Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
History
Sports
Technology
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts221/v4/28/04/1a/28041ae2-0b71-c6e9-adfb-efc16f67f06d/mza_1789570218031010809.png/600x600bb.jpg
WP Product Talk
WP Product Talk
93 episodes
1 week ago
This is WP Product Talk, the place where every week, we interview an experienced WP product owner on strategies, tips, experiences, failures, and successes of running successful and thriving WordPress product businesses.
Show more...
Technology
RSS
All content for WP Product Talk is the property of WP Product Talk and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
This is WP Product Talk, the place where every week, we interview an experienced WP product owner on strategies, tips, experiences, failures, and successes of running successful and thriving WordPress product businesses.
Show more...
Technology
Episodes (20/93)
WP Product Talk
Built on Borrowed Ground: Lessons from Add-On Creators
Hosts Katie Keith (Barn2 Plugins) and Zack Katz (GravityKit) are joined by Melissa Love from thedesignspace.co, who builds and sells Kadence add-ons, to explore what it takes to succeed when your product relies on someone else’s platform. We’ll unpack the realities of building an add-on business inside another company’s ecosystem – from navigating limitations and dependencies to building relationships that help your product thrive. 🎯 Key Takeaways 🧩 1. Build Where There’s a Proven Market — But Do Your Homework The biggest insight for me was how all three guests — Melissa (Star Cloud), Zack (GravityKit), and Katie (Barn2) — emphasized that building on top of a popular platform is a shortcut to product–market fit. But it’s not enough to just pick the biggest name. Melissa shared how her team interviewed potential ecosystems (like KadenceWP, Elementor, Divi) before committing — digging into: How active and open their developer communities were Whether founders were visible and communicative If the product had technical stability and funding longevity Zack echoed this: when he chose Gravity Forms, it wasn’t just the market share — it was their developer-first culture, predictable updates, and strong backward compatibility. 💡 Actionable takeaway: Before you build, vet your platform partner like an investor. Check their roadmap, Slack groups, and developer documentation. If they don’t value external developers, move on. 🤝 2. Treat the Platform Owner as a Partner — Not a Competitor This theme kept coming up: success in an add-on business depends on having a mutually beneficial relationship with the parent product. Zack shared that Gravity Forms gives certified developers Slack access, roadmap previews, and early GitHub updates — which let his team stay compatible and confident. Katie contrasted that with WooCommerce, where early on, there was zero relationship — and she had to grow independently. Only in recent years has WooCommerce opened up to community dialogue. Melissa described Cadence as “democratic,” letting devs monetize through Cadence Cloud and even licensing APIs. 💡 Actionable takeaway: Be proactive in communication. Offer feedback, share improvements, and show how your success lifts the platform’s ecosystem. Collaboration gets you access, visibility, and smoother integrations. ⚙️ 3. Expect Platform Risk — and Outperform It by Being Excellent Every guest admitted that when you build on someone else’s product, you’re vulnerable to that platform changing direction or adding your feature into core. But instead of fearing it, they all agreed on one defense: be the better version. Melissa: “We deal with threats by being excellent.” Her team invests in documentation, training, and customer education — things most platform developers don’t do. Zack: “If Gravity Forms built a GravityView competitor, we’d just have to be better.” Katie: pointed out how WooCommerce often adds basic versions of popular plugin features — but leaves plenty of room for specialized, advanced solutions. 💡 Actionable takeaway: Don’t just rely on your integration — differentiate through support, UX, and focus. Your edge is execution quality and customer experience, not just your technical connection. ✳️ In short: If I had to summarize this episode in one line: “Add-on success = great partner choice + great relationships + relentless excellence.” It’s a masterclass in how to build with an ecosystem, not under it. Mentioned in this Episode NameURLContextWooCommercehttps://woocommerce.comDiscussed as a major WordPress eCommerce platform that many developers build add-ons for.Gravity Formshttps://www.gravityforms.comReferenced multiple times as a base plugin ecosystem for third-party add-ons like GravityKit.GravityKithttps://www.gravitykit.comZack Katz’s product suite built on top of Gravity Forms.KadenceWPhttps://www.kadencewp.comMelissa’s current platform focus; mentioned
Show more...
1 month ago
52 minutes 4 seconds

