video side of things. We didn’t really have the technology, or the means, and it was just too much with everything else that was going on in the world. So it kind of petered out, and as did my involvement in the community, as much as in person involvement kind of faded out.

And I looked back and, yeah, the last meetup that I attended was in 2020, before just the other week when I’ve gone back, but like the last one was 2020 was the last, looking at my logs, the last Meetup I attended in person, which is quite sad to look back. But this all changed around. I’ve gone very off topic of what I actually do. I think I just went into this hole.

[00:08:49] Nathan Wrigley: Oh, no, it’s great because obviously what the listener doesn’t know is that you and I already know this is what we’re destined to talk about. So you’ve given us the full introduction. So I’ll just take over for a minute, if that’s all right? Because that’s really the case, I think you could map that across all of the WordPress Meetups within the UK.

So prior to COVID, things seemed to be going great guns. There were lots and lots happening. I don’t know the exact number, but there were many. I could pluck out of the air several, and probably, if you combined all of the numbers of those, it was hundreds of people, you know, getting out of their house, going to an event, sharing expertise but also, like you said, the social side of things.

And then this moment in time, this kind of sword of Damocles, if you like, suddenly that we didn’t know was there, dropped. Killed the whole thing overnight for good reason. You know, there was a really legitimate reason for everybody to stop moving around. But it seemed to have changed something for good.

Now what’s curious about that is I remember being in that COVID time, and I remember being utterly fed up and bored, and praying for the time when things would just return back to normal. And with great speed, actually, with the benefit of hindsight, looking back, that almost seems like I watched a COVID TV program. You know, it seems like, obviously I know it was real to me, but it all seems so in the rear view mirror now. It was almost like it was part of a fictional book or something like that.

But I fully expected that the minute all of the guards, and the protections, and the legislation came away, that I would just drop back into everything that I’d done before. And so for me, that’s what happened. I went immediately back to everything, you know, attending events, and all the other different things that I do in my own spare time that have got nothing to do with WordPress.

But the curious thing is, for me at least anyway, is that I appear to be different. You know, you’ve just gone back, within the last few weeks or so. What changed for you? Have you had the time to be introspective and think to yourself, why, Simon, did I not just resume what I was doing before?

[00:10:59] Simon: Yeah. So I mean it’s twofold for me. Yeah, I’ve been very reflective over the last kind of few weeks on this because I’m just reaching out again and seeing people. It’s like, I’ve not seen you in six years and it’s kind of crazy. Well I mean I spoke to them online and responded to comments here and there but, yeah, for me it was twofold.

So during the COVID times I was fortunate enough to have a baby, which changes everything again anyway. And that just became my focus. So whilst working full time and also having a child, that was my focus. The evenings, when I used to have the time to go to the Meetups and everything, in the evening, if I had any spare time, I would just prefer to sit. I didn’t want to do anything else. I didn’t have any energy. I was spent. I was enjoying a glorious moment of sitting, and if I was lucky watching a bit of TV. Yeah, it took it all out of me.

So I’ve put things on pause in that sense. I wasn’t really doing anything. Yeah, as you’ve mentioned the guitars and everything, used to go to gigs a lot as well, but that kind of went on hold. The music side ironically kicked off after. So that’s something that did come in first. So whilst I didn’t go to Meetups, some other people, when things got back reached out to me and said, oh, I’m running a band, do you fancy joining that? So that became my kind of social outlet instead. So my focus went on that, and playing in a band and just meeting up with them. So that was my social interaction.

Ironically, that was someone I knew through, not through Meetups but through events they used to run, I think it was Future of Web Design, or future of, one of those that was down in London. A lady called Michelle, who also has a child, used to live behind me, back in the day in Bristol. She’s moved away. And then she just dropped a message on one of the other social platforms, which I’ll go back to, and just said, oh, do you fancy joining a band, I do drums? I didn’t even know she played drums. Like, she’d been playing drums since kind of school and it just came out.

So that was my social outlet for a while. So I was doing that, and that was good because that was like once a month or so we’d just meet up and have a few hours. My wife could look after my little girl. And so that was my focus for a while and that kind of kept me content for a while moving forward. But I think, yeah, I lost the kind of the urge or the will. I didn’t really have the capacity to run the Meetup that I used to be involved with.

And there were a couple of failed attempts to hand it over. Several people came in and said, oh, I’d like to have a go at running that. So it’s brilliant. So I kind of was like, here’s the keys, off you go. Even still had the Trello board and everything that we had.

And one tried and failed. I think another one did and I just kind of left it. So I assumed nothing really was happening on that. Until recently, it was last year I believe when some of the original team, a lady called Janice who was there at the very first pub round table with me, I think we’ve been to every Meetup ever since. She moved into retirement because she was a web developer and was like, don’t want to stop doing things. And she liked the community and she thought, right, well, if no one’s going to get this up again, I’ll do it again. And she was in the team at the end as well, so she’s already had the experience. She pulled together some of the others of the team. So still another couple of people, Michael and Rob who used to kind of be managing as well, they’re back in it as well and they started bringing it back to life.

And so I kind of saw this last year, the Meetups kind of started filtering through. And because I’m still connected to a lot of these people I found out, trying to remember how it came, it might, would’ve been something like LinkedIn or somewhere, or even emailed and that kind of came through. And it was like, oh, I need to go along to that one time, I really need to go along. And even one of my friends was talking, I was like, brilliant, I’ll go and see him, I’ve not seen him in ages. And then I had an operation that put me out of action for a while.

So that came in, so even when I was just about ready to go. And then finally, turn around to this year and then, yeah, another good friend of mine Ross Wintle, who is a developer, who I think a lot of people hopefully will know, he works doing stuff for ACF in particular, which is why I harass him all the time. But I’ve known him for ages. He was talking, I was like, right, I’ve got to go along because he’s talking. I’ve not seen him in six years, and it’s a great chance to see everyone. And I was so glad I did.

A lot of it, whilst it was smaller, it was still just a lot of the same people. So I think I kind of took in that seeing the people didn’t really appreciate the size but still it was kind of nice. It still felt the same. It was still the nice, friendly atmosphere which you get with WordPress. I think you get that across the board. Not just in Meetups, but devs talk to other devs which you don’t necessarily get in other industries. I would happily tell another dev, for what I would call a rival, inverted commas, company, how to do something if they were stuck, which you wouldn’t necessarily get in other industries.

And that filters through, for me, for the Meetup side. The atmosphere, it’s just very friendly and welcoming. And talking at it is a joy, because you will never get heckled. No one’s going to do that. Unless it’s a friend of yours and they’re teasing you, because you know them.

It’s just such a nice kind of crowd, and that’s where I started doing talks. And I don’t think I would’ve ever done a talk if it wasn’t in front of such a nice crowd and you knew you could kind of do what you wanted. You can make a mistake and no one’s going to pick you up on it. And then a lot of the time they were just interested to hear what you had to say. It was just, yeah, nice.

So I think I’ve already talked myself into doing a talk again. So there’s a good reason to go back. So got to think about that. Yeah, and then I said, well, I used to have a network of people, so how do I reach out to that network of people that I used to do and pull them in? Like, how do I go, right, okay, we are doing all right here but as always, looking for people to talk? So how do I reach out to those people?

And that’s kind of the next point is, the next thing that changed was the social network seemed to almost turn evil in places like Twitter, which used to be a nice go to, and you’d message everyone. Everyone kind of jumped ship because, for good reason. No one seemed to jump ship into the same boat, and everyone was doing their own thing and there was no confined next to step of where you get in touch. And that’s where I’m currently at is, six years down the line, what’s the way to kind of network now on the internet with these people and get in touch with those I may have lost touch with?

[00:16:34] Nathan Wrigley: That’s so interesting. I’m going to unpack a lot of what you said there. I’ve been making my little notes as you’ve been going along, but there’s a few things there.

So the first thing is that it’s curious you, for reasons that you’ve explained very well, you know, the family being the easy one to grasp. You know, you had a very, a different life out the other side of COVID. And so the constraints around that, and the possibilities of socialising were diminished regardless.

I didn’t have that, and so I did sort of just drop back into where I was before. But what’s curious is that clearly isn’t the pattern. You know, we hear about, not just in the WordPress space, but lots of sort of social enterprises, clubs and things that were going on all over this country, kind of lost their way. They couldn’t attract the people back.

So something happened, I think, to us during that period of time. I don’t know if we just became habituated to sitting in more and, you know, more accustomed to watching the telly. I don’t know if they’re ingrained into us somehow, was this fear of the outside world. That’s really overdramatising it, but hopefully you can grasp what I mean. You know, just this idea that outside, bad, inside, good.

[00:17:44] Simon: It was two years of being told to stay inside. And whether of not, that’s going to sink in isn’t? At some point, without even thinking.

[00:17:50] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. But then it just means that, when eventually the guardrails are pulled off, and obviously they weren’t just pulled off in one fell swoop. It was this sort of slow experimental phase, where you could be with a few people and then more people, and then that all got pulled back again, and then it all began again. Eventually, where we are now is you can do basically everything again. There’s no restrictions whatsoever.

But the community, the WordPress community in particular, I do wonder if we probably went into our screens a bit more than the typical person might do. Because, you know, we’re on our screens doing the work. Six o’clock maybe would’ve rolled by in the year 2018 and we would’ve closed the laptop, shut the computer down, and then done the other things. But then for a period of three or four years, we just carried on, on the screens and met on Zoom, or just carried on watching Netflix or whatever it may be. And then untangling all of that on the other side, proved hard, hard to do.

