ThemeFusion – Avada Website Builder https://avada.com For WordPress & WooCommerce Mon, 14 Oct 2024 10:54:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 Open for Business, Physical Distancing, Your Welfare, Sending Love From Our Team https://avada.com/blog/open-for-business-physical-distancing-your-welfare-sending-love-from-our-team/ https://avada.com/blog/open-for-business-physical-distancing-your-welfare-sending-love-from-our-team/#respond Tue, 24 Mar 2020 12:27:49 +0000 https://theme-fusion.com/?p=715464

Amidst this unprecedented situation across the world, we felt it appropriate to let our community know that we are open for business as usual and are here to help.

We appreciate that many people will experience disruption to their daily lives and routines as Governments and local authorities implement measures to mitigate the spread and ultimate effect of COVID-19. And, this is why we feel that some reassurance, from our team, can go a long way. Our support team will continue to provide the 24/7 support for all Avada customers that you have been used to for the past 7+ years, without disruption. Likewise, our development, design, and documentation departments will continue to grow and evolve Avada per our 2020 plans, also without disruption.

Our ThemeFusion team is globally dispersed, and with each person working remotely, we are confident that even with all of the efforts being enacted across the globe to bring this situation under control, we are here for you. Each member of our team is doing what they must to stay safe and comply with their local ordinances. Our safety and your safety is a priority, please take heed as we navigate the coming weeks and months. We all have common ground. However, you are impacted by this all, our love and thoughts go out to everyone concerned.

Our team is a family, our community is the same. From each person here at ThemeFusion, we wish everyone the fortitude and resolve to rise above the challenges ahead.

With love and grace,
Team ThemeFusion

Resources

Keep In The Know

Information begets knowledge! We feel that the more information you have at your fingertips, the better informed you will be. With the entire web industry and WordPress ecosphere changing at the speed of light, making sure Avada stays ahead of the curve is no mean feat. Subscribe to us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, and our official newsletter to keep informed of future promotional events, sales, and insider tips.

]]>
https://avada.com/blog/open-for-business-physical-distancing-your-welfare-sending-love-from-our-team/feed/ 0
ThemeFusion Interview – Auf Deutsch https://avada.com/blog/themefusion-interview-auf-deutsch/ https://avada.com/blog/themefusion-interview-auf-deutsch/#respond Wed, 23 Oct 2019 13:27:56 +0000 https://theme-fusion.com/?p=663671

Von Zeit zu Zeit werden wir von Tech-Blogs, WP-Blogs, Podcast-Channels oder auch Job-Plattformen zu Interviews eingeladen. Wir freuen uns über diese Gelegenheiten und darüber, die vielen großartigen Interaktionen zu unterstützen, die die wunderbare Community bietet, in der und für diewir arbeiten.

Diesmal wurden wir von Markus Puckmayr, dem COO der österreichischen Job-Plattform devjobs.at zum, deutsch geführten, Interview gebeten. Da wir im deutschen Sprachraum sehr viele, begeisterte Kunden haben, freuen wir uns besonders über die Möglichkeit, einmal einen Blogartikel extra für diesen Kundenkreis zu veröffentlichen.

Wir hoffen, in Zukunft weitere Artikel auf Deutsch und auch in anderen Sprachen auf unserer Seite zu posten und würden uns freuen euch auch bei einem der nächsten WordCamps zu sehen. Von unserem Team werden einige beim WCEU 2020 in Porto dabei sein, aber auch schon davor besteht beim WCVienna 2020 die Möglichkeit zum Austausch.

Euer
ThemeFusion Team

From time to time, we are asked to do interviews with tech or WP blogs, podcast channels or, job platforms. We are thrilled to be invited for interviews, sharing our experience with customer interaction, employee relationships, and the vast community. This time we had the pleasure to be interviewed by an Austrian IT jobs platform. We particularly enjoyed that the interview was done in German, as we have a large and enthusiastic customer community in the German-speaking countries.

We are happy we could do this post in German above and are looking forward to hopefully more articles in foreign languages in the future and to seeing you all at one of the next WordCamps.