WP Product Talk
Maximize Your WordPress Sales This Cyber Monday: Proven Strategies
It’s that time of year again—Black Friday and Cyber Monday are almost here, and WordPress product owners are gearing up for their biggest sales season. Join us for Black Friday Strategies for WordPress Products, a special episode where our co-hosts share proven tactics, lessons learned, and insider advice for running high-performing holiday promotions. We’ll cover everything from pricing psychology to partnership campaigns, so you can make the most of your Cyber Monday WordPress plugins strategy. 🎯 Key Takeaways 🧭 1. Black Friday Is About Meeting Customer Expectations — Not Just Discounts If there’s one drum the whole panel kept beating, it’s this: you don’t have to love Black Friday, but you can’t ignore it. Zack Katz (GravityKit) admitted he used to resist the consumerism of it all — he even tried a “Giving Thanks” sale instead — but eventually realized that expectation trumps philosophy. Customers come to your site that week expecting a deal. If they don’t find one, they’ll just go buy a similar plugin from someone who’s running one. Katie Keith (Barn2) added a nuanced point: even if you don’t discount, you still need to “show up” in the conversation. A promotion doesn’t have to mean a percentage off; it can mean a lifetime plan, a bonus add-on, or an early renewal perk. Ian Misner (KestrelWP) framed it perfectly: “Black Friday is the one time of year your audience’s buying intent shows up for free — so lean into it.” For product founders, the takeaway is clear: Black Friday is less about sales psychology and more about participation. You can choose the format — bundle, credit, or limited edition offer — but being absent makes you invisible. 💌 2. Email Segmentation Is the Unsung Hero of Black Friday Wins Every panelist agreed: email drives the majority of Black Friday revenue. But what separated their results wasn’t volume — it was segmentation. Ian shared that last year, his team learned people will “let you email them way more than usual” during Black Friday week — as long as the messages feel relevant. He’s now leaning into deep segmentation and personalization, even with a relatively small list (~10K subscribers). Matt Cromwell (ex-StellarWP) highlighted a specific tactic he learned from Chris Lema: “Put a link at the top of every email saying, ‘Not into Black Friday promos? Click here,’ and tag them as opt-out. That way, you can email aggressively without burning out your long-term subscribers.” Katie Keith built on that, explaining how Barn2 tailors their Black Friday messages by customer type — offering upgrades or cross-sells to existing users instead of generic discounts. So the tactical lesson here: Start early. Warm up your list before November. Segment smartly. “New,” “active,” and “churned” users need different offers. Give control. Let people opt out without unsubscribing altogether. Black Friday email success isn’t just “more emails.” It’s more respect with strategy. 💡 3. Treat Black Friday Like a Retention Strategy — Not a One-Weekend Cash Grab This was one of the most refreshing themes of the episode: all four co-hosts talked about turning Black Friday customers into long-term loyalists. Ian described how CheckoutWC is using their “Account Funds for WooCommerce” extension to give customers store credit or rewards that bring them back in January. Katie and Zack both shared stories of early renewal campaigns — offering existing subscribers a smaller pre-Black Friday discount (like 25% off instead of 40%) to renew early and skip the chaos. Ian summed it up well: “It’s not about the four days — it’s about how you attach those buyers to you so they keep buying after the sale.” That’s also why several of them prefer Cyber Monday positioning over Black Friday — it aligns with digital products, software, and continuity rather than impulse shopping. The broader takeaway: treat Black Friday as a loyalty event, not just a sales
Show more...
1 month ago
1 hour

WP Product Talk
Listening Without Overbuilding: The Art of Handling Feature Requests
As product founders, we LOVE when customers share ideas…but how do you decide which requests to act on and which to let go? In this episode, Robby McCullough and Justin Busa from Beaver Builder join us to talk about finding that balance between listening and overbuilding, how Beaver Builder approaches feedback, and why saying “no” can actually make your product better. 👉 Tune in to learn how to turn feedback into focus without letting feature creep take over.
Show more...
2 months ago
53 minutes 4 seconds