But then the bit that you just said, I’ve never thought about that. The social media, the shattering of social media where people have decided that this platform over there is not for them anymore. And, okay, I’m going to either discontinue using social media, or go to somewhere else and there really isn’t that, what do they call X? They used to call it the town square or something like that. And that’s a long time since that happened. But there’s now, there’s no replacement for that. There’s no one place you can go to. Everything’s shattered over multiple accounts. There’s no question there, but I don’t know if you wanted to respond to any of that.

[00:19:15] Simon: That’s where I am at the minute was I moved on, I tried different things and that’s randomly how I got the band notification was off one of those. But I can’t even remember now what platform that was. And I think I’ve closed the tab on my browser, and I’ve long since forgotten and not really gone back into it because it was a handful of people. And I spent a lot of time building up my Twitter following, and I just lost the urge to kind of do that all over again. And followed enough people for a while but then kind of lost the interest in that.

And, yeah, I don’t know, it’s weird. It’s just because there isn’t really anywhere that’s taken over that was, I mean Twitter was the key one for me. That was because I managed the account for the Meetup as well. So I could post on their behalf, but I could also kind of tie in and connect myself. I could retweet myself and retweet other people, and you could get those connections in place which is harder to do now.

That was my go-to, and then I don’t really know now, yeah, where to reach out. And even, one of the things raised at the Meetup I went to was, someone asked a question. It was like, well I’m not sure I can answer that for you immediately. We need to kind of sit down in front of a computer or something. But how do we communicate in between this and the next Meetup? How do we talk? What is the way to communicate now, that’s standard? You give out an email address or something that, I don’t know. Is that the way you communicate? I seemed very lost and almost forgotten how to socialise outside of actually being there in person. The in-betweens, which I’ve been doing for years and years, what’s the in-between way of talking?

[00:20:40] Nathan Wrigley: It’s strange that that’s a thing really, isn’t it? But it definitely is a thing. I suppose the piece of the jigsaw puzzle where it fits into this podcast is that if you are new to WordPress and you’ve never been to any of these events, and you’ve recently started going, a bit like you have done again. You go and you look at the event and you’ll think, okay, this is nice. Here’s the collection of people. But if you were to go pre 2019, so 2017, 2018 in particular, you were probably looking at the same event with, I don’t know, five times the number of people, 3, 4, 5, maybe even 10 times the number of people.

And so whatever that period was, whether it was COVID or a variety of other things, the numbers have dropped. And I think, whilst it’s not, I’m using air quotes at the moment, whilst it’s not necessary to have community for an open source CMS software project, certainly helps.

It helps that these people gather. It helps that they gain empathy. They sort of start to understand each other. It helps so that they feel a connection. You know, they’re going to join different teams because, oh, that person’s in that team and I know that person. It helps because it enables you to share knowledge and hopefully, instead of 10 people falling over the same problem, one person does, and shares their experience to the other nine. And yada, yada, yada. On it goes.

And it does trouble me that that component is now missing. It makes me think this isn’t good. And I don’t know what the answer is. I wish I had a magic wand that I could wave and bring it all back. Does it bother you? Do you feel that the community should still be important? Or can we just say, this is now where it is, just accept it. This is what we’ve got.

[00:22:26] Simon: Having dipped my toe back in properly into the community as it were, recently, it’s kind of reminiscing now what it was, and there’s still elements there of what it is and knowing people. It is almost networking. It’s kind of knowing those people, and someone knows someone. There’s a very kind of small world. Those relationships and people I used to speak to a lot that I didn’t so much, and it’s weird why that kind of stopped.

And I think, yeah, it’s definitely the kind of the sharing. And it’s particularly relevant I would say if you are a freelancer or work on your own or you are even part of a smaller team. But the networking helps you kind of expand out, and expand your team without it having to be in the company you’re working for. Because as I previously mentioned, the rare thing in the WordPress community is that a developer can speak to another developer about an issue for say, it might even be for a client, and they will work together to resolve it. Offering back is how it was, and I think it still is in some areas, which you wouldn’t say get in others. And I think that’s the community side of it that’s very different.

And I noticed that with the Meetup because I’ve been to other Meetups. We even did a collaboration Meetup as well. And the other ones I went to, it just didn’t feel the same kind of warmth. It felt very fixed. There was no kind of welcoming.

So the one thing that has always been relevant that the Bristol one, is we’ve got a welcoming team. So as soon as you step through the door there’s someone there. Get a little name badge as well. And if you’re new, they’ll ask a few questions and find out what you do. And what we always do is, oh, what do you do? Oh, I’m in project management. Ah, go and speak to so and so, they’re a project manager. Or, I’m looking for a developer. Or kind of find out what was their reasoning, and then direct them because we knew who was there.

That’s opposed to other ones where you go in and you almost kind of sign in and then you’re left to your own devices, and no one approaches you, and it just felt very kind of awkward. Whereas we would try and engage everybody, and we were lucky with the people who kind of organised it, with people like Janice who’s just a naturally approachable person and she will go out and talk to people. And we had that kind of mixture of people that, it just made it nice, and it was nice to go along. And you would go along for the people as much as you would for the talk itself.

I would go to talks which had absolutely no interest to me on paper, but I go along anyway because I wanted to see everybody. And then I ended up finding out that these talks were actually sometimes even more interesting when I thought they wouldn’t be any relevance to me. And it helps you kind of expand your kind of knowledge, and appreciate other elements, and other factors that you might not know about. Which in person is just a lot better and I think it’s more engaging as well. So you can kind of stare at a screen watching something. It isn’t quite as engaging as it is being in person.

And also, once you finish, it’s the debrief after that I really like. So when the talk is finished and everything’s wrapping up, you can go and speak to the talker and query something with them and go and speak to other people. And you kind of have that little social bit afterwards, and it’s all just nice and relaxed. And you don’t really get that on a video call because you can’t really go and mingle on a video call, because how do you go and talk to someone else. And it isn’t the same in person, it’s just a lot easier to kind of do that.

Yeah, how do you sell that for something that wasn’t there for a few years? It’s twofold. How do you bring in the people who used to come? And how do you introduce people who may have been born into never having that? The younger generation who lived through COVID, and didn’t really have that Meetup experience before it to know that this exists on the other side. And what would make it appeal to different kind of levels, really?

[00:25:43] Nathan Wrigley: So I’m not entirely sure, again, if we could rewind the clock. So this is going much, much further back. Let’s say the year 2003, something like that, when WordPress was really little. I don’t actually know the date of the first Meetup, but let’s imagine it was around there. And nobody had, in the WordPress community had ever thought to meet up.

If that just never had become a thing, I wonder how the project would’ve fared. I wonder if it would have been as successful. Because, you know, there were things like Skype and these platforms were coming along where you could do project management and things like that online. It feels like there was no, there would’ve been no inhibition to it being successful.

But I’m more or less willing to predict that it would not have been successful. I think the glue that binds the project together on some completely unquantifiable level is that community. And a certain proportion of that community in the past required the in-person meeting. You know, whether it be the WordCamp events, where they get on a plane or in a car and drive a long distance for a few days and lots of talks. Or whether it’s the more kind of informal monthly Meetup scenario, where it’s probably closer to home and a little bit quicker and one evening only, something like that.

I just have an intuition that the project wouldn’t have been successful. It was those people, and I think I’ve heard the word maven. Maven being this sort of description of somebody who is like a hyper connector. They’re really good at connecting the dots between people and saying, you should meet this person, and you should meet this person. A little bit how you described.

I think there’s some jigsaw puzzle of that going on. There’s some tapestry of these community members making it successful in a way we’ll never fully unpick. And now that that, in the year, so we’re recording this in March, 2026. Now that that seems to be somewhat in question, it then raises the question of, well, what does that mean for the future of the project as a whole?

My anticipation is that if we were to, let’s say nobody from this moment forward ever attended an event again, I think the project would not be as successful. There would be less development, there would be less interest in it. So I think it’s important that we do get these things back. But again, moving on to your point about how, that’s the tricky piece. You know, has life changed? Is the advent of everything online all the time, you know, so go back 10 years, there was no Netflix. Well, maybe there was, I don’t know. But the point is the entertainment that’s available through everybody’s TV now is so compelling, it’s kind of hard to fight against that.

But I don’t know how we get the young people in. I don’t know what it is about, you know, what the competition is. We’ve obviously got AI painted into the mix, and all of the interesting things going on there. So I don’t really, I’m not really pressing you for the answer.

[00:28:36] Simon: That’s fine. One of the reasons for joining is to kind of ask that question to the people listening and saying, has anyone else got that kind of magical wand and jigsaw missed piece? Has anyone got any ideas to kind of move forward with it? Because I say, I’m going to be looking, moving forward now, what I can do and how I can connect and get back in touch with people that I’ve not spoken to. I’ve already done it with a few people I hadn’t spoken to in a while. It’s like, oh, I’ve not spoken to you, oh, you’ve got a child as well. Oh, lovely. Those things you talk about which you just kind of left.

But yeah, I completely cut short on it and it’s just bizarre. But it is kind of coming back. It’s nice to know that whilst it’s quiet, it’s still there. It hasn’t died out, it’s just a little bit smaller than it was. But like you say, whether it can rebuild to where it was, or even partway to that is the query. I’d hope it can because I think it helps.

And the project itself, as you mentioned, WordPress wouldn’t exist without a community because it’s built by a community. It’s not built by a singular development company, and we wait for them to do it, you get involved. If you want to work with WordPress, you can do. There’s nothing stopping you getting involved. You can get in, you can be involved, you can be a tester, you can be a developer for it. There’s no like barrier to be involved in it, and it needs that community to keep it going. As you said, it wouldn’t probably have progressed to where it is without that community behind it.

