We’re back with day 16 of the Build-A-Blog workshop. Now that our website looks almost ready to go, we need to add a few pages in order to better serve our audience. The first one that we want to configure is the “contact us” page… making it easier for readers to get in touch! ;)

Pages v. Posts

In WordPress, the general “lingo” can be a bit confusing to a new user. While all of your actual content is going to be posted day after day by “adding a new post,” there is another very different option available called “adding a new page.” The difference is that posts are a lot more dynamic in nature, whereas pages are dedicated static locations on your website where you can send visitors. Essentially, think of pages as posts that are more visible and permanent on your blog. This is a convenient feature to you, because it allows us to make dedicated links to things like a terms of service, contact, advertise or about page. Today, we are focusing on this “contact us” page.

Go ahead and log into your admin panel, then navigate to “Pages” -> “Add New”

How to Design an Effective Contact Page

The contact page will serve as an important medium between you, the blogger, and the reader. Blogging is meant to be informal, so having a way for your readers to communicate back and forth with you is important. One thing to note is that you need not have your own email listed on the contact page, as you can use a script to mask the sending address and generate a contact form.

I would recommend having a few things on your contact page, and you can view the Net Fool’s contact page as a sample. Mine is actually very very old (haven’t updated it ever, all the way back since version one!)… but it still works like a charm. A few things to consider: instant messaging screennames, email addresses, name, nickname, social media IDs, live assistance and/or a contact form.

Want to install a contact form on your website? Simply download a WordPress plugin and upload it into the /wp-content/plugins/ folder through the use of your FTP client. Then, activate it through your WordPress admin section and add your form to your new page. My favoties are: CForms II, Contact Form 7 and SimpleModal.

Need help? Let me know! Get those Contact pages up and running! :D
-The Net Fool

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