Cheers
ThemeFusion Team

]]>
https://avada.com/blog/themefusion-interview-auf-deutsch/feed/ 0
ThemeFusion At EnvatoWorldwide & WCEU 2019 https://avada.com/blog/themefusion-at-envatoworldwide-wceu-2019/ https://avada.com/blog/themefusion-at-envatoworldwide-wceu-2019/#respond Mon, 17 Jun 2019 22:36:23 +0000 https://theme-fusion.com/?p=622926

Hey everyone!

This is Mark, ThemeFusion’s CTO. I’m currently here in Berlin for #WCEU 2019. A few other members from ThemeFusion will also be in attendance so we thought we’d do a brief diary blog to let everyone know what we’re doing, who we’ll meet and the events we attend. If you have the opportunity to be here yourself, that’s awesome and if you can’t make it, you can always follow up with our diary to be part of WCEU week. We’ll update this post every day with all that goes on for us.

Monday, June 17th – Arrival In Berlin

Today was traveling day and my wife and me arrived at Berlin during the afternoon. We have planned some sightseeing for tomorrow, before the actual work-week starts on Wednesday at the Envato Worldwide Conference, where I’ll be giving a talk with the topic “ThemeFusion – Behind The Scenes”.

Here are some of our first impressions of an incredibly diverse city of Berlin.

Brandenburg Gate

The “Brandenburger Tor”

Berlin Cathedral by the Spree

The “Berliner Dom”

Berlin Sunset on the Canal

Sundown at the Spree

Tuesday, June 18th – Some Sightseeing

As said yesterday, we explored Berlin a bit today and I prepared for the talk tomorrow at the Envato Worldwide event.

Berlin is a very diverse city, with a lot of places to see and to experience. It represents some of the characteristics we hold up high here at ThemeFusion, like  open-mindedness, creativity, friendliness, ambition and drive.

Temperatures were rather high, 32° C (around 90° F), so sometimes you just have to hide away from the sun. We did just that by visiting the “Hackersche Höfe”, a traditional building complex, where young designers from Berlin present their hand-made goods. Even the coffee-shops there do creative promotions (see on the right).

A visit of the “Brandenburger Tor”, the “Museumsinsel”, with 5 amazing museums and a boat tour on the Spree, the river that runs through Berlin are things that we can highly recommend. Also a visit of Berlin’s largest park area, the “Tiergarten” is worth a visit.

Cafe Board

To chill-out, we can definitely recommend having a beer at the “Holzmarkt Strandbar”, where you can eat traditional food and have a nice cold beer, directly at the riverside in a very nice atmosphere.

In the evening, we also visited the location at the Spree, where we are going to have our ThemeFusion meetup on Thursday night. A teaser image is included below.

We have been in contact with James Giroux from Enavto and the guys have arrived today in Berlin and got ready for the conference tomorrow, having some Berlin style “Schnitzel” :-)

Berlin Riverboat on the Spree

Boat tour on the Spree

Pathway to Berlin’s Victory Column

“Siegessäule” in the “Tiergarten”

Envato Worldwide Meetup

Venue of the ThemeFusion meetup

Wednesday, June 19th – EnvatoWorldwide Conference

Today was our first full conference day of this week. At 09:30 Envato Worldwide kicked off with coffee, biscuits and opening remarks by James Giroux, Author Engagement Lead at Envato.

Workshops, presentations, discussions and Q&A sections followed throughout the day, making the conference an interesting and fun to attend event. Socializing during the breaks, allowed everyone to meet new people or to reunite with old friends.

In the afternoon session, I had my talk “ThemeFusion – Behind The Scenes”, providing some insights about how we are doing our job and why we believe that our customer base and the WP community are so important. The Q&A after the talk wasn’t long enough to follow up with all the questions, so that Ari, Filip and me answered more of them during the after show meetup.

The conference day closed at 17:00 on a roof-top style terrace wit lots of sun, nice food and some cold beer.