And that community is still there in some context, but where are they in terms of, how can I to them and talk to them? Because there’s definitely people I want to reach out to again. And what’s the way to reach people these days? What’s the platform now? What’s the way to reach out to people? Where are people talking? Are they talking anymore? Or is it all just looking at TikTok? This is where I’m going to sound really old. Looking at like TikTok and just looking at short videos of things and that’s where. Or do people still communicate, and how? What’s the way to do that?

[00:30:20] Nathan Wrigley: I get what you’re saying by the way. I am of a certain age and things like, how do you even do TikTok? What even is that? I’m not entirely sure. But again, rewinding the clock, the website was the thing. That was the fulcrum of the internet really. It was, you know, suddenly you had this capacity to publish things online, and in order to do that, certainly prior to Facebook and MySpace and those platforms, you had your blog, you know, that was the way to do it.

You had to go through the process of setting it up. And the process of setting it up would pull back the curtain on, oh, so this is a bunch of files and a thing called a database. Right, okay. And that’s now on my computer, is it? Oh, right. And then that means I can mess up out with it. Oh, that’s interesting. And I can do this. And so this loop of curiosity gets created.

Whereas now, and again, this is where I’m going to sound old, the internet feels like a very different place. You know, you’ve got a billion platforms that you can just log into, no money down. There’s maybe some, you know, quid pro quo in terms of advertising or selling whatever it is that your attention can demand. And you can create your stuff over there, and it’s fine. And that platform has a reach of 3.6 billion people and yada yada, on you go.

So whether the incentives for younger people has changed because they just don’t see the need for having a website. Because that’s all been taken care of by these platforms that you log into. And, oh, just go over there, username, password, I’m all done. I think there’s something there.

[00:31:48] Simon: Yeah, I guess it’s the questions when you’re working on something. Because back in the day you would speak to someone, it would be someone’s response. If I had a question I would need someone to have answered that question on the internet. So developers will, of a certain age, will know Stack Overflow is kind of the go-to. That’s where we spent most of our time on the internet. You’d ask Stack overflow because you’d hope someone else had the same issue, and they responded or they’ve posted it, someone’s told them how to fix it or that kind of thing.

And I got to the point where even I started, I made it as a goal to hit a certain score on Stack Overflow. I was like, right, I’m going to hit a certain score, I’m going to respond, I’m going to answer questions, just because I want to feel like I’m giving back because it felt nice. I’d consumed so many answers from Stack Overflow, it felt rude not to give back. And the same thing for me I think with WordPress is I was consuming so much information I wanted to kind of give back, it was nice. And it made you feel, there was a nice thing in the community thing was, if I knew the answer to something and I could explain that to someone else and help them, it was a nice feeling, it was a nice thing to do.

It was like, I’ve learned this thing, and you are looking to do that thing, oh, I learned it, do it this way, this is how you do it. And that kind of helped me. So all of my Stack responses were WordPress. And it was nice to kind of respond to someone and them say, oh yeah, that’s great, and then several other people would like it. It was just a real nice, positive thing as well.

But now, again, there is a lot of reliance on AI coming forward, because it’s like, you ask AI and AI gives you the answer. And whilst AI consumes information from people, it doesn’t tell you who it consumed it from. So your answer is coming from the AI agent you are using, not from whoever’s actually come up with that answer. So you’ll get your responses, you don’t have to reach out to a person anymore so much as you did back in the day. And whether that’s a factor that the community isn’t needed because it’s being replaced. And you aren’t exposed to the community so you are not getting the answers through the community, you are getting it kind of channeled through an AI agent who’s consuming that.

So they’re doing all the stuff you used to do, and giving you the answers without you having gone into the community and found out that, oh, it was Joe Blogs who answered that question. And it might be that you reach out to them and say, actually, you knew this, do you know that? I’ve made connections through kind of these things as well, and if the answers are no longer attributed, and it’s like the AI agent is the one who’s responded, you don’t know who actually did that if that came through someone because it’s got this information.

[00:34:07] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, it’s just the void provided the answer for you. Yeah, yeah.

[00:34:11] Simon: Exactly. And that’s the community’s kind of gone on that sense but, is that how people are kind of, that’s what they like or do people still enjoy asking others? I still like responding to others internally in my team. If one of my fellow devs has a question, I love to kind of speak, screen share, go and talk through together, because it’s a lot more kind of enjoyable than just asking the internet.

[00:34:32] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. So I wonder if that’s the bear bones of what we need to sort of aspire to. So it’s to realise that there’s a proclivity to, so, okay, rewind a bit. To realise that the community has taken a hit. There’s no question that’s happened. But also to realise that there isn’t a panacea for this. There’s no red pill that we can take which is going to fix it over time.

It’s to recognise that there’s value in these things. It may be that there has been a dwindling in the audience of these things, but also that little avatar that you just painted of the person who’s curious about the code, but also has a desire to hang out, for the multitude of reasons that that could be, you know, they want to just hang out because that’s a nice thing to do, or they want to do networking, or they want to just make connections that they can chat to when they’re not in the room. To recognise that those people are still out there, and maybe those numbers are smaller.

Whilst you were talking also, it sort of occurred to me that maybe we’re just in flux. You know, nobody’s writing on cuneiform tablets anymore. Nobody’s using a stylist to write on papyrus anymore. Things change, you know, over time. And it may be that this is just the new normal, this is what we now have. I’m not entirely sure. But I kind of long for halcyon days. I’m looking back to those sort of 2018s, 2019s and thinking that’s the bar I’d like to have set. Whether or not that’s possible, I’m not sure.

[00:35:59] Simon: Yeah. It leads to me onto the level up on the Meetup was the WordCamps where it was a big kind of weekend event. And I was lucky enough to be involved. So I was the speakers organiser for the WordCamp that was in Bristol in 2019. Ironically booked my boss before I joined a company just as one of the speakers, and someone we employed as well I booked in for that.

And that was just, yeah, it got so big that we could actually run an entire weekend of stuff. But because the Meetups are now going down in size, I see there is still the appetite. It seems in America and other kind of countries around, but would there still be the appetite in England specifically, where we’re both based, for there to be a WordCamp? Would there be enough to warrant one of those? Or would it have to be very scaled back? Because I remember back in the day, I’ve been to like the London ones and you’ve got multiple tracks. Even the Bristol one had two separate tracks running. But now would it be something a bit more stripped back? Would it just be one track and a small kind of event? What scale would it be? Would there still be the interest?

[00:36:56] Nathan Wrigley: And also, does it have to be kind of mixed up with other things? Like, does it have to be part entertainment, part information, part hallway? Because again, I just wonder if that’s the diet that we’ve created ourselves with. Our always on culture, where entertainment is so readily available, I do wonder if, you know, we’ve got to just acknowledge that those things are of importance.

If you want to attract an audience of people, you’ve got to have the social afterwards, you’ve got to have the band, the live entertainment, the bits in between, the, I don’t know what that is, but just some aspect of gimmicks to make these events fun. Not just, okay, let’s go to a talk, watch the talk and then all go home.

[00:37:36] Simon: Yeah. There was always, I mean the thing I liked with a lot of these was there was the kind of a developer day or, that often preceded so you could get involved a bit more for those who wanted to. So there were kind of certain things. There were the socials as well that was always key to some, and that was just a nice way to kind of unwind afterwards. Because a lot of the time people would be traveling, so you didn’t want to go to the event and then go back to the hotel room and sit on your own. You could stay out and chat.

And as mentioned before, the community is a lovely community. So it’s people you want to hang out with because they’re nice people to hang out with. They’re all really lovely. And I’ve met a lot of really nice people at Meetups, at WordCamps. Just afterwards in particular and just chatting, chat about anything because after a while you get bored talking about WordPress, you’ll chat about whatever you want.

I mean if I get talking about music then I’m away. But it’s just, you build those relationships. And there are connections that I’ve made back, six, seven years ago that I’m still in touch now and I’m reaching out again and going, we lost that touch in between. So I’m kind of reaching out again and just catching up with people. It’s just nice to know like, oh, you’re still in the industry. What are you doing? What’s happened to you? And that kind of just disappeared almost. There wasn’t a way to stay in touch in between.

[00:38:42] Nathan Wrigley: The sort of glib comment that I made at the beginning about the fact that if we were to switch on the cameras on this podcast, we’d be able to see that Simon has a guitar in his background.

[00:38:51] Simon: I’ve got more if you look further up.

[00:38:52] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, there’s many musical instruments there. But the point being though that there seems to be a, certainly from my perspective, doing these interviews on a, multiple a week. There’s a high correlation between musicians and WordPressers. And so I’m going to drop this bomb. Maybe that’s a channel for these events is to combine other things. Like combine cinema with a WordPress event. So, you know, there’s a track for watching films at the same time as there’s tracks for speakers, but there’s also live music over there. You know, I’m not suggesting we invite Coldplay or anything. But, you know, some local acts. Maybe some of the people that are involved in the event themselves, many of whom we know are musicians. It’s gimmicks again, but it’s fun.

[00:39:32] Simon: It’s a nice way, yeah, I mean it’s on our, so our band’s been going for a while and it’s still on our bucket list is to actually perform somewhere. We get together and rehearse and it’s one of my bucket list things is I would love to actually perform. Even if it’s just in a small pub in front of a handful of people and I know them all anyway, but just to kind of do that performance in front of things.

So that could be tied in. I wouldn’t be against kind of suggesting it to the rest of the guys and saying, there’s going to be this event and there’s all sorts of things taking place. There’ll be some technical talks or whatever and all these things. There’s also some music so we could perform. Definitely an idea. Yeah, like you said, there’s a lot of musicians around.

