WordPress Crowdsourcing - GreenGeeks https://www.greengeeks.com/tutorials/category/wordpress-crowdsourcing/ How-to Website Tutorials Sat, 18 Nov 2023 23:15:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 How to Set Up WP Crowdfunding in WordPress for Your Projects https://www.greengeeks.com/tutorials/wp-crowdfunding-wordpress/ https://www.greengeeks.com/tutorials/wp-crowdfunding-wordpress/#respond Wed, 19 May 2021 14:00:12 +0000 https://www.greengeeks.com/tutorials/?post_type=ht_kb&p=41721 Do you have a great business idea, but can’t secure the funding to get started? If so, you’re not alone. But luckily, banks are not […]

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Do you have a great business idea, but can’t secure the funding to get started? If so, you’re not alone. But luckily, banks are not the only option to consider nowadays. Instead, you can try setting up a crowdfunded project with the WP Crowdfunding plugin for WordPress.

If your project can reach and appeal to enough people, you might just get the funding you need, or at least secure enough funding to convince real loaners to join in. And the first step to this is to create your own crowdfunding website.

Today, I will demonstrate how to use the WP Crowdfunding plugin to begin gathering funding.

What is Crowdfunding?

Crowdfunding is a technique many start-up businesses utilize to acquire the funding necessary to start their business or fund specific projects. They achieve this by collecting small amounts of money from a very large group of people, and sometimes, it can take years to reach a goal.

Many of these start-ups will choose to use a third-party platform that already has an established reputation and userbase. This will ensure more people will see the funding request and that they will be likely to trust the project.

However, these platforms are not a charity and take a portion of the money raised to cover transaction fees and make money. Instead, you can build your own crowdfunding website and cut out the middle man.

That said, unless you have a way to spread the word, you may not be able to reach enough people with your idea.

How to Use WP Crowdfunding WordPress

Step 1: Install WP Crowdfunding

WP Crowdfunding is a WooCommerce-based plugin, which means you must also install WooCommerce on your website. With this plugin, you can create a WordPress crowdfunding section or dedicate the entire site to your purpose.

This means accepting payments from funders, setting goals, seeing progress, and just about everything else you will need to manage your fundraiser.

Let’s start by clicking on Plugins and selecting the Add New option on the left-hand admin panel.

Add New

Search for WP Crowdfunding in the available search box. This will pull up additional plugins that you may find helpful.

WP Crowdfunding

Scroll down until you find the WP Crowdfunding plugin and click on the “Install Now” button and activate the plugin for use.

Install Now

Note: If you don’t have WooCommerce installed, you will receive an error message informing you to do so. This plugin assumes you have WooCommerce installed and set up as this is required for the plugin.

Step 2: Ensure Your Payment Method is Set Up

While I am assuming that you have WooCommerce set-up, there is one thing you really need to make sure of before proceeding, the payment method.

WooCommerce supports a variety of payment options including PayPal and Stripe. However, depending on how you have these accounts set up, they may not be in a position to, hopefully, accept hundreds or thousands of transactions as donations begin flooding in.

This is also a great time to take a deep look at the transaction fees of each platform.

While you want to ensure you make it easy for customers to donate, it is important to realize that the transaction fees can cost you a lot of that money. You might even want to exclude certain options.

I highly recommend getting into contact with each payment system and seeing what options they might offer a crowdfunding website. After all, crowdfunding is very common online today.

Step 3: Setup Pages

This plugin adds a variety of pages to your website that includes the CF Campaign Form, CF Dashboard, CF Listings Page, CF User Registration, Donation Confirmation, Donation Failed, and Donation History.

Each of these pages consists of just a basic shortcode and really needs to be fleshed out. Spend some time customizing these pages. That said, you could simply add the shortcode to an existing page if it better suits your needs.

In the next step, you will have to decide which pages are used when and where.

Step 4: Configure the Settings

With that out of the way, let’s get right into the settings of this plugin. For the most part, everything is very straightforward, but there is a lot to go through.

Note: There are multiple premium add-ons you can pay for which offer a variety of useful features. One big one would be access to the Stripe Connect payment gateway. That said, this tutorial will not go through the premium add-ons at this time.

On the left-hand admin panel click on Crowdfunding and select the Settings option.

Crowdfunding

The plugin is broken up into four main tabs that contain a variety of settings to configure.

I will cover each tab individually.

General Settings

The General Settings tab allows you to choose the funds manager, which is the system that will accept and manage payments. However, you can only select WooCommerce, so there is no choice in the free version.