In the evening the ThemeFusion crew went out for an after business dinner and some drinks at the nearby “Gendarmenmarkt”.

I guess the images attached will get you a much better idea about EnvatoWorldwide, than me re-narrating could ever do.

Thanks Envato for this awesome conference day!

Thursday, June 20th – WCEU Contributor Day, ThemeFusion Meetup

Thursday started with a nice cup of coffee and writing the entry for Wednesday, since I couldn’t get it done in time :-)

During the morning we had a few appts and Ari attended the morning session of WCEU Contributor Day at the Hotel Estrel. Lots of people showed up here, being happy to give back to the community. Of the 611 sign-ups, 169 said they were new contributors. Workshops and helping to improve WordPress on all kinds of areas and teams were the main focus, as per usual.

At lunch time, our team showed up them at Envato’s Power Elite lunch in the “Gaffel Haus” in central Berlin. We enjoyed traditional German food and networking with fellow authors and team members from Envato.

After the lunch, I went back to our hotel and started to prepare for our ThemeFusion meetup, a few hours later. We met at the famous “Freischwimmer Berlin” bar, directly at the Spree for some food and beers. Our friends from Envato, James, Stephen, Will and Kenn were there, as well as Andras from the Events Calendar team. Quite some folks of the awesome WPML team came to see us too, including founder Amir, CCO Amit and product lead Andrea. Fellow authors from the ThemeRex team visited us as well, which made us a crowd of people of more than 10 nations. It was very inspiring to have that diversity at one table.  Stickers and T-shirts for the attendees were provided and our team had a really good time.

Looking forward to our next ThemeFusion meetup, thanks everyone!

Update: Ari, who stays directly at the Estrel hotel, the venue of WCEU 2019, when heading home found lots of attendees still hanging out and socializing although it was already past midnight, so joined them for a drink and some nice conversation. Let the good times roll!

Friday, June 21st – WCEU Day 1, longest day of the year

So here it is, the first day of WCEU 2019 in Berlin at the Estrel hotel. Our team, has had an exciting week so far. Lots of events and appointments and meeting lots of cool people and having interesting conversations.

Again, the day started for me with updating the blog diary, in this case with info for Thursday. Today, I’m doing better and am updating on the correct day :-)

The Estrel hotel is a huge convention venue and the perfect location for an event as big as WCEU. Official stats say that over 2600 attendees registered today, which is pretty awesome and makes this year’s WordCamp the biggest word camp of all time worldwide!

Registration went super smooth, the volunteers prepared the check-in perfectly and we were able to quickly move on to meeting people from the community and attending presentations from the 3 different tracks.

As always, the talks have been very professional and valuable for a broad audience. Our team met old friends, made some new contacts and had some good appointments today. We met with agencies from different countries, from Serbia to India, with folks from Envato, WPML, YITH, WPMUDEV, WooCommerce, SiteGround, our fellow authors from QODE and ThemeRex and many more. In fact it was so many different people that we had to shift some of the appointments to tomorrow. An incredible and als classic first day of meeting people ate WCEU.

The catering at lunch time was, again as always, one of its kind, and the community used the time to sit outside and enjoy the sun and some good company.

One of the major highlights in the afternoon sessions was the “Summer Update” talk by Matt Mullenweg, the co-founder of WordPress and CEO of Automatic.  He presented some insights about the future of WordPress and also did a long Q&A where attendees could bring up all kinds of interesting questions.

Towards the end of the official working day, our team had an after business beer at the hotel lobby and then moved on to exploring some more of Berlin.

Ari did some nice pictures for us of today’s “night session” at the Estrel hotel.

We are looking forward to tomorrow, to meet more cool WP folks!

Saturday, June 22nd – WCEU Day 2

We started day two of WCEU similar to day one, with a few talks and some meetings with partners. Fortunately we were able to deliver a few more ThemeFusion T-shirts to some partners we had missed on Thursday and Friday.

I had a nice chat with Gary Pendergast from Automattic, one of the project leads of the Gutenberg project and with Aaron Rutely from Envato, showing once again, that the WordPress community is built from just nice folks.