[00:40:07] Nathan Wrigley: Like a hybrid, arts meets technology kind of event.

[00:40:11] Simon: Yeah. There’s a lot of creativity. One of the best people I got speaking at the Bristol Meetup, bare in mind this is just a very small handful of people, a guy called Gavin Strange who works for Aardman. He is just amazing, and he’s done some brilliant speeches. I lucked out working with him on a community thing where we got together on a weekend and built websites in the space of a weekend. So thank God for WordPress, I basically built a site in, I don’t know, about five hours, we built a website from scratch.

He was working with us doing some animations and things and was such a positive, really great person. He works outside of work. He’s insane. He never stops. I reached out on a whim and said, do fancy doing a talk? And he goes, well, I don’t do WordPress. It doesn’t matter, it can be anything. And he came along and did a really good, positive, energetic talk. And that was my biggest coup was I got him to speak to us.

[00:40:57] Nathan Wrigley: And it was nothing to do with WordPress. Okay, that’s so interesting.

[00:41:00] Simon: Absolutely nothing. Nothing to do with WordPress. He just talked about, I can’t even remember, it’s a long time ago, but it was just interesting because it, just talking about what he does and a lot of kind of what he does outside of his working day and keeping busy and just.

[00:41:14] Nathan Wrigley: There’s a lot of overlap with soft skills and things, isn’t there? And to be honest with you, even just learning about the animation process and the tech, no doubt, involved in that. It’s kind of interesting. Okay. This is fascinating. This is going in an unexpected direction.

[00:41:27] Simon: That’s my thing now is maybe I can reach out to him again. And then through my other ways I’ve, I know someone who’s done a TED talk. That’s just probably a little level too much, but he’s a mountain biker. But I wonder, can I tie in that into somehow? And can I pull in that crowd that way? There’s all those kind of connections. It’s like, it doesn’t have to be. I think that’s the thing, we managed to get across that it doesn’t have to be WordPress. You can talk about anything if it relates to the internet, and then it might just aspire that that connects to a site that runs WordPress.

That’s how we kind of got a bigger crowd because we dabbled. We did do a technical focused one and it just, that was my thing. I really wanted to get techie and nerdy and it’s like, but you just cut down to too much of a niche and you’re cutting people out. It’s better to kind of have all sorts of things, and as I mentioned before, getting people to see a talk about something they might not think they’re interested in and realise actually it is very interesting and put across and try and get people in.

[00:42:17] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. I think that’s the perfect place to sort of draw a line under this one. So what we’re saying is that WordPress events, Meetups in particular, I think we’re talking about mainly, they’re definitely going through a state of flux. We don’t necessarily have the answer, but we’ve definitely floated what the problem is. And there’s a few towards the end there, interesting ideas of ways to possibly make it more engaging to people who’ve, I don’t know, just lost interest, or have never come across WordPress.

So, oh, that’s fascinating. I really enjoyed that. Simon, where do people find you? Where are, you mentioned earlier how the entire world of social networking has been shattered.

[00:42:53] Simon: That’s my issue. Yeah, well, I mean you can find me on illustrate.digital. I’ve got to give a slight plug out to the company I work for. We are a WordPress agency. We do loads of stuff for WordPress. At the minute I seem to be living on LinkedIn. I got addicted to a game on there, and then I kept kind of pulling back. That’s my kind of way to reach out at the minute so you can find me there. I think, yeah, otherwise I don’t really use the other socials. I am on Facebook, if you find me, good luck. But otherwise I think LinkedIn is the way to get me initially. But if you’ve got an example and say, ah, you should join this platform, do reach out and let me know, I’m happy to have a look.

[00:43:22] Nathan Wrigley: Thank you. I will make sure that anybody listening to this is able to find that. If you go to wptavern.com, search for the episode with Simon Pollard in, you’ll be able to probably scroll to the bottom of the show notes and there’ll be links to his LinkedIn.

So Simon Pollard, that was a really curious and interesting chat. Thank you for chatting to me today. I appreciate it.

[00:43:41] Simon: Thank you very much Nathan.

On the podcast today we have Simon Pollard.

Simon has been building with WordPress for many years. Originally from Devon in England, he’s worked as a professional web developer across locations, eventually landing at Illustrate Digital, where he’s been for six years. Simon’s not just a coder, he’s been deeply involved in the WordPress community, not only organising, but helping to grow the Bristol WordPress Meetup from a casual get-together in a pub to a thriving, officially-backed event with dozens of regular attendees.

Like many in the WordPress ecosystem, Simon wears multiple hats. He’s a musician, a devoted dad, and an accidental community leader who found himself at the heart of local WordPress organising. But COVID-19 changed all that. In today’s episode, Simon explains what happened to WordPress Meetups during and after the pandemic, how vibrant communities fizzled out, how hard it was to bring people back, and the new challenges of connecting when traditional social media platforms no longer bring everyone together.

Simon talks about his own journey, how he paused on events, shifted his social life to music, and struggled to hand the Meetup keys to new organisers. Eventually, a call from old friends drew him back, and he was faced with the new reality, smaller groups, fractured channels, and the question of how to keep the in-person spirit of WordPress alive.

We get into the irreplaceable value of real-life connection, the ‘warmth in the room,’ and the need to rethink what gets people to in-person events now. Is it hybrid events? Perhaps it’s music? Something beyond pure WordPress talks? We discuss what’s been lost, what still matters, and what it might take to build the next era of WordPress community in a distracted, always-connected world.

If you’re curious about the future of WordPress Meetups, if you’ve felt the ebb and flow of community during the past few years, or if you just want to know how to find your people again, this episode is for you.

Useful links

Simon on LinkedIn

Illustrate Digital

Bristol WordPress Meetup Group

WP:26: Patterns shaping WordPress in 2026

18 March 2026 at 14:23

When we started planning WP:26, we kept returning to one question:

What patterns are emerging that will shape WordPress in 2026 and beyond?

The CMS landscape is changing quickly. AI is transforming how teams work. Expectations around accessibility and performance are rising. Enterprise organisations are rethinking how their digital platforms evolve over time.

By the end of the event, one thing was clear: WordPress isn’t standing still while the web changes around it.

If anything, the platform is evolving faster because of the people building with it — publishers, developers, and organisations experimenting at scale.

From agent-ready architectures to accessibility, AI experimentation, and enterprise workflows, the conversations throughout the day were thoughtful, candid, and occasionally delightfully chaotic (as all good live events are).

To everyone who joined us from around the world: thank you. And a huge thank you to our speakers for sharing their experience so generously.

If you missed any of the sessions, you can watch them below.

WordPress as an agentic platform

HM CGO Noel Tock opened the day with a provocative idea: what happens when software agents start interacting with websites as much as people do?

We’re already seeing AI systems summarise content, generate answers, and navigate websites programmatically. The next step is systems that act on behalf of users — querying data, triggering workflows, and orchestrating actions across platforms.

For Noel, that changes how we think about a CMS.

WordPress isn’t just publishing infrastructure anymore. It’s becoming a programmable platform for intelligent workflows.

“The web is shifting from something humans browse to something agents can act on.”

What made the talk particularly compelling was the idea that WordPress may actually be well suited to this shift.

Because it’s open, extensible, and deeply embedded in the web ecosystem, it can evolve alongside these new patterns rather than trying to bolt them on later.

It was the perfect framing for the rest of the day.

AI search and the return of web fundamentals

Yoast Principal SEO Alex Moss took us into the rapidly changing world of AI-driven search and discovery.

But instead of focusing on hype, Alex highlighted something refreshingly practical: the websites performing best in AI-powered search environments tend to be the ones doing the foundational web practices really well.

Clear semantic HTML.

Logical heading structures.

Proper form labelling.

Content that machines can actually understand.

In other words, the same practices that make a site accessible also make it legible to AI systems.

“If you’re one of those companies where if I go to the about page and read three sentences and I still don’t know what you do, that’s for the human. That’s not for the machine. Make sure that everything’s machine readable and make sure that everything’s concise, everything is structured well.”

One of the most interesting threads of the entire event started here:

accessibility, AI discoverability, and search optimisation are increasingly the same conversation.

Accessibility isn’t a feature — it’s a mindset

Talking with Web Accessibility Specialist Rian Rietveld is always energising because she has a way of reframing accessibility in a way that feels both practical and urgent.

At one point she captured the stakes perfectly:

“If you create only for perfect people, then you say only those people are allowed in your web shop.”

It’s a simple way of expressing a big truth: accessibility isn’t a box to tick. It’s about who gets to participate in the web you’re building.

We also explored how the block editor and full-site editing could become powerful tools for accessibility if reusable components are designed inclusively from the start.

If core patterns — menus, accordions, navigation blocks — are accessible by default, entire websites can inherit that accessibility automatically.

Rian also shared progress on the WordPress Accessibility Knowledge Base, an initiative aimed at creating a clear, central source of accessibility guidance for designers, developers, and content teams.

Her closing advice was refreshingly direct:

“Train your people. Accessibility is mostly just good HTML and good thinking but it has direct impact on revenue.”

The state of the web

Pantheon’s Chris Reynolds zoomed out to look at the bigger picture shaping the web today.

AI tools are accelerating how quickly teams can build, publish, and iterate. At the same time, expectations around digital experiences continue to rise.

The result is an environment where organisations need platforms that adapt quickly without constant reinvention: Chris framed this as a question of resilience rather than disruption.

Platforms that succeed over the next decade won’t be the ones chasing every trend. They’ll be the ones that evolve steadily as the ecosystem changes around them.

And that adaptability is something WordPress has quietly excelled at for more than twenty years.

