Now that my final exams are behind me, I am re-focusing my energy on cleaning and organizing, well, everything!
I am notoriously disastrous when it comes to keeping up with, well, just about everything, so, I have to force myself to get organized. When I do, I’m so happy. Like deliriously happy. Then I always end up saying to myself, “why didn’t I do that sooner?” So, here I am again, doing the same routine, trying to organize and clean-up my spaces.
Now that I’m a proud new young fresh blogger I’ve gone and added yet another thing for me to have to organize, my online stuff! Ugh. Oh, well, better dig in, not getting any younger here.
So, I decided to tackle some WordPress organizing. Since they say that your blog is like your living room, I figured I’d start there (or here, rather, ahem, onward with the tutorial!) So, into the WordPress Codex I went, head first and hoping for the best. And, not to disappoint me, they have great resources, lots of resources. So many in fact I could probably start a blog just to talk about everything WordPress… haha, there I go again adding work for myself.
Anyway, I ran across this video tutorial and thought it gave an excellent explanation of content maps. You know that thing you carry around with you telling you where you’re supposed to go instead of wandering around exploring everything and then complaining that you’re never getting anything done? Yup, that one!
I, tragically, made some of those organizing mistakes that he talks about, so I too will be joining you in revising my site to reflect those more logical structures. Now I know why those developers hate us so much. We literally cause their brains “does not compute” errors. Oops, sorry about that guys!
Enjoy!