At lunch time, Filip and me had an appointment with an Avada customer who runs a agency for small business websites, collecting valuable feedback and sharing some advices on how he could speed up his workflow. Gladly we brought along some of our promo videos for Avada 6.0, which we happily showed.

Ari used the lunch break and parts of the afternoon session to meet with some people of the WordPress coding standard team, discussing possible improvements.

At the end of the conference the host city of WordCamp 2020 was announced: it is going to be Porto! Dates are from 04th – 06th of June.

The after party was absolutely fantastic. Catering was stunning, with foods from all over the world and lots of bars to get cool drinks. Some 80s music started the evening and quite a few attendees showed up with 80s style clothing. At 09pm, a live performance from “Stars in concert” played lots of the hits of Madonna, Tina Turner and Joe Cocker, all inspired by the original live shows of these stars.

The community was on fire and celebrated all night through :-)

Our team chose to leave after the live acts and to settle for one last drink in the “Biergarten” of the Estrel hotel, at the riverside. We were once again joined bei Andras from the Modern Tribe team for that.

Unfortunately, all good things must come to an end, so the ThemeFusion crew finally had to say goodbye.

We all enjoyed this week of work and could successfully complete all our appointments and business meetings. It has been an awesome week! Berlin, you have been amazing and took our breath away :-).

Porto 2020, here we come!

]]>
https://avada.com/blog/themefusion-at-envatoworldwide-wceu-2019/feed/ 0
Putting Together a Multilingual Site with Avada and WPML https://avada.com/blog/avada-wpml-multilingual/ https://avada.com/blog/avada-wpml-multilingual/#respond Tue, 22 Sep 2015 21:20:56 +0000 http://theme-fusion.com/?p=393124

No matter where in the world you are as a site owner or developer, having to put together multilingual sites is an increasingly common requirement. How best to do this using Avada is also a support question that pops up quite a lot here at Theme Fusion. The recommended route is to use the market-leading multilingual WPML plugin to arrange your translations.

In this article, we’ll cover the available versions of that plugin, look at putting together the basics of a multilingual site with WPML and Avada, and touch on broader issues such as multilingual SEO and the challenges of finding decent translators.

Let’s start with some background on why multilingual sites are becoming increasingly essential.

Overview

Living in a Multilingual World

Two simple facts should be enough to grab the attention of anyone who makes their living online:

When you add in the fact that English is very firmly established as the global lingua franca these days, it becomes evident that an enormous amount of sites will require – at a minimum – English plus one other language.

This is already the case across much of Europe, where multilingualism is common and the default language of business is English. It’s standard practice for businesses looking to address a broader European market to present local-language content for the domestic market and English for everyone else.

The situation is similar in Asia, where local languages such as Thai or Japanese will be served up next to an English offering aimed at the rest of the world.

The United States – the second biggest eCommerce market globally – has an enormous internal Hispanic audience. It’s also geographically close enough to further huge Spanish and Portuguese-speaking markets to make multilingual content a worthwhile investment for many.

For many online businesses, particularly in the area of eCommerce, failure to provide multilingual content is essentially leaving money on the table – a mistake very few firms can afford to make these days.

WordPress Still Lacks Built-in Multilingual Tools

Perhaps a little surprisingly, WordPress still doesn’t have tools for multilingual front end content built into core.

The back end, of course, has long been available in a huge number of languages. Developer-friendly features such as language packs are being rolled out, and the subject of internationalization is definitely on the core team’s agenda – as you can see from the presentation by Andrew Nacin below.

All that said, divvying up your actual content for different audiences still generally requires the use of third-party tools.

As detailed on the WordPress Codex, there are a number of different strategies for handling this, including Google Translate, using WordPress Multisite, multiple languages per post, and a one post per language approach.

This last option is the one taken by the tool we’ll be employing for the rest of this article: the WPML plugin from OnTheGoSystems.

