Making Peace With The Feast Or Famine Of Freelancing

Making Peace With The Feast Or Famine Of Freelancing

Making Peace With The Feast Or Famine Of Freelancing

Liz Elcoate

It’s embarrassing to admit — particularly as I host a podcast about this very subject — but I dramatically dropped the ball when it came to booking in projects for this past spring. It just suddenly happened. I was finishing up two major contracts and had the next one in the pipeline. Then out of the blue that client postponed indefinitely and my two big contracts finished and I was left with no work — nothing, zip, zilch.

I’ve been here before for a week or two at a time so the panic didn’t kick in immediately. A week passed and I caught up on a few things and wrote a bit. I updated my portfolio and recorded some podcast episodes. When week two rolled around with no enquiries I put out a lazy tweet saying I was looking for work at the same time as contacting some previous clients and colleagues to see if they had anything that they might need me on. Still nothing. Then week three and week four came and went rapidly and by the end of the first month I was feeling physically ill with panic and worry.

The Panic

The worry wasn’t just financial - financially I was okay for a little while - it was also centred around what this lack of work said about my abilities and my worth.

By the beginning of month two I’d stopped sleeping. I was round robin-ing friends and colleagues in wild eyed desperation hoping that they might miraculously have an answer for me. I felt isolated and scared. I was also scattergun-ing job advertisements for anything — full time, contract, part time, freelance — something that would end the worry. And that was the strangest thing of all. The worry wasn’t just financial — financially I was okay for a little while — it was also centred around what this lack of work said about my abilities and my worth.

I just kept wondering why this had happened. I blamed Brexit, the patriarchy, my sex, my age, but more than anything I blamed myself and my obvious huge lack of talent. Why hadn’t I realised it before, why had no one else realised it before?

The Shame

While this inner turmoil was going on I was maintaining an aura of calm to the outside world as I didn’t want anyone to realise I had spectacularly failed. I didn’t want anyone to know how I’d gone from being a relatively successful designer — who’d worked on some brilliant projects with some brilliant people, who wrote about brand design, who hosted a successful podcast, who got asked to speak regularly on the subject of design — to being found out as a talentless fake. I can’t put into words how isolating this was. Feeling it was impossible to be honest about the position I was in to the majority of the people I cared about. I think a few people guessed and I was honest with others close to me but I was in a downward spiral of shame.

The Truth

As I always do when things are tough I decided honesty was the best policy. I thought I would write an article about the position I’d found myself in and the impact it was having on my mental health. I didn’t want to write a how-to-find work piece — there are a million of those — but a piece on the mental implications quiet times can have. Firstly though I needed to talk to other freelancers about their experiences and what better place to do that than on Twitter.

So I asked the question:

It’s fair to say the answers took me by surprise. Not only had other freelancers been through this but they had also had significant periods of time without work, it was far more common than I had realised.

Times varied from one month to six months to two years without paid work. Most common was around two to three months. But quite a few people also mentioned that they had sustained periods where they had work but it wasn’t enough to pay the bills (something I had definitely experienced). It was also suggested that the quiet times are seasonal which seemed obvious when mentioned but not something I’d really thought about until then.

One person who replied had had to go on benefits, a few others had taken full time roles (of course with the result being that the minute they accepted the position they had a deluge of enquiries from new clients). There were others who had had to use tax money to live on.

Some freelancers had taken on alternative types of creative work such as writing, journalism or creating their own courses.

The Fallout

It was clear that I was not alone and that this was a common pattern for a lot of people. The thing I was most concerned about though was how people coped with this from a mental health stand point. Did it affect other people as dramatically as it effected me?

So I asked Twitter, “What did you do to stay on top of the anxiety and worry when work was dead? Did you manage or did it impact your mental health?”

This to me was the most important question of all. Until this point I hadn’t realised that my self esteem is utterly tied up in my work, so when I’m busy I think “Brilliant, I must be pretty good at this” and when it went quiet I immediately thought “Everybody has realised I’m a talentless idiot”.

Worryingly it seems that I am not alone and this is an all too common feeling. Pavithra Muthalagan replied saying that

Sometimes I feel unemployed even when my bank account is telling me things are fine.

and

… There’s some ingrained mentality defining “success” in a extremely limited/limiting way… imposter syndrome is always hovering over my shoulder

I get this on all levels, it was exactly my experience. My bank account was okay but I felt profoundly unemployed and unemployable. This was far more worrying to me than just the financial impact. I was deeply disappointed that my self esteem and identity were so tied up in how many projects I had on.

Katherine Cory replied to my question about the impact these quiet periods have had on her mental health:

This is a scenario I have also experienced in the past, taking on difficult clients for little money just to get some work in but then the whole project being a nightmare and ending up worse off financially and mentally.

The Positives

But it seems these difficult and stressful times can also be used for growth.

Ben Tallon wrote:

I love this idea and Ben’s attitude. Viewing these times philosophically and finding value in them is a great way to make peace with the up and down nature of freelancing.

Jon Hicks shared his experience:

This was a common theme. Getting outside in nature and pursuing your passions or just having a ramble. Running and upping the time you exercise in quiet times was another great suggestion that several people made. Anything that takes you out of your head and into your body and reminds you of the world outside.

My biggest problem was obsessing over the lack of work and how this defined me as a designer and person. Matt Essam who is a business coach said that he works with clients on this and refers to it as a “scarcity” mindset. He wrote:

I’ve found the only cure to be massive, consistent action. Picking up the phone, going networking etc.

I completely agree with this point however I need to acknowledge it is more easily said than done, especially when your confidence is already rock bottom and you’re riddled with anxiety.

There were other great ideas too. Several people suggested alternative unpaid work — maybe writing or volunteering. Others used their time to learn something new — a coding language or design technique.