WP Product Talk
AI in Support: What Works, What Doesn’t, and What’s Next
AI is changing how WordPress product teams handle customer support—but not every experiment delivers results. Join us for “AI in Support: What Works, What Doesn’t, and What’s Next” as Aaron Edwards, Founder of Docsbot, sits down with co-hosts Matt Cromwell and Zack Katz to share real lessons from building and deploying AI in WordPress support. We’ll explore what AI does best today, where it still falls short, and what’s coming next for product owners who want to scale smarter without losing the human touch. Tune in October 15 at Noon Eastern Time for this lively, future-focused discussion on the evolving world of AI in WordPress support. Show notes: DocsBot.AI (not "DocSpot"!) Cromwell's blog article: The Real Power of AI in Support Isn’t Fewer Tickets; It’s Better Answers for More People
Show more...
2 months ago
1 hour 7 minutes 31 seconds

WP Product Talk
The Prioritization Playbook: Lessons from Multi-Product Businesses
Running multiple WordPress products under one roof can be both an opportunity and a challenge. In this episode of WP Product Talk, hosts Katie Keith (Barn2 Plugins) and Matt Cromwell (GiveWP/StellarWP) sit down with Ian Misner, Co-Founder and General Manager of Kestrel, to explore how product companies can juggle competing priorities without losing focus. We’ll dive into: ✅ How to decide when to build a new product versus doubling down on an existing one ✅ The frameworks and habits that help multi-product teams stay aligned ✅ Real-world examples of cross-promotion that actually drive growth ✅ Common mistakes that fragment focus and how to avoid them If you’re managing - or planning to manage - more than one WordPress product, this episode will give you practical insights to help you balance growth across your portfolio.
Show more...
3 months ago
56 minutes 34 seconds

WP Product Talk
Who Are You Building For? Enterprises, Agencies, or End Users
When you build a product, the first and most important question isn’t what features should we add? — it’s who are we building for? In this episode of WP Product Talk, we’re joined by Robert Abela of Melapress to explore how your audience shapes every decision you make. From enterprises that demand security and compliance, to agencies that need scalability and flexibility, to end users who want simplicity and speed, your product’s direction, pricing, support model, and growth strategy all hinge on understanding your customer. We dig into: The key differences between building for enterprises, agencies, and end users How to identify your true audience and stay focused on their needs Real-world trade-offs product makers face when choosing their market Lessons from Robert’s journey at Melapress and how he’s navigated audience alignment If you’ve ever struggled with feature creep, pricing decisions, or figuring out who your marketing should target, this episode is for you!
Show more...
3 months ago
58 minutes 13 seconds

WP Product Talk
AI Search is Here: How to Make Your Content Stand Out
In this episode of WP Product Talk, hosts Katie Keith (Barn2 Plugins) and Zack Katz (GravityKit & TrustedLogin) are joined by James Baldacchino, Head of...
Show more...
3 months ago
56 minutes 37 seconds

WP Product Talk
Lifetime Deals: The Shortcut Every New Founder Dreams Of (But Few Survive)
Lifetime deals often look like the perfect launch strategy — quick cash, loyal early adopters, and momentum out of the gate. But what happens after the rush? Join us as Lesley Sim, fresh off launching her new product Event Koi, shares the behind-the-scenes of kicking off with a lifetime deal. Co-hosts Katie Keith and Matt Cromwell will explore how lifetime sales shape product growth, customer feedback, and long-term sustainability for WordPress founders. If you’ve ever wondered whether lifetime deals are a rocket booster or a weight that drags you down, this episode is for you.
Show more...
3 months ago
1 hour 4 minutes 32 seconds

WP Product Talk
SPECIAL GUEST: Matt Mullenweg on his vision of AI in tech and WordPress
Matt Mullenweg joins WP Product Talk to share his vision for WordPress AI — from Core AI to new tools shaping product dev. Don’t miss this live episode!
Show more...
3 months ago
1 hour 1 minute 59 seconds