Some Background on WPML

WPML has been the dominant WordPress multilingual plugin since its arrival in 2007; it is deployed on a huge range of sites worldwide.

WPML Features

Originally a free plugin, the software is now available in three basic licensing options, all of which are valid for use on multiple sites:

  • Multilingual Blog: The basic option for multilingual WordPress blogs. This is a €39 annual fee.
  • Multilingual CMS: The complete solution for multilingual WordPress. This is a €99 annual fee.
  • Multilingual Agency: The complete solution for agencies, building many multilingual websites. This is a €199 annual fee.

WPML is split between core and add-on plugins. We’ll cover the highlights of several of the add-ons in due course.

Avada and WPML

Avada has been compatible with WPML since 2013, and the two companies have worked closely to make integration as simple as possible since then.

There’s a dedicated help file on the Avada help center, and WPML have an excellent introduction to using Avada with WPML on their site.

It’s worth mentioning that Avada itself is no slouch regarding internationalization. By default, the theme is packed full of translation features, is RTL ready and ships pre-translated in 23 languages with all outputted front end strings fully translatable out of the box.

Setting up WPML with Avada

For the purposes of this article, we have a local install of Avada set up with the Cafe prebuilt website loaded as sample content.

Avada Cafe

Before we get going, you may want to have the WPML documentation to hand as you follow along.

Installing WPML itself is a breeze. In our case, we’ve gone for the Multilingual CMS option. Kick things off by visiting the WPML site post-purchase to access your files.

In addition to the core plugin, we’re going to load WPML String Translation and WPML Translation Management. Simply download the relevant files and install and activate them as you would with any other plugin. You’ll be given the option of being taken to the Getting Started guide once you’ve activated the core plugin, which is handy if this is your first time using WPML.

WPML Configure

As the screenshot below shows, you’ll also need to register your purchase by entering a valid key.

Activate WPML

This key can be generated by logging into your WPML account and adding a site under My Sites. Local (IE: WAMP/MAMP) installations are supported. Now we’re ready to set up a language.

Register WPML

Setting up Your Languages

Setting up a language is a straightforward process. Navigate to WPML > Languages and choose your default language, other active language(s) and language switcher options.

WPML Setup Screen

On the next screen you can choose your primary language and any additional languages available, for your translated site.

WPML Choose Languages Screen

For this example, we’ve added German, Dutch, French and Irish and then selected a simple option for the language switcher. A full guide to language switcher options is available in the WPML documentation.

WPML Languages Switcher

There are a couple of different ways to add the language switcher to your Avada site. Method 1 is to enable the dedicated WPML Menu Language Switcher options. Method 2 is to deploy a dedicated WPML Language Switcher shortcode on your site that can be added to pages, posts, footer widgets, widget areas, and even the Avada Theme Options Tagline Field for this example sites header area. Let’s take a look at both methods:

Method 1:

The WPML Language Switcher Option:

:: WPML >> Languages >> Menu language switcher

WPML Language Switcher Setting

We want the language switcher to be included in the main menu and in the configuration screen we have configured the following settings:

  • Selected the Cafe Main Menu
  • Positioned it as the last menu item
  • The selection style is a dropdown
  • Selected the Flag, Native language name and Language name in current language
  • A clear color scheme
  • Clicked ‘Save’
WPML Language Switcher Setting

What it looks like on the front end:

WPML Language Switcher Setting

Method 2:

The WPML Language Switcher shortcode example:

Copy to Clipboard

The shortcode added to the Header Tagline For Content 3 field:

:: Theme Options >> Header >> Header Content >> Tagline For Content 3

WPML Shortcode

What it looks like on the front end:

WPML Shortcode

Things are looking good so far but we should take a minute to describe the options available to you in terms of domains and directories before actually adding some multilingual content.

Deciding on Domains and Directories

You have three basic options when it comes to deciding how your content is split out by country:

  • One directory per language (e.g. http://multiavada.local/de)

  • One domain or subdomain per language (e.g. http://de.multiavada.local)
  • A language parameter added to the URL (e.g. http://multiavada.local?lang=de)

Most people will naturally opt for either option one or two. If you’re going down the domain route, bear in mind that you will need to make changes to your DNS and server settings.