You can then set up the default campaign status, campaign edit status, select a dashboard page, campaign submission form, and which user roles can create a campaign. I recommend only letting the administrator role have this privilege.

Click on the “Save Changes” button when you are done.

Save Changes

WooCommerce Settings

The Woocommerce Settings tab deals more with the way crowdfunding is handled and is broken up into multiple sections.

The first section allows you to hide both the crowdfunding page from the shop page and the billing address from the checkout page. You can also select the listing and registration page here.

Choose Pages

The Categories section allows you to separate crowdfunding categories from shop categories. And below this, you can customize the submit form.

Submit Form

The rest of the settings allow you to customize various page elements like how many items will appear on the listings page. Simply fill them out and click on the “Save Changes” button.

Style

The Style tab is dedicated to the aesthetics of the plugin. You can select the color scheme, button color, hover color of the button, text color, hover text color, and you can even add your own custom CSS to better match your website’s design.

Simply select the options that work best for your website.

Style

Field Settings

And finally, the Field Settings tab allows you to hide or display various information on your crowdfunding pages. These include things like the start & end date, minimum donation amount, videos, funding goal, and much more.

All of these options are handled with a checkbox, thus you simply need to check the box to enable a feature and uncheck to hide it. By default, everything is checked.

Field Settings

That concludes all of the settings the plugin offers. As long as you customize your pages, your crowdfunding website is ready to go.

Congratulations!

Build A Userbase

Crowdfunding can only succeed if there is a crowd. Starting a website from scratch is an uphill battle and you are going to need to put in a lot of work to build up a sizeable userbase that will attract businesses to use your website.

There are a variety of website marketing tips available, and you are going to need to take advantage of just about every single one of them.

Which WordPress crowdfunding plugin do you use? How easy did you find the setup process to be?

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How to Accept Guest Posts in WordPress to Grow Your Content https://www.greengeeks.com/tutorials/accept-guest-posts-wordpress/ https://www.greengeeks.com/tutorials/accept-guest-posts-wordpress/#comments Tue, 18 Jul 2017 14:00:42 +0000 http://www.greengeeks.com/tutorials/?post_type=ht_kb&p=13366 Releasing content regularly to keep your readers satisfied is no easy task. It is a full-time job and then some, which is why many websites […]

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Releasing content regularly to keep your readers satisfied is no easy task. It is a full-time job and then some, which is why many websites often accept guest posts to help keep a steady stream of content flowing in WordPress.

Guest posts offer websites several advantages for blogs. If the guest author is well known, you may attract new visitors who are interested in their content. They can also give a fresh point of view on your site that can help shake things up.

It could also open the door for your blog to talk about something different because the guest author is an expert in that field. Most importantly, it is more content for your site that you can often get for free in return for some backlinks.

Today, I will demonstrate how to accept guest posts in WordPress using multiple methods.

How to Accept Guest Posts in WordPress

We will start off with the built-in method for WordPress with user roles and then move on to some plugins that can help. Just make sure that no matter what method you choose, a guest author cannot publish a post on your site.

Let’s just say not all guest posts will use appropriate language, follow the best SEO practices, or may just plagiarize someone else’s work, which could get you into serious trouble.

Thus you need to review and potentially modify any submitted guest post before it goes live.

Method 1: Using WordPress Roles for Authors

The starting place of most websites should be using the User Role system in WordPress. This is a system that allows users to register for a specific role, such as a Contributor who can submit guest posts.

By default, Contributors cannot publish their posts. Instead, they are submitted for moderation where you can do what you like to them, or message that writer to make certain changes.

It’s a great way to ensure that the quality of the work meets your standards. While the user role system is ready to go by default, users can not register for different roles. As such, we need to change that.

To do this, click on Settings and select the General option.

General Settings

You should see a Membership checkbox. Simply check the box to allow users to register. Just make sure you have an anti-spam plugin in place to reduce the number of bots that try registering.

Allow anyone to register so you can accept their guest posts in WordPress

Next, we need to change the default role that users receive when they register. By default, it is set to Subscriber, but we need to change that to Contributor. This is found beneath the Membership option.

Simply use the drop-down menu to choose Contributor.

Choose Contributor so you can accept their guest posts in WordPress

And that’s it. Simply scroll down to the bottom and click on the “Save Changes” button to finish.