WP Product Talk
Deep-Diving Into AI Automations
In this episode, Zack sits down with Jack Arturo, founder of Very Good Plugins and WP Fusion to dig into the real-world impact of AI automations. We...
Show more...
4 months ago
57 minutes 51 seconds

WP Product Talk
Stage-Based Pricing: The Secret to Profitable Product Growth
In this episode of WP Product Talk, hosts Amber Hinds and Kaite Keith sit down with Ionut Neagu, founder of Themeisle to dive deep into...
Show more...
4 months ago
57 minutes 54 seconds

WP Product Talk
The Current State of the Block Theme Market
Brian Gardner joins Matt Cromwell & Zack Katz to reveal where the block theme market is headed. Live insights for WordPress product owners.
Show more...
5 months ago
59 minutes 29 seconds

WP Product Talk
How to Leverage the Customer Feedback Loop for Your Product’s Roadmap
In this episode of WP Product Talk, we’re joined by Elena Kartoshkina, Product Marketing Manager at Crocoblock, to explore one of the most powerful growth...
Show more...
5 months ago
1 hour 1 minute 47 seconds

WP Product Talk
The Agency Advantage: Lessons from Shopify for WordPress Product Makers
Together with co-hosts Katie Keith and Matt Cromwell, they explore how WordPress product owners can adopt lessons from Shopify’s agency-first model to build premium, high-touch...
Show more...
5 months ago
59 minutes 5 seconds

WP Product Talk
Let’s Talk Tooling: Building Your Product Business Infrastructure
Discover how strong product business infrastructure helps your WordPress product scale. Join Matt Batchelder and the WPPT crew for this insightful talk.
Show more...
5 months ago
1 hour 7 minutes 53 seconds

WP Product Talk
The Realities of Selling WordPress Products Internationally
Selling globally sounds like a dream for WordPress product owners—but doing it well requires more than flipping a currency switch. In this WP Product Talk...
Show more...
6 months ago
51 minutes 50 seconds

WP Product Talk
AI + WP – The Future of WordPress
Is WordPress ready for its AI pivot? On July 2 at noon ET, join “AI + WP – The Future of WordPress” as Matt Cromwell...
Show more...
6 months ago
1 hour 25 minutes 19 seconds

WP Product Talk
WordPress in 2025 (& How it Affects Product Builders)
Welcome to Season 7 of WP Product Talk! We’re kicking off with a powerful episode that explores the big question: Is WordPress dying, evolving, or thriving...
Show more...
6 months ago
54 minutes 43 seconds

WP Product Talk
How to Decide: Diversify Your Product Line or Double-Down on Your Bread-Winner
Should You Expand or Double Down? Zack and Amber discuss making the hard call with guest Kevin Geary. When your product is gaining traction, what’s...
Show more...
7 months ago
52 minutes 31 seconds

WP Product Talk
How to Balance Paying Yourself as a Founder While Still Investing in Your Growing Product Business
As a WordPress product founder, figuring out when—and how much—to pay yourself can be one of the trickiest financial decisions you’ll face. In this episode of WP Product Talk, hosts Katie Keith (Barn2 Plugins) and Zack Katz (GravityKit) are joined by Chris Hinds, COO of Equalize Digital, for a candid discussion about the realities of founder compensation in a bootstrapped business. We cover: ✅ How to decide when it’s the “right time” to start paying yourself ✅ Strategies for balancing founder income with reinvestment in growth ✅ The trade-offs between short-term sacrifice and long-term sustainability ✅ Real-world examples of what’s worked — and what hasn’t — from our guests' own businesses Whether you're just starting out or trying to scale without outside funding, this episode helps you navigate the fine line between building a healthy business and making a living from it.
Show more...
7 months ago
58 minutes 55 seconds

WP Product Talk
This is WP Product Talk, the place where every week, we interview an experienced WP product owner on strategies, tips, experiences, failures, and successes of running successful and thriving WordPress product businesses.