The decision you take naturally raises the issue of SEO. It’s a large topic, and outside the main thrust of this article, but WPML offer a number of excellent resources to explore further on their site:

In our case we’ve simply gone for the directories option on the local setup which you can set under WPML > Languages > Language URL format.

WPML Language URL Format

Let’s move on to translating some actual content.

Translating Core Content

When you go to the WordPress Dashboard >> Pages section, you will see a + sign for each language, for each page that you have created. In our case teh languages we have decided on are German, Dutch, French and Irish (English being the primary language).

WPML Translate Pages

Clicking on the + sign will take you to the WPML page content translation screen where you can address all translatable content and assets:

WPML Translate Page Content

Clicking that option gets you a duplicate of your existing English content and structure which you’re then free to edit. In our case, we’ve translated the ‘About Us’ page content over to German (Über uns) with the new page on the front end looking like as the final translated result:

WPML Translated About Us Page

That’s a good start in terms of the main content, but what about the menus? As you begin to fill out your content, you’ll notice that WPML makes these available as potential menu alternatives under WPML > WP Menus Sync.

WPML Menu Sync 2

Here we’ve added an extra couple of German pages to work with. Hitting Sync lets us choose which ones should be translated.

WPML Menu Sync Done

So, by now we have the target language set up and have the ability to control core content and menus in both languages. We’re very much up and running in terms of creating a multilingual site!

Using Advanced Features

As mentioned towards the top, WPML is a modular solution. Once you’ve got the basics of your translated material in place, you can pick and choose from a series of additional plugins to take things to the next level.

  • String translation: The WPML String Translation plugin gives you access to all site content outside of posts, pages or taxonomies.

  • Media translation: The Media Translation plugin lets you localize images, audio and video.
  • Translation management: The Translation Management plugin lets you take fine-grained control over the actual translation workflow of your content.
  • Third-party integrations: Various integrations for popular WordPress plugins are available including WooCommerce.

Alternatives to WPML

WPML isn’t the only solution on the market. If you’re looking for other multilingual options, consider the following:

  • Multisite install: WordPress’ Multisite functionality gives you the tools to essentially roll your own multilingual solution if you’re prepared to put in the groundwork. WPLang has a good summary of how to go about doing this.

  • Polylang: The free Polylang plugin has recently emerged as one to keep an eye on, with over 700,000 active installs. Polylang plays nicely with Avada, and you can read more about that in this article.

Finding a Translator

Finding a reliable long-term translation solution can be a tricky business, particularly if you don’t speak the languages in question.

It’s also an area where you very much get what you pay for, so avoid cheap translations. Prices will naturally vary substantially online, but it’s worth reviewing standard indicative rates to get a feel for what you should expect to pay.

In-house resources, if available, are often the best solution. If you have someone on your team who is a native speaker of your target language and knows your product or service offering, it stands to reason that they may make an excellent translator for your site.

Using the Professional Translation Option, WPML gives you direct access to two translation agencies from within the tool:

There are also many other agencies out there, both on and offline. Make sure you’re following sensible guidelines when it comes to choosing your provider.

Finally, there are also a huge amount of freelance translators available on websites such as UpworkProz and Fiverr. You’ll need to vet candidates carefully here.

Conclusion

WPML is by far the leading multilingual plugin solution for WordPress and the best option for integrating with Avada.

Its ongoing success and large, active development team mean you can be confident in investing in its use.

Hopefully this article has given you some solid pointers for getting set up with WPML. Let’s briefly review the steps we looked at:

  • Install WPML plugins and register your purchase.

  • Pick your languages and set up the language switcher.
  • Start adding your posts and pages.
  • Translate your menu items.
  • Take advantage of more advanced options with WPML plugins.

Once you’re up and running, there’s a lot more WPML and Avada can do together.

]]>
https://avada.com/blog/avada-wpml-multilingual/feed/ 0