One particular reply that really stood out came from Jesse Gardner:

Jesse started a project where he walked the streets of his neighbourhood photographing and interviewing people. There is a lot in this idea — not only does this kind of project keep you being creative and active, it also creates connection with other people, something fundamental to our mental well being. The completed project called Troy Stories: Stories from people of Troy, NY is inspiring and beautiful.

Screenshot of the Troy Stories website homepage
The Troy Stories Website (Source: Troy Stories) (Large preview)

The Why

It’s clear from the response I had to my Twitter questions that at times freelancing can be high risk both financially and for our overall well-being. Three months, six months or even two years without work is devastating. Being in a position where you have to claim benefits or you’re forced to use up all of your carefully saved tax money can lead to crippling anxiety and dramatic changes in circumstances. So it begs the question — why do we do it?

My particular reasons for freelancing were complex — family, commitments, location, flexibility. I’m a lone parent without financial support and I live in a location where there aren’t many design agencies — particularly ones who would let me work flexibly. But everyone has their own particular reasons that make the uncertainty of freelancing worthwhile.

Naomi Atkinson wrote:

This next reply could have been written by me. For many people being able to get outside and walk their dog, and spend time with them is vital to their health and well-being.

Steve Morgan makes an excellent point that freelance gives him the opportunity to work with the type of clients he wants to work with in a way that he choses and in the hours that suit him. They’re some pretty compelling reasons.

For many, employment just isn’t an option as Katie Cory and Adam Greenough confirmed in their replies.

Katie sums it up with one word: necessity. As someone who has ME or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome — Katie has to be able to look after her health, take days out and manage stress. Work when she can and rest when she needs to.

Adam’s reply shows that freelancing gives him the flexibility to be able to manage his mental health with ongoing treatment and operate his workload around that.

Personally, if I wanted to I am in a position to go back to being employed (my daughter is now at University) and I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t tempting after the last few months. The thought of a regular income and being able to focus on the creative side of my work without the worry sounds very appealing. But there are also all the things I love and take for granted about freelancing — having time to spend outside, structuring my day how I want, the feeling of accomplishment when a project launches, the autonomy — so for now I am still on this crazy freelance merry-go-round and I’ve learnt a lot over this difficult period.

The Feast Or Famine Toolkit

So what can we keep in our physical and mental tool kit for those inevitable times when work is quiet?

Don’t attach our value to our lack of work.

We must define success for ourselves. It is ludicrous to feel worthy when we have a lot of work on and unworthy when we don’t.

This is based on an outdated limiting model of what success should look like, created during and peddled since the industrial revolution. We are one of the first generations trying to do things differently and redefine “success”. Success that encompasses life and health as well as work, and we should be proud of ourselves for that.

Drop the scattergun approach to finding work.

Don’t do what I did and sit at your desk everyday for 12 hours applying for literally anything — full time jobs, contract, freelance, temping, dog walking. Whilst I think that action is important, it has to be structured. I had got to the point where I had lost direction and was just taking a “throw enough mud at the wall and something will stick” approach. I feel the only thing I was projecting to potential clients/employers at this point was an air of desperation.

I feel the only thing I was projecting to potential clients/employers at this point was an air of desperation.

Schedule a specific amount of time each day that is dedicated to finding work. Determine your desired market and then target them in a way that works best for you. One book I read during my time of quiet was Anti-Sell by Steve Morgan. It has some brilliant tips for finding work and generating sales for people who hate selling, like me.

Connect with people.

Kind people have saved my life and my sanity over this period. My mate Andy was always up for a dog walk and let me moan at him, my friends on Twitter were amazing (shout out to Dave Smyth and Naomi Atkinson). Try and attend events where you can meet up with other freelancers. Evenings like Design x Business are great because they remind you why you do what you do and are filled with other freelancers. Never underestimate the power of a good freelance podcast too, there are tons out there.

Keep learning and studying in your chosen field.

Use this time to read some of those design or CSS books you bought but never had time to look at. Think about doing a course — they don’t need to be expensive, places like Skillshare have an enormous choice of brilliant subjects.

Create time in your day to do the work you really want to do.

Set a design challenge (like we used to have in the old days). You could create a brief for a made up dream client and a problem they need solving. Then go to town! Enjoy it, be creative. Remember why you chose this career. It’ll be fun and you’ll have something of value to add to your portfolio.

The work you do while you procrastinate is probably the work you should be doing for the rest of your life.

— Jessica Hische

Get out in nature, it is life saving and it is free.

Studies have proven that nature-based activities have a direct and positive affect on mental health, anxiety and stress. Gardening, conservation and walking are all incredibly good for your mental and physical well-being. If you are able then exercising and running outside is also a great way to combat depression and help with sleeping.

Pursue your hobbies — creative or not.

This was a big one for me. I became locked into nothing but my inability to find work. Going back to the hobbies I enjoyed helped so much. They don’t have to be expensive. Films, cycling, painting, model making, knitting, woodwork, pottery, cooking — whatever takes your fancy. And never underestimate the joys of a good book for pure escapism.

Most importantly, don’t be ashamed.

As my conversation on twitter proved this happens to EVERYONE at some point or another. Even people who we assume are constantly over booked with work. Speak to people and be open and honest. It’s important to let people know you’re available for work. Constantly peddling this outward appearance of being super busy and successful can backfire and mean that people don’t approach you for a project as they assume you will be booked up. I know this has meant that I’ve missed out on exciting things in the past as potential clients assumed I’d be too busy.

Finally, try to grow a financial buffer.

I know, I know — easier said than done. If you’re reading this during a quiet period of work and you’re struggling financially then you may feel this is a case of closing the door after the horse has bolted. And if that is the case then try to focus on the points above and not too much on money. You’re more likely to get out of the dip sooner and with your mental health in better shape if you stay positive and don’t get in the scarcity mindset that I did. Money worries are so pervasive, I know whenever I experience them they can render me completely ineffectual.