Why enterprises are backing WordPress in 2026

Following a prescient introduction by WordPress Executive Director Mary Hubbard, we closed WP:26 with a panel featuring leaders running WordPress at truly impressive scale:

The stories shared during this session were fascinating.

Penske Media powers iconic publications like Rolling Stone, Variety, and Billboard. News UK operates massive news platforms with millions of daily readers. CERN manages hundreds of scientific websites serving a global research community.

Despite their very different environments, they described remarkably similar reasons for choosing WordPress.

“WordPress does a great job of staying modern.” — Gabriel Cohen

Joachim shared that CERN conducted a year-long evaluation of CMS platforms before deciding to adopt WordPress as the foundation for its next generation of websites.

Umer talked about how AI experimentation is moving from curiosity to solving real operational problems, from editorial workflows to publishing automation.

Steph highlighted a broader trend she’s seeing across enterprise customers:

“Closed platforms just aren’t going to cut it anymore. Organisations want open stacks they can build on.”

That sentiment surfaced repeatedly throughout the panel.

As AI accelerates innovation across the industry, companies are increasingly looking for flexible, open platforms that can evolve with them.

And WordPress — supported by its global ecosystem of contributors, developers, and organisations — continues to fit that role remarkably well.

Thank you

WP:26 wouldn’t have been possible without the speakers who shared their insights and experience so generously.

A huge thank-you also goes to the Human Made marketing team, who worked behind the scenes to make the entire event run smoothly.

And finally, thank you to everyone who attended, asked questions, and joined the conversation from around the world.

The future of WordPress isn’t just defined by a roadmap.

It’s shaped by the people building with it every day. 

And if WP:26 showed us anything, it’s that the next chapter for enterprise WordPress, AI-powered publishing, and the open web is going to be a fascinating one.

We’ll see you for more next year!

Can’t wait till WP:27? Check out this year’s market analysis report for another hit of WP:26 goodness. 

The post WP:26: Patterns shaping WordPress in 2026 appeared first on Human Made.

Degrowth cabaret comes to London (and other news)

5 December 2025 at 16:33
Degrowth Cabaret! LONDON FRI 23 JANUARY 10.30am – 4.30pm Siobhan Davies Studios If you are an economist interested in performance, a performer interested in economics or simply curious in how these seemingly distinct languages can be bridged, then this session is for you! But don’t worry, you won’t need prior knowledge of economics or the arts!… Continue reading Degrowth cabaret comes to London (and other news)

The next industrial revolution? Reflections from Jisc Digifest 2026

From the birthplace of the original Industrial Revolution, a group of around 2000 intrepid EdTech practitioners and enthusiasts sought to examine and understand what has been dubbed the ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution.’ I was fortunate to be among them for Jisc Digifest 2026 in Birmingham this week.

Birmingham: An 18th century canal sits under a 1960s communication tower nestled among 21st century mid-density residences

There were many opportunities to contribute and get creative

This was my first live Jisc event, and I was delighted to find that the organisers had thoughtfully arranged numerous opportunities for creative thinking and initiating engaging discussions with fellow attendees.

Perhaps my favourite element, the Jisc Hub at the centre of the main exhibition hall. It contained an interactive diorama of what appeared to be a student’s desk circa-2005, complete with an iMac G3, Rubik’s cube, and a fully-playable Nintendo 64. A form on the computer offered delegates to think about the changes in technology since that time and, by extension, what changes we might see on a similar timescale in the future.

An iMac G3 computer and keyboard

I am grateful for the development of non-CRT computer displays

 

Adobe offered delegates a chance to design their own chocolate bar wrapper using the AI tools embedded in Adobe Express. Origami, jigsaw puzzles, and colouring in were available in the Community Hub area.

Far from being frivolous activities, these were opportunities to be creative, and to spark conversations with other delegates.

We have the power to affect change

The conference kicked off with an inspiring keynote speech by climate activist Melati Wijsen. Since the age of 12, Melati has been a passionate advocate for environmental issues, having addressed audiences at the UN and Davos. Her compelling argument underscored the crucial need to include young people in our decision-making processes.

Daniel Liu from the University of Sydney provided a compelling case in allowing students to direct their own learning with AI tools. His case study showed examples of students generating their own self-directed learning tools using an LLM trained on their course materials. In seconds, they were able to generate pop-quizzes, simulations, and interactive graphics to supplement their learning experience.

Liu and many other speakers emphasised that we would do our students a disservice by denying access to these tools, and that it is the duty of educators to ensure that they are taught to use them effectively.

Access to technology is essential to living in the modern world: We must work to ensure that nobody is left behind

I was particularly interested to hear about the positive steps being made in digital inclusion spaces.

Elizabeth Newall presented a set of guidelines that Jisc has developed to assist transnational education (TNE) students and staff. This session was an excellent reminder of the considerations we must make when building our digital estates: for example, we might not think twice when uploading a large image file on one of our webpages over fibre-optic, but such an image might be a severe pain point for a consumer on a cellular-based internet connection.

Such considerations are of particular interest to me: as the Service Manager for the portal service, MyEd, I need to ensure that our services are as lightweight and responsive as possible in order to remain accessible to all of our users.

In a similar vein, I was interested to learn about the UK Government’s Digital Inclusion Action Plan. For many of us, completing tasks like paying for parking or filling in a tax form is made more convenient when done online. However, this is a source of enormous risk for the 8 million people identified by this plan – especially when the action can only be completed online.

Enthusiasm for AI is high among professionals, but questions remain

It is my perception that AI in education technology is beginning to mature and that there is an increasing sense of surety around its potential. This was perhaps best illustrated by the collaborative art piece that was drawn in real-time over the course of the two days. Seeded with the simple question ‘What kind of future do you want to help create?’, a clear picture began to emerge of the exciting potential that these disruptive technologies could provide.

A board covered with answers to the question 'What kind of future do you want to help create?' accompanied by creative illustrations

‘What kind of future do you want to help create?’

 

On the other hand, there are still fundamental questions about AI that are still outstanding, such as: ownership and sustainability of the hardware that AI relies on, the reliance many AI models have on consuming the intellectual property of others, and even the potential for AI to erode the very skills and qualities that make us human.

In perhaps my favourite session of all, ‘Inside the student experience: change, challenges and future hopes’, such concerns were echoed by a panel of student digital champions. They emphasised the importance of listening to student voices and involving them in the decision-making process at all levels. Their perspectives reinforced the notion that the technology of tomorrow must be developed not just with intelligence, but with wisdom and a deep respect for what it means to be human.

Repositioning Effective Digital Content as a short online course: A product approach

Following a successful launch of Effective Digital Content, our internal course that staff complete to learn and practice fundamental content design skills, the UX Service saw an opportunity to make the course more widely available, on the University’s Short Courses platform.

In May 2025, after months of user research-informed development work, my UX Service team delivered a new Effective Digital Content course to University staff. To date, hundreds of staff have successfully completed the course with some staff openly celebrating their achievement by sharing their digital badge.

Read more about how the team adopted a staff-centred approach to developing the Effective Digital Content course:

Series of blog posts about the Effective Digital Content course

Demand for the course from other universities prompted us to think bigger

After the launch of the Effective Digital Content (EDC) course, the UX team presented their work to various forums and groups. Following a showcase of the course at the UCISA UX Community Day in September 2025, we received interest in the course from the wider Higher Education sector, with colleagues from other UK universities requesting access to the course content, so that they could apply the concepts to content publishing in their respective institutions. There were various options to make the course public, and following conversations with University colleagues in Open Education and the Short Courses platform, we decided to pursue adding Effective Digital Content to the short online courses portfolio, to make it part of the University’s continuing professional development offering.

University of Edinburgh short courses website

Market research confirmed EDC a good fit for the short online courses portfolio

As the team behind the course, we acknowledged our bias in deeming it suitable for inclusion in the Short Courses platform. In order to make a more objective assessment of its suitability, we needed to do some research into the external target market and also, to identify related courses and programmes. Google Trends data revealed a growth for the content design sector in recent years, and further market analysis showed that although competitor content design courses were available, none were offered by universities or were targeted specifically at the Higher Education sector, suggesting our EDC could fill a market niche.

Content professionals from the public sector were defined as a target audience

Taking into account competitor courses and their respective offerings and critiquing the content in each of the EDC modules we defined the kind of person we felt would be interested in and would benefit from taking the EDC course. These included:

  • Staff working in communications, marketing, academic or administrative roles in the public sector, working with text-heavy content to ensure compliance with standards
  • People with responsibility for creating or managing digital content on websites, social media or other platforms
  • Those new to content design with broader writing or content creation experience
  • Professionals interested in growing skills and confidence working with content as part of continuing professional development.

Our proposal to reposition EDC as a short online course was approved

Supplying the market research findings together with an appraisal of the course against University-wide criteria such as alignment with strategic objectives and sustainability goals meant the proposal for EDC to be included in the Short Courses portfolio was approved by senior management, giving us the green light to proceed with making it happen.

Design and technical constraints prevented us lifting and shifting the existing course

Excited by the prospect of seeing EDC in a new platform, the UX team dived in, familiarising with Canvas and Eduframe – the dual technologies underpinning the Short Courses platform. After some initial experimentation, however, it quickly became clear that a straight migration of the course content wouldn’t work for several reasons:

  • The section headings of the existing EDC course didn’t map directly into the structure of Canvas
  • Some of the existing EDC video module content was directly Edinburgh-centric (referring to systems like EdWeb for example)
  • The workbook element of the course (where learners receive feedback on worked example) wasn’t feasible to scale beyond an internal audience

Considering these problems one-by-one made them difficult to solve, as there were dependencies between them, as well as additional unknowns still to be worked out.

