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How to Create an Effective Pricing Table for your WP Website with Jupiter

When you’re shopping for a smartphone, let’s say, you look at a few devices and compare them to each other in terms of its design, features, and ultimately, the price. You even place them side by side to study and analyze their similarities or differences.

How to Post a Video on Your WordPress Website: Embedding vs. Self Hosting

Now an increasing number of websites are including videos as a way of establishing a more effective and personal interaction with their customers. After all, seeing members of your team or the founder of a product talking about their work and conveying their character and personality is a powerful way to connect virtually face to face.

How to Fix the Custom Menu Items Limit in WordPress

Creating a dynamic and organized main menu on your WordPress website serves many crucial purposes for your company. It improves the overall aesthetic of your website, creates better navigation to other pages and allows you as a company or web designer to pinpoint your customers’ needs.

Tips on using the Client Shortcode in Jupiter WordPress

When someone visits your website, you definitely want to create trust so that the visitor has the confidence to further engage with your company.

AR, AI and VR: The imagined unimaginable future of web design

Every time I open my Facebook or Twitter feed, chances are pretty high that I’ll see something related to VR, AR or AI (virtual reality, augmented reality and artificial intelligence).

Why a Solid Business is Built on Boundaries

In his book Deep Work, Cal Newport introduces us to a term called Any-Benefit Thinking. He uses it in terms of social media when he says.

Google Analytics for WordPress: Lead Your Business With Numbers

When I was 18 years old I was offered an internship position at a start-up company in Silicon Valley. Two days later I found myself on a flight from Chicago to San Francisco, nervous and still in shock over the exciting opportunity.

Hey WordPress Businesses, What Does Your Warranty Stand For?

They say that something like 80% of software and web design projects fail. If you said you'd be done in 3 weeks and 6 weeks later you're still working on the project, you've failed to meet your obligations.

Using WordPress as a SaaS: An Idea Whose Time Has Come

As we began to think about “what’s next for us, and for WordPress?” it was important for us to put ourselves in the shoes of the average user, as opposed to our professional developer experience.