With that in mind, when work has picked up again (which it will) start setting aside a little each month for a financial buffer. It is so easy to set up a savings account online. Sometimes you don’t even need to do that. Banks like Starling let you set up Goals on your current account which are like little individual pots that you can save money in and then just shift into your account when you need them. I was lucky I had some savings, other people tweeted stated that they used money they’d saved for tax (which can be a little risky depending on the time of year). The point is, that if you can have an account with a couple of months of money in then that will definitely ease the anxiety.

It is always worth remembering that a quiet period will pass, work will come back in — maybe even tomorrow. My biggest regret is that I let it affect my self esteem and self worth so much and made me doubt all of my accomplishments. It isn’t that your work is rubbish or everyone has finally found out you know nothing. Its just that at this particular moment in time you’ve not reached the people you need to reach or your services just aren’t needed. But rest assured they will be again very soon.

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Vericred Launches Disruption Analysis API

Vericred, a company that provides the infrastructure for the digital distribution of health insurance, recently launched its Disruption Analysis API. The API allows users to assess the disruption (positive or negative) that would take place by switching a health or dental insurance plan for a certain group of employees. The company anticipates that the likely users for the API are employer benefits departments and insurance brokers, and the InsurTech companies that build tools for these users.

RocketMQ: HA Design

Decisions decisions

When any messaging system sends messages, there will be errors. Even though the name servers do check the health of brokers beforehand, there is always delay. Plus, a network outage can happen during the transmission. But the handling of errors can be different.

The CAP Theorem is a fundamental theorem in distributed systems that states that any distributed system can have, at most, two of the following three properties: Consistency, Availability, and Partition tolerance. The following diagram shows the tradeoffs:

WPWeekly Episode 358 – Interview with Dan Maby, Founder of WP&UP

In this episode, Malcolm Peralty and I are joined by Dan Maby, Founder of WP&UP. WP&UP is a non-profit charity based in England that supports and promotes positive mental health in the WordPress Community.

Dan explains why he started the charity, what he’s learned and how he manages his own mental health, and how the donation funds are spent. He also shared some startling statistics from a recent mental health survey they conducted. The results of this survey are being put into a white paper that will be published later this year.

We finished up the show covering the news of the week. If you’re interested in supporting WP&UP, please consider donating.

Stories Discussed:

Matt Mullenweg’s Summer Update at WordCamp Europe 2019: Gutenberg’s Progress and a Preview of Upcoming Features

Free Event: Post Status to Live Stream Publish Online July 8-9

Contribution Time, Sponsored, and Teams Fields Added to WordPress.org User Profiles

WP Engine Acquires Flywheel

Transcript:

Episode358Transcript

WPWeekly Meta:

Next Episode: Wednesday, July 3rd 3:00 P.M. Eastern

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How to Be a Better Programmer: Take Care of Yourself!

If you want to be a better programmer, stop this. Now.
Photo credit by Flickr/osseous

A decade ago, a book called Death March was listed as a bestseller. The book described how insane hours of programming led to health issues:

“Death March is a type of project in which the employees need to overwork for unsustainable number of hours. The project starts feeling like an actual death march as the superiors force their employees to keep on working against their better judgment. The projects had so many parameters that the only way to succeed was by coding more than 16 hours a day, seven days a week—with no break until the project is finished.”

Some years later, another story went viral from a spouse of a programmer who worked at Rockstar games. She said the company expected the developers to work 12 hours a day, six days a week, damaging the programmers’ health.

Visualizing the Istio Service Mesh Using Kiali

Kiali lets you monitor, visualize, and configure the Istio Service Mesh from within a single user interface. Kiali lets you view configurations, monitor traffic flow between services, and analyze traces. It provides visibility into features likes service health, request routing, circuit breakers, request rate, traffic flow, error rates, and more.

Once you have a number of services deployed inside the service mesh, you will have a number of questions around Istio observability:

Monthly Web Development Update 6/2019: Rethinking Privacy And User Engagement

Monthly Web Development Update 6/2019: Rethinking Privacy And User Engagement

Monthly Web Development Update 6/2019: Rethinking Privacy And User Engagement

Anselm Hannemann

Last week I read about the web turning into a dark forest. This made me think, and I’m convinced that there’s hope in the dark forest. Let’s stay positive about how we can contribute to making the web a better place and stick to the principle that each one of us is able to make an impact with small actions. Whether it’s you adding Webmentions, removing tracking scripts from a website, recycling plastic, picking up trash from the street to throw it into a bin, or cycling instead of driving to work for a week, we all can make things better for ourselves and the people around us. We just have to do it.

News

  • Safari went ahead by introducing their new Intelligent Tracking Protection and making it the new default. Now Firefox followed, enabling their Enhanced Tracking Protection by default, too.
  • Chrome 75 brings support for the Web Share API which is already implemented in Safari. Latency on canvas contexts has also been improved.
  • The Safari Technology Preview Release 84 introduced Safari 13 features: warnings for weak passwords, dark mode support for iOS, support for aborting Fetch requests, FIDO2-compliant USB security keys with the Web Authentication standard, support for “Sign In with Apple” (for Safari and WKWebView). The Visual Viewport API, ApplePay in WKWebView, screen sharing via WebRTC, and an API for loading ES6 modules are also supported from now on.
  • There’s an important update to Apple’s AppStore review guidelines that requires developers to offer “Sign In with Apple” in their apps in case they support third-party sign-in once the service is available to the public later this year.
  • Firefox 67 is out now with the Dark Mode CSS media query, WebRender, and side-by-side profiles that allow you to run multiple instances parallelly. Furthermore, enhanced privacy controls are built in against crypto miners and fingerprinting, as well as support for AV1 on Windows, Linux, and macOS for videos, String.prototype.matchAll(), and dynamic imports.