Just keep in mind that your backend may get filled with a lot of drafts, so it is important to stay on top of it. This could clog up your backend and ultimately require a lot of time to really get through everything that is submitted.

As such, you may want to be more selective than just allowing anyone to sign up as a contributor, which is where these other methods could help. The plugins demonstrated below can help you select contributors.

Method 2: Using Submissions Forms

Letting anyone be a contributor can be risky. You can end up getting a lot of joke posts, low-quality posts, or just ads disguised as posts. As such, most blogs are quite selective about who can create content.

For these reasons, most of these sites use a plugin to create submission forms that users can fill out to request to become a contributor. Luckily, WordPress has several excellent form builder plugins that can do everything you need.

Alternatively, you can even use submission forms to allow users to submit their work. This way, they never get access to your backend. Granted, this has its own set of downsides like not being able to view SEO tips from Yoast.

Let’s take a quick look at the User Submitted Posts plugin.

User Submitted Posts

The User Submitted Posts plugin has a variety of options available to help you build a form specifically for guest blogging. Simply put, this plugin allows users to submit posts for review from the front end of your site.

All that is required of you is to configure the submission form and then place the shortcode to display it. Ultimately, it will only take a few minutes, so begin by installing and activating the plugin.

Once the plugin is ready for use, click on Settings and select the Submitted Posts option.

Submitted Posts allows you to accept guest posts in WordPress

Click on the Plugin Settings area to expand its list.

Plugin Settings

This will reveal a series of options you can click on to expand. Due to how many of them there are, I will not go into detail but instead recommend that you go through each one and focus on the Form Fields.

The Form Fields section allows you to customize the form that users will need to fill out to submit their posts. You can ask them to provide a title, category, tag, and allow them to upload images.

You can also require them to include their information like email addresses. There are also custom field options that you can use to ask them for any additional information.

For example, maybe you would like them to link a social media page.

This can help you promote them, which will help entice users to want to create content for your site.

In any case, just make sure to click on the “Save Settings” button at the bottom to save the changes.

Save All Changes

Now that you have set up the plugin and have a form ready for users to fill out, all that is left is to actually make it public. As I said earlier, this plugin utilizes shortcodes to display the form. Thus, it’s just a matter of placing it where you want.

All you need to do is copy the following shortcode:

[user-submitted-posts]

And then paste it in the desired location. In this case, I recommend creating a dedicated page that has all of the information that guest writers should be aware of. This may help reduce the amount of low-quality content you receive.

In either case, you need to paste the shortcode inside of a shortcode block and you are good to go.

Submit Post Content

WP User Frontend

Another great plugin to consider using is WP User Frontend. This is far more robust than what we just covered, but it has the same functionality among other things for websites to enjoy.

Go ahead and start by installing and activating the plugin.

When you activate it, you will be able to go through the setup wizard. That said, there really isn’t much to this setup wizard, so feel free to skip it or go through it quickly. It doesn’t have any impact on what we are after.

Setup wizard

Again this, plugin has a lot to offer, but we are only focusing on frontend post submission. The first, and only thing you really need to do, is customize the submission form. The plugin generates a default one that you just need to edit.

To do this, go ahead and click on User Frontend and select the Post Forms option.

User Frontend

You can select the Sample Form that the plugin creates or create a new one. The editor itself is quite simple and utilizes a drag-and-drop interface. You simply need to drag the elements you want to include in it and arrange them as you see fit.

Build Form

Once you are happy with the changes, click on the Settings tab. We need to enable guest posting.

Select the Submission Restriction section and check the box to allow guest posts. Alternatively, you could check the box to allow certain roles to submit posts.

Guest Posts

Be sure to save the changes you have made.

Now, you just need to place this form on your website. It utilizes shortcodes to do this, so it’s quite easy. To find the shortcode, go back to the Post Forms area.

Next to the form, you will see the shortcode. Copy it and paste it into a shortcode block in the desired area.

Shortcode

And that’s it. Users will be able to submit post content from the front end of WordPress for you to review.

Accept Guest Posts in WordPress Today

As you can see, there are several ways to accept guest posts in WordPress. Doing so will help you continue delivering a steady stream of content to users while reducing your own workload. That said, make sure you are still producing your own content.

You cannot rely on guest posts to always meet your quality expectations, thus, they may not be suitable to publish. This can leave you without content to post, which is never a good thing.

Guest posts often work better as releases between your own content rather than a substitution for it.

Why do you want to accept guest posts in WordPress? What plugin do you use to accept guest posts in WordPress?

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