Read more about Learning Management System software Canvas and Eduframe on the Instructure website

I brought in a product development framework to keep things on track

Having worked as a UX Lead on various projects, I recognised that when decisions become difficult, it is worth taking a step back to consider the bigger picture, to avoid getting lost in the details and potentially making decisions based on short-term logic that may have adverse consequences in the longer-term. Drawing on my most recent experience, working as part of the Drupal CMS product team, I referred to a useful product design framework, the Product Kata, from ‘The Build Trap’ book by Melissa Perri.

Adaptation of the Product Kata diagram from Melissa Perri's book 'The Build Trap' showing the stages: Understand the direction, (Company vision and strategic intent), Analyse the current state, (Current state of awareness), Set the next goal, (Product initiative), Choose step of product process (Problem exploration, Solution exploration and Solution optimisation)

Adaptation of the Product Kata diagram from Melissa Perri’s book ‘The Build Trap’ showing the 4 stages: Understand the direction, Analyse the current state, Set the next goal, and Choose step of product process.

 

This framework follows a classic UX design process whereby the product strategy and vision provide the direction, and an analysis of the current state indicates the work to be done to achieve the vision. With the gulf between the current state and the vision defined, it is possible to set milestone goals and establish the relevant product process step to achieve these: problem exploration, solution exploration or solution optimisation.

I used details from our approved proposal document to define a product vision

Using examples from ‘The Build Trap’ as inspiration, and drawing on the information supplied in the proposal, I pulled together a product vision for EDC as a short online course, outlined as follows:

Product vision

To become the first-choice digital content training course for professionals in Higher Education – equipping them with the practical knowledge and confidence they need to create content that is clear, accessible, transparent and sustainable.

The problem our product is solving

As public sector institutions, universities have strict accessibility, legal and transparency obligations. Thousands of people working for universities are responsible for creating and maintaining digital content – but many have not received support or dedicated training. The result is content that’s difficult to read, costly to maintain and runs the risk of being inaccessible to many users.

The gap our product is addressing

There are lots of content design courses available, but few address the practical realities of writing digital content in the Higher Education sector, where accessibility compliance, inclusivity and  transparency are non-negotiable.

Who our product is serving

The main audience for our product are staff in professional roles who publish digital content a part of their broader roles and need practical guidance they can absorb at their own pace and can immediately apply to their own contexts. A secondary audience  is those wishing to move into content design roles, perhaps from related fields such as copywriting or social media communications.

What makes our product stand out from the competition

Our course was built by content professionals working inside a prestigious Russell Group university, responding to real needs identified by years of research with staff with content publishing responsibilities. It has been refined over years and has been completed by over one thousand staff. Unlike competitor course which are marketing led or are UX-oriented, our course specifically addresses:

  • Hands-on guidance on making content accessible
  • Ways to improve the efficiency of finding information, reducing cognitive load and friction
  • Responsible practices to reduce unnecessary digital waste and promote sustainability
  • Real-world context – with examples and exercises grounded in the Higher Education environment
  • Practical application of theory, designed to be adaptable and applicable in learners’ own contexts.

The strategic value associated with our product

Our course stands to bring value to the University of Edinburgh by:

  • Extending the reach and impact of our in-house content design expertise to a wider audience
  • Positioning the University as a leader in digital content practice
  • Demonstrating commitment to knowledge-sharing and sector collaboration

It also promises to deliver value to learners and their respective organisations by:

  • Building a common language and baseline standard for content design across the sector
  • Addressing growing regulatory and accessibility obligations
  • Supporting staff professional development
  • Helping to reduce costly content errors and accessibility failures.

At a more granular level, I teased out learning outcomes for each course module

Regarding the collection of modules in the internal version of the EDC to represent the ‘current state’, I wrote learning outcomes for each module, to epitomise the purpose of each one.

To form the learning outcomes, I  firstly thought about the practical skills learners would gain on completion, but that felt limited. Perhaps more important for the learners to take away was an appreciation of what these skills could achieve with them and therefore why they were important. Added to this, I felt that each module should also leave learners with an impetus to take the skills and apply them to content in own contexts.

Recalling how we developed EDC for internal staff, I remembered how we worked hard to avoid a static learning experience – and instead provide an experience where the learner is actively guided to apply what they have learned, both to supplied examples in the course but also to their own real-life circumstances.

In the book ‘Learning Experience Design: How to Create Effective Learning that Works’, author Donald Clark refers to this set of emotions as ‘Reflective feeling’:

One important facet of reflective feeling comes through the follow-up, actually doing something. This can be triggered by nudge learning so that the learner gets their kicks through going back to their job and actually implementing a challenge” – Donald Clark, Learning Experience Design: How to Create Effective Learning that Works, 2022

With this in mind I grouped the learning outcomes under ‘practical skills’, ‘knowledge and understanding’ and ‘attitude and awareness’. Examples of each for the module ‘Get link text right’ were as follows:

Practical skill

  • Write link text that is clear, meaningful and make sense on its own out of context

Knowledge and understanding

  • Understand why certain phrases like ‘click here’, ‘more’ and ‘further information’ should never be used as link text

Attitude and awareness

  • Appreciate that good link text improves the experience for all users, not just those with accessibility needs.

The learning outcomes serve as principles to guide content trade-offs and define a proof-of-concept

Having learning outcomes for each module has helped us critique the existing EDC content, to establish what is needed to meet the learning outcomes, what is a nice-to-have and what might be missing. This is, in turn helping to set a blueprint for the minimal content of each module for EDC within the short courses platform.

Referring back to the Product Kata, these outcomes serve as a way to progress from the stage 2 current state to stage 3 where we set our next goals. In real terms this means that as we continue to make decisions about course content – for example, whether to include videos, or how to provide learner feedback, how to replace the workbook element of the course, we can use the outcomes as guardrails to refer to, to drive our decision-making in an auditable way. Collectively these decisions or milestone goals will inform a proof-of-concept ready for testing with representative audiences – the results of which will guide stage 4 and our path of execution – problem exploration, solution exploration or solution optimisation as appropriate.

We’re working with colleagues to deliver the proof-of-concept by summer 2026

Repositioning our EDC course for a new platform has been a learning curve so far, and we’re continuing to draw on the expertise of University colleagues in the teaching and learning realm to ensure we make best use of the technology to deliver a course which meets the need of our target audiences and is an attractive proposition for them to engage with to learn content design.

We’ve set a target to achieve a proof-of-concept course by summer 2026, and are working towards this through a series of three-week long sprints, each focused on one of the course modules – including review of content against learning outcomes, ideation around activities and exercises and testing with at least one user. When we reach the end of these planned sprints, we have a view to testing the entire course with participants representative of the target audience, to iterate on research learnings and deliver a version one of our EDC product by the start of the next academic year 2026/2027.

Exciting times ahead! We’re grateful to the support of the Short Courses team, the Learning Technology team and others to help us bring our content design expertise to life in a new EDC short online course.

What is keeping digital leaders and CMS Experts up at night? Notes from two days of discussions in London

A couple of weeks ago, I packed my notebook and headed to London for two back-to-back events organised by Boye & Co: The UK Digital Leaders meeting and CMS Experts. After two days and a lot of discussions with the support of quality coffee, and delicious Thai and Indian food, I took the train back to Edinburgh having enough ideas, links and reflections to fill several blog posts. Here’s my summary.

About these events

Boye & Co run a series of peer group meetings over each year for digital professionals, bringing together practitioners from a range of sectors in small, high-trust settings. That format works well, encouraging genuine and honest conversation, and it’s very common to hear the real stories behind the polished case studies. This was not my first UK Digital Leaders, or CMS Experts, event, since myself and colleagues have been attending similar events over the last few years, so knew what to expect and was excited about the upcoming discussions. Both groups had overlap in attendees and themes, which made the two days feel satisfyingly joined up.

Reflections from a conference focussing on digital leadership in higher education – October 2025, by Stratos Filalithis

Key insights from the 2025 UK Digital Leaders Summit day in Cambridge – October 2025, by Emma Horrell

My takeaways from the latest Digital Leaders London meet-up – March 2025, by Emma Horrell

AI is everywhere. And that’s both exciting and exhausting.

If there was one thread running through every session, discussion and side conversation across both days, it was artificial intelligence. This was hardly surprising, but what stood out wasn’t the hype, or any superficial push to use AI in any way imaginable as has alarmingly been the case the last few years, but the honesty. There was a shared sense that the AI landscape is overwhelming not because it isn’t relevant, but because it’s so relentlessly fast-moving, has an extremely wide application scale and very high, positive or negative, impact.

There were several ideas and articles shared, highlighting some “uncomfortable” truths. For example, how the Harvard Business Review argues that the expectation that AI will simply lighten the load hasn’t quite matched the reality of integrating it into teams, workflows and systems, especially in complex, devolved organisations like universities, but the result has been quite opposite: to intensify it.

AI doesn’t reduce work – it intensifies it – Harvard Business Review

One specific area where AI adoption has been focussing is web development and software engineering. Terms like “vibe coding” are becoming more popular, even though a term I heard and liked during these two days was “agentic engineering”. It’s not only catchier, it’s more accurate, too. TechCrunch’s reporting that Spotify senior engineers haven’t written a line of code since December has left me with mixed feelings. Nolan Lawson, on the other hand, reflects the current reality a lot better, highlighting that the “craft” of coding has changed and there’s no question of going back. This, however challenging for a lot of people, is an uncomfortable truth: we can’t escape the fact that AI is here for good.

Spotify says its best developers haven’t written a line of code since December, thanks to AI – TechCrunch article, February 12th 2026.

We mourn our craft – Blog post by Nolan Lawson.