General

  • The web relies on so many open-source projects, and, yet, here’s what it looks like to live off an open-source budget. Most authors are below the poverty line, forced to live in cheaper countries or not able to make a living at all from their public service of providing reliable, open software for others who then use it commercially.
  • We all know that annoying client who ignores your knowledge and gets creative on their own. As a developer, Holger Bartel experienced it dozens of times; now he found himself in the same position, having ordered a fine drink and then messed it up.

UI/UX

  • With so many dark patterns built into the software and websites we use daily, Fabricio Teixeira and Caio Braga call for a tech diet for users.
Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Netflix Nutrition Facts.
“Dark patterns try to manipulate users to engage further, deeper, or longer on a site or app. The world needs a tech diet, and designers can help make it a reality. (Image credit)

CSS

  • The CSS feature for truncating multi-line text has been implemented in Firefox. -webkit-line-clamp: 3;, for example, will truncate text at the end of line three.

Security

Privacy

  • Anil Dash tries to find an answer to the question if we can trust a company in 2019.
  • Kevin Litman-Navarro analyzed over 150 privacy policies and shares his findings in a visual story. Not only does it take about 15 minutes on average to read a privacy policy, but most of them require a college degree or even professional career to understand them.
  • Our view on privacy hasn’t changed much since the 18th century, but the circumstances are different today: Companies have a wild appetite to store more and more data about more people in a central place — data that was once exclusively accessible by state authorities. We should redefine what privacy, personal data, and consent are, as Maciej Cegłowski argues in “The new wilderness.”
  • The people at WebKit are very active when it comes to developing clever solutions to protect users without compromising too much on usability and keeping the interests of publishers and vendors in mind at the same time. Now they introduced “privacy preserving ad click attribution for the web,” a technique that limits the data which is sent to third parties while still providing useful attribution metrics to advertisers.
An overview of how hard privacy policies are to read and how much time it requires to do so. Most privacy policies are college and professional career level. Only one is comprehensible on a Middle School level.
Most privacy policies on the web are harder to read than Stephen Hawking’s “A Brief History Of Time,” as Kevin Litman-Navarro found out by examining 150 privacy policies. (Image credit)

Accessibility

  • Brad Frost describes a great way to reduce motion on websites (of animated GIFs, for example), using the picture element and its media query feature.

Tooling

  • The IP Geolocation API is an open-source real-time IP to Geolocation JSON API with detailed countries data integration that is based on the Maxmind Geolite2 database.
  • Pascal Landau wrote a step-by-step tutorial on how to build a Docker development setup for PHP projects, and yes, it contains everything you might need to apply it to your own projects.

Work & Life

  • Roman Imankulov from Doist shares insights into decision-making in a flat organization.
  • As a society, we’re overworked, have too many belongings, yet crave for more, and companies only exist to grow indefinitely. This is how we kick-started climate change in the past century and this is how we got more people than ever into burn-outs, depressions, and various other health issues, including work-related suicides. Philipp Frey has a bold theory that breaks with our current system: A research by Nässén and Larsson suggests that a 1% decrease in working hours could lead to a 0.8% decrease in GHG emissions. Taking it further, the paper suggests that working 12 hours a week would allow us to easily achieve climate goals, if we’re also changing the economy to not entirely focus on growth anymore. An interesting study as it explores new ways of working, living, and consuming.
  • Leo Babauta shares a method that helps you acknowledge when you’re tired. It’s hard to accept, but we are humans and not machines, so there are times when we feel tired and our batteries are low. The best way to recover is realizing that this is happening and focusing on it to regain some energy.
  • Many of us are trying to achieve some minutes or hours of “deep work” a day. Fadeke Adegbuyi’s “The Complete Guide to Deep Work” shares valuable tips to master it.

Going Beyond…

  • People who live a “zero waste” life are often seen as extreme, but this is only one point of view. Here’s the other side where one of the “extreme” persons reminds us that it used to be normal to go to a farmer’s market to buy things that aren’t packed in plastic, to ride a bike, and drink water from a public fountain. Instead, our consumerism has become quite extreme and needs to change if we want to survive and stay healthy.
  • Sweden wants to become climate neutral by 2045, and now they presented an interesting visualization of the plan. It’s designed to help policymakers identify and fill in gaps to ensure that the goal will be achieved. The visualization is open to the public, so anyone can hold the government accountable.
  • Everybody loves them, many have them: AirPods. However, they are an environmental disaster, as this article shows.
  • The North Face tricking Wikipedia is advertising’s dark side.
  • The New York Times published a guide which helps us understand our impact on climate change based on the food we eat. This is not about going vegan but how changing eating habits can make a difference, both to the environment and our own health.
Smashing Editorial (cm)

Ketamine Media

Ketamine Media was founded to help physicians raise awareness about the clinical use of Ketamine. Our agency works exclusively with infusion centers on a national level. Our mission is to help connect treatment providers with individuals searching for new treatment options to battle depression and other treatment resistant conditions.

The post Ketamine Media appeared first on WeLoveWP.

WPWeekly Episode 355 – Food Poisoning Is No Joke

In this episode, John James Jacoby and I discuss Joost de Valk’s decision to step down as WordPress’ Marketing Lead. I shared my recent encounter with food poisoning and some of the lifestyle changes I’m making to improve my health. We also talk about a new experimental plugin by Automattic that aims to provide full site editing and FreeCodeCamp’s decision to migrate away from Medium to Ghost.

