New gig

As of today, I have a new gig.

The longer story is that things have been slow in the web design front.  My going theory is that the industry — especially given the economy; that great excuse we’ve been using for everything from health care to what store we shop at — is moving toward customizing existing solutions (say, modifying a premium theme for WordPress — a free software application) rather than completely custom websites.  To be fair, the industry has a point.  WordPress is getting increasingly more robust and easy to use, there’s less and less of a reason to have someone else set it up for you if you know you’re going to use it anyway, especially when your webhost has a little button that says “click here to install WordPress” (of course, this option throws all security out the window, but it’s easy to stick your fingers in your ears and say “la la la la la la la” on that point since it isn’t something that has an observable effect…until your WP database is hacked).

This past summer has been particularly hard and we’re still trying to recover.  Museum Themes is slowly picking up — our sales are increasing every day — but the best it’s able to do at this point is keep itself afloat.  It doesn’t, for example, pay me to build new themes for it, so Museum Themes development gets thrown along the wayside in favor of paid work (when we have it).  And we’ve been needing more of that.

I started looking for a job.  At first, I was mostly just looking to get a job in the Specialty department at Whole Foods again — especially with them opening a new store in a week.  This time, I’d work (or try to get) a full-time position, and focus on Museum Themes on my off-days, do client work as needed, but scale that back quite a bit and put the expected completion times out further.  But that didn’t happen.  (The new store only had 2 positions available in Specialty and I was sort of — naively, perhaps — adamant that that was where I wanted to be.  The Great Salt Lake Whole Foods Store Shuffle, which will undoubtedly occur once the new store opens and everyone starts vying to get into that store, hasn’t happened yet, and probably won’t for a couple months.  Meantime, we need something sooner.)  So, I went to my old standby jobs of helpdesk/tech support and web design.  I actually found a couple (not very promising) web design jobs, but mostly was finding tech support stuff.  Which, of course, I have years of experience doing above and beyond being the guy that rips apart computers and puts them back together again.  I actually had a pretty good week for interviews last week.  And yesterday morning, I absolutely nailed an interview to be a Counter Intelligence Agent at Best Buy’s Geek Squad.  (It’s just, you know, Best Buy.)

But sometime at the end of last week, Event Espresso — those guys I met at WordCamp last year that do an event registration plugin that’s astoundingly well-built and is doing really well, having been covered on WP Candy a couple of times and in conjunction with their campaign to give all WordCamps a free Event Espresso license to prevent them from having to spend ridiculous amounts of money using Eventbrite instead — created a job board, and posted a couple internal jobs which they then tweeted about; namely, Web Designer, WordPress programmer, and technical support.  All three of which I could conceivably be doing.  I applied immediately.

Yesterday, I met with Garth and Seth — the first time I’ve seen them in person since WCUT, though I watched Seth on his video interview with WPCandy — and we had a meeting at a Wendy’s.  (Oddly enough, this isn’t the first time I’ve had a business meeting at a Wendy’s.  Just a different Wendy’s.)  At the end of the hour, my user account on the Event Espresso support forums was upgraded and shortly thereafter I had an official Event Espresso email address and spot on their About page.

This is an excellent opportunity.  First of all, I get to continue to work at home and more or less do the same stuff I’ve been doing.  I’ll need to buckle down and I created a hard schedule for my weekdays so that I have enough time for everything and can — hopefully — manage my time and be more productive with it.  This means no Twitter during working hours, sorry @Twitter.  Secondly, I’m doing the same stuff I was already applying to anyway.  Third, this gives me an opportunity to really dig into Event Espresso and learn the code, which is something I’ve been wanting to do since agreeing at WordCamp to develop some Event Espresso themes.  Fourth, though the support job is part time, they get non-support related requests for customizations — stuff I’ve been doing a lot of already — and that’s stuff I could potentially pick up as well.  Lastly, these guys are local and they’re cool guys.  It’s good for everyone because we can actually meet in real life if we wanted/needed to and because we already knew each other.  It also makes things a lot easier with the aforementioned theme idea, since I’m now actually affiliated with them.

So, I’m pretty excited and I’m looking forward to it.

Comments

2 responses to “New gig”

  1. Garth Avatar

    We're glad to have you working with us; you're doing well.
    My recent post Coming Soon- Multiple Event Registration

    1. jazzs3quence Avatar
      jazzs3quence

      I was telling my wife last night: the first day I felt like I was on Tier 1. Yesterday I felt more like I was on Tier 2. Let's hope I make it to Tier 3 next week. :)

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