What about the skills required to make the most use of AI, coding or not? David Strachan from HCL discussed about “vibe coding” maturity models, which can enable organizations to identify skills gap, organize appropriate training for their teams, and get well ahead of the AI adoption curve.

Finally, there was very interesting discussion related to the impact of AI related to digital accessibility. I have published my thoughts in a separate blog post, earlier this week.

AI and accessibility: keeping the human in the middle – Blog post by Stratos Filalithis

On of my personal takeaways is the confirmation that taking our time to adopt and adapt with cutting edge technologies, which is often the case with the Higher Education sector, it creates a lot of “Fear of Missing Out” moments, but it has a lot of benefits too. We get to learn from others’ experiments, mistakes and successes, putting us in a lot better position to get the best value of our investment. I am expecting something similar to happen with AI, too.

From SEO to GEO and AEO. The era of the answer engine is here.

There were several sessions covering the theme of discoverability in the age of AI. Matthew McQueeny iterated the reality that web search as we know is changing. AI-generated answers are increasingly replacing the traditional list of blue links, which means website traffic from search engines is declining. Adobe’s winter holiday 2025 metrics, a typical season of web search getting busier due to the search for gifts, showed that AI referrals had increased by 700%, with AI-referred visitors converting 30% better than those from traditional search. Bain & Company have shared more detailed analytics about how the average user behaviour has changed dramatically, for example approximately 80% of web search users rely on AI summaries at least 40% of the time.

Goodbye Clicks, Hello AI: Zero-Click Search Redefines Marketing – Brief from Bain & Company

To optimise content discoverability for AI, the traditional Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is transforming to what practitioners are calling Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO) or AI Engine Optimisation (AEO). William Borg Barthet’s lightning talk summarised that good SEO is good AEO. The familiar techniques of structured data, clear metadata, use of schema.org markup, and accessible writing are not going away, to the contrary: they matter more. One phrase from Tom Cranstoun’s session on Machine Experience paraphrased the title of a UX classic book by Steve Krug: “Don’t Make the Agent Think”, which translates to: if your content isn’t structured for humans to grasp at a glance, it won’t be structured for AI agents either.

With AI taking control of the narrative, we need to rethink our content

The rise of AI has made us ask some very interesting questions. For example, who do we design and build websites for? Surely, our end users and audiences are at the top, but how should we approach the fact that a rising amount of them interact with AI summaries, and choose not to visit our websites?

Kate Kenyon presented on how website content has been designed and built for screens, for human eyes to read and hands to scroll and click. AI is not interacting with the content in the same way. It scans it, looks out for clear content structure, context and relationships, usually hidden from the human eye, and uses them to respond to user questions, setting the narrative using our content.

I was encouraged to think that our central website platform, EdWeb 2, has been designed using structured content in its pages by default by using the Paragraphs module in Drupal.

Digital Sovereignty, it’s closer to home than you think.

Living and operating in a, quite fluid at the moment, geopolitical environment has triggered questions about ownership of digital platforms. Simon Jones delivered a lightning talk on digital sovereignty that sparked a lively conversation. Following political decisions and the shift of alliances, the physical boundaries between countries are starting to extend to the digital world, too, sadly. About 80% of EU governments currently rely on US-owned platforms and tools for their digital infrastructure, and some of them are already considering the associated risks, or actively moving away from them.

France, for example, is actively moving away from Zoom and Teams, building its own government platform, LaSuite. Other EU-based technologies that are considered are Matomo for privacy-first analytics, Proton for encrypted communications and Bunny.net as a content delivery network.

LaSuite – France’s public digital services suite

Matomo – privacy-first analytics

Proton – Email and encrypted communications

Bunny.net – Content Delivery Network

This made me think about our own reliance on non-UK based technologies, and the potential impact of that technology not being available or shifting its direction towards more privacy invasive strategies. It was quite a scary thought to make.

If any of my reflections have sparked a thought, a challenge or a question relevant to your own work, I’d love to hear from you. Use the comments below, or get in touch with me directly at stratos.filalithis@ed.ac.uk. These conversations are a lot more useful and productive when they go out of the room and evolve.

Creating a new style guide page on University terminology

This year the User Experience Service have been working on improving the University’s editorial style guide. Nick Daniels, Hannah Watson and I have blogged about previous aspects of this work:

In this post, I will focus on the work we’ve done to create a new page on University terminology for the style guide.

Our research findings led to the creation of a new University terminology page

An intrinsic part of the style guide refresh project has been looking at the way we write content across the University’s vast array of web pages to evaluate how we use, spell and punctuate certain words – identifying opportunities to reduce inconsistencies. In doing so, we recognised that there were a variety of University-specific words being written in varying ways, using different types of punctuation, capitalisation and abbreviation.

We also heard anecdotally through our research with style guide users about some areas of confusion around how to use certain University-specific terminology and the need for some clearer examples.

Colleagues questioned how they should be referring to the University in different contexts.

When am I allowed to say UoE rather than the University of Edinburgh?

We also heard about the confusion around how to write masters.

How do you refer to masters degrees? Does it have an apostrophe or not?

Bringing together the findings of both our desk-based research and user insights, we decided to create a page in the style guide dedicated to guidance on how to use specific terminology within the University of Edinburgh context.

We’ve expanded the previous ‘Referring to the University’ page, consolidating guidance from other style guide pages

We started our review process by looking at the ‘Referring to the University’ page, which previously sat within the ‘Language and tone’ section of the style guide. The page covered how to refer to the University of Edinburgh and when to capitalise the words ‘school’ and ‘college’. Whilst we felt that this guidance was still needed, the existing explanations needed clarification and more illustrative examples.

During our review of the guide as whole, we also noticed that other pages such as spelling, abbreviations and the PDF version of the guide included guidance on University-specific words/terms. Therefore, we decided to consolidate these, where relevant, so they all appeared together on the University terminology page for ease of reference.

The new page therefore covers guidance on:

  • referring to the University
  • writing the names of schools and colleges, including when to capitalise the words ‘school’ and ‘college’
  • writing degree programme titles and awards, including honours and degree classes
  • when to capitalise the word ‘masters’ and whether an apostrophe is needed
  • words to avoid

University terminology style guide page

We’ve included more illustrative examples to aid understanding

Throughout our user research and also usability testing, the power of a good example has shone through. We’ve seen first-hand how it can often allow a user to cut through technical or grammatical explanations to understand how the rule or convention will apply in a practical sense.

Examples are therefore a key feature of the new style guide pages. We’ve used feature boxes to highlight examples throughout the pages of the guide, so they are easy to scan and locate. On the University terminology page, given the nuances in how you use certain words or phrases, depending on the context, we’ve often provided two or three different examples to hopefully make it clear how the term would apply in each case.

A screenshot of how examples are displayed on the University terminology style guide page. Illustrative examples are displayed in two feature boxes. One feature box has the heading 'Write' and another 'Do not write'. Underneath each heading are examples of 'how to' and 'how not to' apply the style guide conventions relating to how we refer to the University in different contexts.

A screenshot of the University terminology style guide page, showing illustrative examples of how to apply the style guide conventions, displayed in feature boxes.

 

The University terminology page aims to enhance consistency

The importance of consistency, particularly when thinking about University terminology cannot be underestimated. It has a direct impact on the perception of the University’s brand and reputation.

A key example and perhaps the most important is how we reference the University itself. During our research we’ve seen many variations: Edinburgh University, UoE, ‘Edinburgh’, the University, The University of Edinburgh to name but a few.

If we aren’t consistent in the way we refer to the University and how we write more generally, we increase the likelihood that audiences (both internally, but particularly externally) will become confused or uncertain when consuming our content.

We hope that the new University terminology page helps to answer some of the questions you might have and provide you with confidence in how to use University-specific words/phrases in different contexts.

How to access the new University terminology page

You can access the new University terminology page in the ‘Language and tone’ section of the style guide

University terminology style guide page

We’ve also updated the abbreviations page of the style guide

Alongside the work we’ve been doing on University terminology, we’ve also reviewed and refreshed the abbreviations page, which is now called ‘Acronyms and abbreviations’. On this page you will find helpful guidance and practical examples on how to use shortened forms of words and phrases within your web content.

Acronyms and abbreviations style guide page

Next steps

Our work continues to keep updating the remaining pages of the style guide. Punctuation is next on the list, along with dates and numbers.

How you can get involved in shaping the new style guide

We are always on the look out for willing volunteers to test out new versions of style guide pages. If you would like to get involved, please get in touch with the User Experience Service: user-experience@ed.ac.uk.

November Content Improvement Club: Creating an event page that works for users

1 December 2025 at 14:30

Content Improvement Club is our regular meetup for web publishers. In our November session we covered events pages. We worked in groups to create a journey map of the information people need from an events page at different points in time. We also spent time peer reviewing events pages people had brought along.

We produce a lot of events content at the University

The idea to focus the session on events pages came about as we thought in the run up to Christmas there’s lots of events going on around the University. However, in reality the University events calendar is busy all year round both for internal and external events.

To give some context, as of May 2025, at a rough estimation there were just over 5,000 events page on EdWeb 2 (covering all existing, past and present events).

During the session we did a WooClap poll to get ideas from people in the room about the type of events they need to advertise. This showed the wide variety of events and it also helped us to decide which type of event to focus the journey mapping exercise on.

 

Screensot of a computer screen showing a wordcloud generated from a WooClap poll to capture the types of events people in the session had to advertise at the University. The different types of events appear in different colours with the most popular events featuring in larger text, such as workshops, conferences, panel discussions, talks, external public events, inaugural lectures, community events, internal, lectures.

A WooClap word cloud of the results of our in-session poll question: what types of events do you need to advertise?