Stories Discussed:

Joost de Valk Steps Down as WordPress Marketing Lead

FreeCodeCamp Moves Off of Medium after being Pressured to Put Articles Behind Paywalls

Automattic is Testing an Experimental Full Site Editing Plugin

WPWeekly Meta:

Next Episode: Wednesday, June 12th 3:00 P.M. Eastern

Subscribe to WordPress Weekly via Itunes

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Listen To Episode #355:

Using Deep Learning Image Analysis To Spot Inequality

Inequality may seem something that is all too evident, as run down streets and communities show visible signs of lacking due care and attention, But in many communities, poverty can lie out of plain sight. New research from Imperial College London suggests deep learning can be used to better detect social, economic, environmental, and health inequalities than existing methods.

The researchers believe their system can help policymakers gain a greater understanding of the inequalities that exist within their city, and therefore have more informed policies for tackling them. What's more, the real-time nature of the metrics allows more effective interventions to be crafted.

25 Best WordPress Themes for CrossFit (2023)

Are you looking for the best WordPress Crossfit themes?

Considering the number of themes out there, choosing the right one can be quite overwhelming. You’ll have to find a balanced theme that has the right features and the perfect look for a health and fitness-related website.

In this article, we will share some of the best WordPress themes for Crossfit, health, and fitness websites.

Best WordPress Themes for Crossfit Gyms

Making a Crossfit Website Using WordPress

If you look around the health and fitness industry, you will notice many top brands using WordPress. That’s because WordPress is extremely flexible and easy to use.

WordPress is the most popular website builder in the world. It powers over 43% of all websites.

However, you need to make sure that you are using the right type of WordPress. Often people get confused between WordPress.com vs WordPress.org. You need to use WordPress.org to get all the features and functionality of WordPress.

To get started, you will need a domain name and WordPress hosting. A domain name is your site’s address on the web, like wpbeginner.com or google.com. Web hosting is the storage for all your website files.

We recommend using Bluehost for web hosting. They are one of the largest hosting companies in the world, and an official WordPress recommended hosting partner.

Bluehost WordPress Hosting offer for WPBeginner Users

The best part is that WPBeginner users get a free domain name and free SSL certificate.

After purchasing hosting, the next step is to install WordPress. You can follow our guide on how to make a website with step-by-step instructions.

Next, you need to install a WordPress theme. Select a theme from our expert pick below and follow the instructions on how to install a WordPress theme guide.

Now that we’re ready, let’s check out some of the best WordPress themes for CrossFit and fitness websites.

This list contains both free and paid themes, and all of them are mobile responsive.

1. Astra

Astra CrossFit

Astra is a popular WordPress theme with multiple templates. It has a built-in website demo for gym, CrossFit, and fitness websites. This includes sections for about me, awards, training, schedule, rates, image gallery, and more.

Astra has multiple layout choices allowing you to create a unique homepage layout and custom landing pages. To make it even easier, it works great with drag-and-drop page builders like Beaver Builder and Elementor.

Plus, Astra is designed for good WordPress search engine optimization (SEO). This helps your crossfit site to be found in search engines like Google.

2. SeedProd

SeedProd website builder

SeedProd is the best WordPress website and theme builder on the market. It lets you make your own CrossFit and gym theme, and then you can use this custom theme for your website.

SeedProd is easy to use for anyone and requires no coding knowledge. It comes with a powerful drag-and-drop builder that you can use to design your theme, make your website, and create landing pages.

To make it more simple, SeedProd provides built-in theme templates for different business niches. These templates are ready-to-use, and you just need to replace the content to launch your site.

3. Divi

Divi CrossFit

Divi is a powerful and stylish WordPress theme designed to create all types of WordPress websites. It has multiple ready-made layouts and Divi Builder support to create your own pages using powerful drag-and-drop tools.

It includes photo galleries, events, schedules, and an about section. This theme has custom widgets for social media integrations, featured posts, and more. Divi fully supports eCommerce and can be used to create an online store for your fitness products.

4. OceanWP

OceanWP CrossFit

OceanWP is an all-purpose WordPress theme, including a ready-made website template for gyms, health, and fitness websites. It includes easy-to-manage sections to add instructors, classes, locations, and more. It also allows you to show different classes, training sessions, and pricing tables.

The theme setup is easy, and it also has a 1-click demo content installer. It has many flexible customization options to upload your own logo, choose custom colors, or change fonts. OceanWP is eCommerce-ready and optimized for SEO.

5. Ultra

Ultra fitness theme for WordPress

Ultra is a modern WordPress theme designed specifically for gyms, CrossFit, health, and fitness training businesses.

Its Fitness template comes with a built-in section for memberships, training, amenities, and apparel. It allows you to easily manage schedules, classes, and training sessions. It also includes an activity section where you can add different activities.

Ultra is a highly flexible WordPress theme with tons of options, multiple layouts, custom widgets, sidebars, and unlimited colors. Plus, it’s translation ready and can be used to create multilingual websites using a translation plugin such as WPML.

6. Landing

Landing

Landing is a modern multi-purpose WordPress theme designed to create one-page websites. It’s super flexible and comes with multiple ready-to-use pages that you can install with 1-click. It has multiple header styles, an events section, a portfolio, and eCommerce support.

Other features include a theme options panel, parallax background, video background, and Themify Builder.

7. Neve

Neve CrossFit

Neve lets you tell your fitness story through your diet plan and photography. It’s a beautifully crafted WordPress theme with a minimalist design and gorgeous image galleries. It includes sections for portfolio, featured content, and eCommerce products.

Wellness also has a pain-free setup process and even includes a theme setup guide, so you can get online within minutes.

8. Aspire

Aspire Pro

Aspire is a modern and stylish WordPress theme for gyms, fitness centers, CrossFit, and sports websites. It features a beautifully crafted homepage with a fullscreen header background and popup-style subscription box. It offers flexible options for different layouts, headers, templates, and more.

Other notable features include WooCommerce support, widget areas, custom page templates, photo galleries, etc.

StudioPress is now part of WP Engine, the most popular managed WordPress hosting company. You can get this theme and all 35+ other StudioPress themes when you sign up for WP Engine hosting to build your website.

Bonus: WPBeginner users also get an additional 20% OFF. Get started with WP Engine today!

9. Hestia Pro

Hestia Pro WordPress yoga studio theme

Hestia Pro is an excellent WordPress multi-purpose theme that can be used for gyms, fitness, and health websites. It ships with a fullscreen image slider, an eCommerce-ready layout, a separate blog page, and call-to-action buttons. This theme has homepage sections for your featured content.

Hestia Pro comes with its own set of companion plugins that you can activate to add new features to your website. It’s fully compatible with drag-and-drop page builders such as Visual Composer. All the theme options can be easily set up using the live theme customizer.

With Hestia Pro, your site will always look great on mobile devices. The theme is fully responsive and retina ready.

10. VW Fitness

VW Fitness and yoga theme

VW Fitness is a free WordPress theme designed for gyms, fitness, and weight training websites. It includes a banner section, testimonials section, appointment form section, call to action button, and social media buttons.

All the theme options can be easily set up using the live theme customizer. It has a limited slider for the homepage. More features can be added using third-party WordPress plugins. For instance, you could easily add a contact form to your site.

11. Stack

Stack

Stack is a multi-purpose and metro designed theme. It makes a great CrossFit WordPress theme and can be easily used for gym fitness, CrossFit, or sports website.

It features a sidebar-based navigation menu, a custom logo, and social icons. Two key features of this theme are the masonry layout and infinite scrolling. It supports drag-and-drop page builders to design your own layout. Stack is easy to get started with and comes with a theme setup dashboard included.

12. Extra

Extra

Extra is a modern WordPress theme for personal trainers, gyms, and sports websites. It features a polished professional look with a beautiful slider and parallax effects. It includes custom page templates, unlimited color choices, multiple header layouts, and menu styles.

Inside, you will also find the Divi drag-and-drop page builder, sidebars, multiple layout choices, Google Fonts, several custom widgets, a custom admin panel, and more.

13. Consulting

Consulting

Consulting is a free WordPress theme perfect for fitness bloggers, CrossFit, and gym consultants. It includes multiple-page templates that allow you to show your classes, training, and schedule. It has a beautiful full-width homepage slider.

Consulting uses blurbs to display recent posts and featured content. All theme options can be set up using the live theme customizer.

14. Spencer

Spencer

Spencer is a stylish WordPress theme that can be used to create websites for CrossFit, gyms, and fitness businesses. It ships with a sticky navigation menu, newsletter sign-up form, fullscreen header background, and call to action button.

The theme setup is quite simple. The homepage uses a widgetized layout, so you just drag and drop content widgets to set it up. Spencer supports all popular page builder plugins out of the box.

15. Corner

Corner

Corner is an excellent WordPress multipurpose theme. It comes with a 2-column layout and a sidebar navigation menu where you can easily add your pages, welcome text, and social icons.

There’s a featured slider on the homepage to display photos. You can also add call-to-action buttons on slider images to redirect users to CrossFit and gym landing pages.

Moreover, it supports WooCommerce to sell gym equipment and collect payments online. The theme is easy to set up using page builder plugins and WordPress live customizer.

16. Listable

Listable

Listable is a WordPress theme that allows you to build a local directory of businesses and places. For instance, you could create a directory of local gyms, fitness training, and adventure events.

It lets users submit their listings, add listings to favorites, and manage their places from your WordPress site. And you can charge for a listing submission and service request to make money online.

This theme also includes beautiful colors and fonts, social media integration, and tons of customization options.

17. Pranayama Yoga

Pranayama Yoga

Pranayama Yoga is a free WordPress theme for yoga and health-related websites. It features a simple, spacious layout with bright colors. It includes a custom menu, a welcome banner, about information, courses, trainers, and testimonial sections.

It has footer widget areas and a right sidebar with custom widgets. All the theme options can be set up using the live theme customizer, and you can see a live preview of your website while making changes.

18. Inspiro

Inspiro

Inspiro is a multipurpose WordPress theme with a beautiful fullscreen video background, video gallery, and a lightbox popup to view videos. This makes it a great option to use videos to inspire your customers or promote your business.

Inspiro has a powerful portfolio section that you can use to showcase your gym inspiration, fitness videos, or photo galleries. It also includes uniquely designed templates and a drag-and-drop page builder to create your own layouts. It’s easy to customize and comes with a powerful theme options panel.

19. Flevr

Flevr

Flevr is a highly customizable WordPress multipurpose theme for all kinds of business websites. It features a clean white navigation menu on top of a fullscreen background image with a welcome message and a call to action button. The homepage uses a widgetized layout, which allows you to just drag and drop content widgets to create your homepage.

It also uses parallax effects on the homepage to create a visually stunning user experience. It includes multiple color choices, page templates, social media widgets, content discovery widgets, and a beautiful slider.

20. Poseidon

Poseidon

Poseidon is a free WordPress theme designed for health and fitness websites, sports blogs, and gyms. It has a minimal layout with a custom logo and navigation menu on top. It features a fullscreen image slideshow to grab the user’s attention.

It uses a magazine-style layout to display your blog posts on the homepage with post format support. The theme setup is straightforward, and the theme can be easily customized with the live customizer.

21. Breakthrough

Breakthrough Pro

Breakthrough is an iconic and simple WordPress theme for weight training, CrossFit, and bodybuilding websites. It features a neat layout with a welcome message alongside the call to action button. It’s built on the robust Genesis Framework, so it’s a great theme for fast WordPress performance.