Journey maps can help you to assess how user needs change over time

Sarah Winters from Content Design London describes a journey map as a timeline, which shows the series of steps that your audience goes through, as they try to get from where they are to a desired goal.

The process of creating the map helps you to think through what a user needs at different points in their journey, which in turn helps you to assess how effective your content is.

For events pages, the information that users are going to need will likely vary depending on when you ask them and which stage of the process they are at. For example, what someone needs before signing up for an event will be different to what they need after they’ve attended.

More widely journey mapping can be a useful way to:

  • analyse user needs in other contexts
  • identify pain points
  • get a collective view of a service (not just the bit you support)

We created user journey maps for a University in-person conference

In the session we took the example of a University in-person conference (as this was the most popular type of event from the WooClap poll) and in groups mapped out what information an attendee would need from an events page about the conference at different points in time.

We had identified certain key milestones in the journey before the session, but attendees added their own milestones as they went too.

The key milestones were:

  • Deciding whether to attend
  • Logistics of attending
  • A week before the event (added by participants)
  • The day before the event
  • At the event
  • After the event

Step 1: Map out tasks and questions

The first task was to think about the tasks that an attendee needs to complete and also the questions they might need to answer at each milestone. We did this by laying out the milestone stages in blue sticky notes and then used yellow sticky notes to add the tasks and questions underneath.

Step 2: Decide what information attendees need

The second task was to think about the different types of information attendees need from the page based on the tasks and questions previously identified. We did this by adding pink sticky notes under each milestone stage.

 

Blue, yellow and pink sticky notes on a white table to show the journey map that a group created in the session. Blue sticky notes show the different milestone stages in the journey, yellow sticky notes show the tasks and questions the group identified and the pink sticky notes show the information they thought needed to be included on their events page.

Journey map created by one group in the session

 

Summary of the key information attendees might need at each milestone

The journey mapping process was helpful to assess the content that attendees would need at different stages. During the session each group fed back on their journey map and shared their ideas among each other. This was a really useful way to create discussion between groups and highlight areas of difference between approaches.

We’ve consolidated some of the ideas people had about the key information event attendees might need at each key milestone:

Deciding whether to attend

  • Event title, organiser and affiliation
  • Date and time
  • Event structure/overview and key note speakers
  • Costs (sponsorship opportunities)
  • Format and agenda
  • Accessibility and venue facilities
  • Contact details
  • International considerations
  • Sustainability
  • Speaker opportunities

Logistics of attending

  • Venue location (What3Words) or map
  • Transport options
  • Accommodation
  • Catering
  • Calendar invite
  • GDPR
  • Sustainability

A week before the event (added by participants) / the day before the event

  • Reminder / confirmation email
  • What to bring
  • Directions to the venue
  • Reminder about catering

At the event

  • Programme / schedule
  • Networking opportunities
  • Note of the sessions you’ve pre-booked

After the event

  • Event overview
  • Session recordings and downloadable resources
  • Early bird discounts for next conference

We peer reviewed a selection of different events pages

A key part of our Content Improvement Club format is providing the opportunity for people to bring along a page from a site they work on and discuss it with colleagues from across the University. For this session we had time after the journey mapping to take a look at some event pages people had sent through to us in advance. Each group picked a couple of pages to review and provide feedback to each other on.

The idea was to think about how the content catered for the user needs we’d previously identified, as well as how effective the order and layout of the information was. It was great to see people discussing their pages and getting a fresh perspective from somebody outwith their team.

 

A print out of an events web page for the School of Veterinary Studies titled Inaugural Lecture Showcase. There are two orange sticky notes with feedback on the page content, such as 'it's clear what the event is' and 'good heading'.

Photo of one of the events pages with group feedback provided

How to hear about our next session

We’ll promote our next session via our mailing list. If you’re interested, please sign up:

Join the UX and Content Design mailing list (University login required)

We’re always interested to hear topic ideas for these sessions. It would be really helpful if you could let us know any ideas you have using this form:

Suggest a topic for Content Improvement Club

Other training that we offer

More training is listed on the User Experience Service website:

Training | User Experience Service

Why take the Effective Digital Content course?

27 November 2025 at 15:54

Earlier this year, the UX Service launched a new version of the Effective Digital Content (EDC) online course. This blog outlines why the course matters and how it supports anyone involved in creating or managing digital content across the University. 

In today’s digital world, information is constantly competing for attention. At the University, we publish a large volume of digital content. In such a busy environment, it’s crucial that what we create truly works for our audiences. The EDC course helps us do exactly that.

In a content-heavy world, effective content matters 

People likely arrive at our content already juggling notifications, distractions, and demanding tasks. Their cognitive load may be high, so our content must be as clear as possible. 

It’s important digital content is: 

  • easy to use, understand and find 
  • user-centred 
  • consistent 
  • accessible 

Clarity is essential, not optional. Effective content respects people’s time, helps them complete tasks quickly and delivers the right information at the right moment.  

The EDC course helps you create content that is findable, understandable, and genuinely useful.

The course is for anyone who contributes to digital content 

EDC is designed for anyone who creates, updates or contributes to digital content. That includes staff in communications and marketing, but also researchers, academics, professional services staff, service owners, managers and interns.If your work touches web content in any way, the course provides practical, actionable skills you can apply immediately.

What the course involves 

The course includes six modules, as well as a practical workbook with an exercise for each: 

  • Understanding what your content is for  
  • Creating accessible content  
  • Writing effective headings  
  • Getting link text right  
  • Working with the style guide  
  • Maintaining your content 

What you’ll gain from the course

We’ve picked out a few clear benefits of taking the course. 

It’s a chance to refresh your knowledge  

This course is a great opportunity to refresh your knowledge, whether it’s your first time taking it or you’re coming back for a refresher. It’s always useful to revisit and practice the principles that make digital content effective.

We’ve focused on making the guidance clearer, more engaging, and easier to apply. We’ve also updated some of the guidance to reflect best practice and where the core guidance hasn’t changed, we’ve tried to explain it in a way that’s easier to understand and remember, and put into practice.

If you’ve taken the previous version of EDC, the refreshed examples, exercises, and explanations make it worthwhile to revisit, and you may pick up something new along the way.

Tailored and actionable feedback is provided

A key new feature of the course is the personalised feedback you receive on your workbook. This guidance is designed to help you apply what you’ve learned directly to your real-world publishing tasks, making the learning feel personal and relevant.

So far, learners have consistently highlighted this as one of the most helpful parts of the course. They say it boosts their confidence and gives them clear, actionable next steps for improving their content. It’s been rewarding to see people finish the course feeling supported and better equipped in their content work. Even better, it’s been great to see them making meaningful improvements to their pages based on the reflection and practical tasks they complete in the workbook.

Earn a digital badge 

Another benefit of the updated course is the introduction of a digital badge awarded upon completion of the workbook. This BadgEd (Open Digital Badges) accreditation recognises the skills and effort you’ve put into the course. It can also be shared on LinkedIn or professional platforms, or to support your continuing professional development. 

Mainly, the badge helps highlight your commitment to clear, effective communication, something increasingly important across all roles in the University. 

You can find out more about the BadgEd scheme on their web page.

BadgEd (Open Digital Badges)

How to take the course 

If you’d like to take the Effective Digital Content course, you can find more information on our course page, including a link to enroll through People and Money.

Effective Digital Content 

Insights and reflections on building the course

You can explore our process for creating the new EDC course and read about lessons learned from its launch in our previous blog posts: 

 

MyEd for support staff webinars

Earlier this year, our team worked with the Digital Skills team to develop a short webinar aimed at staff who support students. The goal was to help our colleagues understand how students can use MyEd to traverse our complex digital estate more effectively.

Why the webinar was needed

The primary need that this webinar fulfils is that staff generally aren’t able to see what a student sees in MyEd. MyEd personalises its content and layout depending on the user, so a staff member will have a completely different experience to a student. This is one of MyEd’s key features: students only see content which is relevant to students, and the same principle applies to staff and applicants. However, this does pose a challenge for support staff who need to know how a student can navigate MyEd to complete the tasks that matter to them.

This is something that support staff have fed back to us for some time, so it has been good to develop the webinar as a solution.

We developed the webinar with support staff in mind

When developing the webinar, we made sure that the session was as concise as possible. We settled on a run time of 30 minutes (20 minutes of content and 10 minutes of discussion) as we are aware of the many pulls on our support colleagues’ time.

When deciding on the content, we chose to focus on three elements:

  • Explain in detail how the content and layout of MyEd differs between different user types
  • Provide a walkthrough of the main tasks that students complete through MyEd
  • Demonstrate how the Favourites function in MyEd can be used by students to highlight the items that are most important to them

The webinar needed additional support materials

While we thought that the short demonstration of the student view in MyEd was valuable, we expected that viewers were likely to want to take screenshots for their own personal reference. We thought that this would be undesirable, as such screenshots could become obsolete should the layout or content changed in the future.

For this reason, we decided to provide a set of up-to-date screenshots on the MyEd Support Hub and promote this during the webinar. Now support staff can reference this resource and be safe in the knowledge that the information is remains correct. This resource is available to everyone with a University of Edinburgh Office 365 login:

Student view of MyEd in the MyEd Support Hub

We are planning to continue these sessions in the new year

So far, we have delivered 5 sessions to 61 attendees. Feedback has been positive, with many attendees indicating that the new resource in the MyEd Support Hub was the most interesting part of the session.

We plan to continue to deliver these sessions in the new year. If you or someone you know is interested in attending one of these sessions, please feel free to contact me and I’ll make sure that you are informed when the next batch of sessions are scheduled.

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