Inside you will also find beautiful page templates, custom widgets for social media, and eCommerce support. Breakthrough can be easily edited using the page builder or the live theme customizer.

22. Eclecticon

Eclection

Eclecticon is a portfolio WordPress theme to share your adventure, sports, and CrossFit portfolio. It has a clean, minimalist layout with a sidebar navigation menu and a fullscreen image slider. The theme homepage also utilizes beautiful parallax effects and CSS animations.

It has a theme options panel to manage the theme settings easily. Eclecticon fully supports eCommerce and uses responsive design to look great on all devices.

23. Float

Float

Float is another great choice for gyms, CrossFit, and fitness training websites. It’s a highly flexible WordPress theme featuring a modern layout with bold colors. It includes an easy theme setup with drag-and-drop options.

Inside you will find a 1-click demo installer, social media integration, custom logo upload, multilingual support, and more. It also includes beautiful templates for your homepage, blog, and photo galleries.

24. Indigo

Indigo

Indigo is a super flexible WordPress theme to start a blog or any other kind of website. It ships with several ready-made websites which you can install with one click. After that, you can just replace the content with your own, and you are good to go.

If you want to create your own layouts, then Indigo makes that easy too. It has ready-to-use modules that you can drag and drop on any page to create your own layouts. It includes beautiful typography, templates, sliders, and many customization options.

25. Meridian Fitness

Meridian Fitness

Meridian Fitness is a WordPress theme for health, fitness, and gym websites. It includes built-in sections for classes with schedules and trainers. This allows you to easily add a gym schedule, workout routines, and trainer profiles to your website.

It also includes custom widgets, multiple color schemes, a class schedule template, a parallax effect, and more. It’s easy to set up, and all the theme options can be configured using the live customizer.

We hope this article helped you find the best WordPress themes for CrossFit, gyms, and fitness websites. You may also want to see our guides on WordPress SEO guide for beginners and how to make a gym website in WordPress.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

The post 25 Best WordPress Themes for CrossFit (2023) first appeared on WPBeginner.

30+ Best Medical WordPress Themes for Doctors

Best Medical WordPress Themes for Doctors and HospitalsThe medical profession is a competitive field. Whether you’re a general doctor seeking new patients, a birthing center, a health & wellness organization, a local clinic or a network of medical offices you need an amazing website. Medical websites should be professional, easy to read and include support for image galleries, sliders and of course […]

The post 30+ Best Medical WordPress Themes for Doctors appeared first on WPExplorer.

How to Use the Google Ads Keyword Planner

The Keyword Planner is the one must-have tool for any Google Ads campaign so you can find profitable keywords.

You’ll learn how to add “seed keywords” that help you uncover hidden gems, how to interpret the information the tool gives you, and how to estimate how much traffic you’ll receive from a particular keyword.

Your first step is to log into your Google AdWords account. Click on “tools and analysis,” in the top toolbar and choose “keyword planner” from the list. On this screen, you’ll find three different tool that will allow you to find new keyword ideas or see how an existing list of keywords will perform in AdWords.

The first, “search for keyword and ad group ideas,” is great if you want to brainstorm and find new keywords to add to your campaign. And there are a few ways to do it. The first is just to add keywords related to your niche. So if you sold fitness products you would include things like fitness, weight loss, and other keywords that you think your target audience is using when they search on Google looking for products that you sell.

Landing page is simply a page that you want your AdWords traffic to land on. So if you have one set up just copy and paste the URL into this field, and if you don’t you can just use your home page or an internal page on your site and Google will visit the page, extract keywords and use those to give you new ideas for your AdWords campaign. Or you can also choose a product category. So Google has built in product categories, so just click here and you can choose one of the product categories that fits within your industry. And you can also target the keywords ahead of time.

So if you want to target, let’s say, only people in the US, you’d leave this the same, but if you wanted to add a country or target a different country click on this and choose a different country. If you want to target a different language you can do the same thing. If you want to target Google only and not their search partners like AOL, you just want to leave that like it is.

And if you want to include negative keywords, which are keywords that you don’t ever want to show up in your Google AdWords account, you can just include those here. And you can also use keyword filters. And what that does is it allows you to filter out keywords that don’t meet your criteria. So if have specific monthly search volume that you want to meet or cost per click that’s above a certain level you can click this and then set the criteria here.

Now, keyword options is simply to hide keywords in your account, so if you already have an active AdWords account, you obviously don’t want those to appear again, because you’re looking for new ideas so you want to leave that like it is. And if you want to include or exclude certain keywords, you can include those here. And once that’s all set up you want to click on “get ideas.” But we’re actually going to move on to the next tool. which is “enter or upload keywords to see how they perform.”

And this is really straight forward. This isn’t actually looking for keyword ideas, this is if you already have a list of keywords; for example if you advertised on bing before or a different network you can include those keywords here, or upload them in a CSV file and Google will give you information about how those keywords will perform within AdWords.

Now finally, we have the multiply keyword list feature. And what this does is it allows you to enter different keywords in list one and list two and Google will combine them together. So if you had that fitness site, you’d put keywords like fitness, health, wellness and weight loss and in list two you combine totally different keyword and they’ll combine them with this.

You can put thing like premium products tips and it’ll combine them all together. So once you have a list going you can click on “get estimates” and Google will show the same information just like it would show you from the search for keyword and ad group ideas feature. And that’s actually what we’re going to go over now.

So let’s enter a few seed keywords. And generally want these to be pretty broad unless you have a specific keyword in mind. Just to give you the most amount of ideas. So you’d want to put fitness, weight loss, health, health tips. So you could put general keywords like that. If you’re more in the brainstorming phase.

But if you have specific keywords that you want to use for example, product related keywords like fitness dvds, you could include those keywords into the list instead of or in addition to the more general keywords. But just for the video we’re actually going to use some general keywords so we can see the most amount of ideas.

So you want to put two or three general keywords or include your landing page and then set any criteria that you want and then click on get ideas. Now once you’re here, it automatically shows ad group ideas. Now this is something you might want to do if you’re still in the brainstorming phase.

But you don’t want to specifically just take on an ad group because this might not be appropriate for what you’re selling and the traffic that you want to get. So for example, “weight loss plan,” might be great if weight loss is the primary focus of your product. But if not it may include a lot of keywords that you don’t want. So just to check you can always click on it. And see the keywords that they suggest within that ad group.

Okay, and if you want to add all those keyword to you ad group just click on “add all” and it’ll add all of them, otherwise go back click on the keyword ideas tab and now the tool shows you information about specific keywords related to the keywords that you gave it. So at the top it actually shows the keywords that you entered.

So if you included, let’s say, five keywords it would show five keywords here under search terms. And it also shows you keywords related to the keywords that you entered. So these are basically new keyword ideas. Now if you see one that’s good you can always add it to your account or search for it and get ideas based on that keyword and repeat the process until you’ve found all of the keywords that look like good fits.

So now I’m going to go over what all of the categories mean next to a keyword. So the first is this little graph icon and all that does is when you hover over it, it shows you the variations in search volume over the last 12 months. So this gives you an idea of whether the keyword popularity is trending up, trending down, or whether it fluctuates a lot, for example seasonal keywords. And then average month searches is very straight forward.

It’s the amount of people that search for that keyword per month. Competition represents the number of different AdWords advertiser that are targeting that keyword. Average cost per click is the average cost per click that advertisers pay to get one click from that keyword. And ad impressions share is the percentage of times that your ad appeared when someone searched for the keyword.

So if you haven’t actually advertised that keyword before this will always be zero percent. So when you see a keyword that look good you can click on the blue button here and that keyword will be added to the ad group “my keyword ideas.” And you can always go back and add that to a specific ad group that you want to advertise on later.

So what this little your plan feature does is it gives you an idea of how many click you’ll get depending on how much you bid. So if you bid zero dollars obviously you’re not going to get any clicks and if you bid $21 a click. you’d get 847 clicks a day. which is extremely high because this bid is ten times above the average cost per click.

So what we want to do is move this bar to a more reasonable bid. Something like $2.38. And with that you’d get 645 click which is still actually really really good and it would cost you about $543 a day to advertise at that bid level and you can adjust it left and right to see how many click you would get depending on your bids.

So that’s all there is to using the Google AdWords keyword planner. As long as you add several seed keywords into the tool and then take some of the keywords suggestions and add those back into the tool you’ll find plenty of great keywords that you can advertise on to get targeted traffic to your site.

Will We Company Take Over Our Smart Cities?

In the earlier days of wearable tech, I remember there were great amounts of media interest around the idea that people wearing a Fitbit or Pebblewatch at work could be subject to undue surveillance by their employers. Today, there are many employee health programs that their employer-funded health insurance tracks fitness metrics such as blood pressure and the number of daily steps in exchange for bonus points, Pebblewatch is no more, and the apps we willingly upload onto our phones are offering more data on our daily lives than ever before. But if you own a smartphone and happen to work in a smart building where everything from lighting, utility usage, meeting room occupation, and people movement is tracked, things get a bit more interesting. 

WeWork Knows All About Its Inhabitants

Enter WeWork/We Company (aka We for the purposes of this article.) As of early-January 2019, WeWork had a valuation of roughly US$47 billion and managed 10,000,000 square feet of office space. They have over 425 coworking spaces in over 100 countries. They also own a series of children's schools called wegrow and welive for digital nomads and traveling executives. Last year, they acquired Meetup and Teem. Then, in February of this year, they acquired spatial analytics company Euclid. In announcing the acquisition, WeWork asserted:

You (Probably) Don’t Need to Worry That Your AirPods Will Give You Cancer

If you work in an open office (like me), you probably have your earbuds in constantly – because of course you do; open offices are the worst. But if those earbuds happen to be wireless, you may want to reconsider.

As this piece in Quartz explains, there was a bit of an uproar last week when reports began circulating the web that more than 200 scientists from around the globe were warning of serious health risks tied to this technology.

Telit Just Made (Future) IoT Devices More Secure

It seems everything is going smart these days: refrigerators, entire factories, shoes, this ball thing that spies on your pets. But you know what else is getting pretty smart? Hackers, especially since this burgeoning IoT boom – which Gartner estimates will reach 20.4 billion connected devices by 2020 – is all-too-often setting people up to have their networks hijacked much in the same way babies lose candy to morally bankrupt people. (Monsters.) Indeed, as this piece from CNET points out, “There's a running joke regarding connected gadgets and the internet of things: ‘The 'S' in IoT stands for security.’”

But companies like Telit are trying to make room for that ‘S.’ Recently unveiled to the world, their WL865E4-P module, a low-power Wi-Fi Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) combo unit based on the Qualcomm QCA4020 system-on-chip (SoC), features integrated crypto hardware, enabling “IoT developers to meet demanding requirements for power consumption, security, performance, size, and reliability,” the company explained in a press release. Designed for high-bandwidth applications, the module is ideal for uses in “health care, video, smart home, and industrial control.”

Server Monitoring With Logz.io and the ELK Stack

In a previous article, we explained the importance of monitoring the performance of your servers. Keeping tabs on metrics such as CPU, memory, disk usage, uptime, network traffic, and swap usage will help you gauge the general health of your environment as well as provide the context you need to troubleshoot and solve production issues.

In the past, command line tools, such as top, htop, or nstat, might have been enough, but in today’s modern IT environments, a more centralized approach for monitoring must be implemented.