WordPress – Changing Passwords

This short video tutorial from our video series teaches users how to change their own password in Your Profile.

This video introduces users to:

  • Navigate to the Your profile edit page.
  • Enter a new password and check it for strength.
  • Save their new password.

The password and email address attached to your username can be changed at any time using the Your Profile screen.

And here’s some info about changing your password you can use to complement your videos — if you like!

The password and email address attached to your username can be changed at any time using the Your Profile screen.

It’s as simple as:

1.  Go to Users > Your Profile or Profile > Your Profile in your site dashboard.

  • The menu item you use depends on what role you have been assinged on a site.

2.  Scroll to the bottom of the page to the New Password area.
3.  Type your new password into both boxes and click Update Profile when you are done.

  • TIP: Using a combination of letters, numbers and symbols makes it hard for others to guess your password.  The strength indicator provides an indication of how good your password choice is!

4.  Your password should now be updated and next time you need to log into your account this is the password you use.

WordPress – Create And Edit Users

This short video tutorial from our video series introduces users to creating and editing users inside WordPress.

This video discusses:

  • Adding new users to your WordPress site
  • Required information for creating a new user
  • User Roles and what certain Access Levels can and can’t do inside WordPress
  • Editing user accounts
  • Promoting users on your site with biographical information

You add a new user by clicking on the “Users” link in the admin menu inside the WordPress dashboard, and then clicking “Add New.”

There are only 3 pieces of required information to create a new user:

  1. username
  2. email address
  3. password

All other fields in this view are optional.

If you wish your user to be notified of his new account make sure to click the check box for “send this password to the new user by email.”

The user role selection box determines the capabilities you can assign to the new user, which vary in the following ways:

Subscriber – This is the default setting for a basic user which can login and read content only. They have no posting capabilities, other than the ability to leave comments on posts on the front end of the site.

Contributor – This is the next level up from Subscriber, and contributors have the ability to add content, but not publish it. Content added by contributors are put into the administrator’s “pending” posts panel for approval before publishing.

Authors – Can do everything a contributor can do, and can also publish their own posts. They cannot, however, edit content created by other authors to the site. They can only edit their own submitted content. Authors can also add media to the site and their own posts.

Editor – Can do everything authors can do, and have the ability to edit content created by other authors on the site.

Administrators – Have complete control of the site and all its areas, including themes, plugins, and user creation and editing.

 

Editing users

To edit a user, hover over the user’s name in the All Users panel in the WordPress Admin. Links to edit or delete that user will appear – click edit. This brings up the edit profile screen, showing more information options than when the user is created.

You, or the user, can add various snippets of additional information, including a nickname, which determines how the user’s name is displayed on the front-end of the site – like in comments, post meta, and forums.

WordPress also includes fields for several social media profiles and a text box for biographical information. These inputs can be especially handy for a multiple author site that wants to show off personal information for its authors. This increases engagement with your site and interest in its member users.

WordPress – Editing Posts And Pages

This flash video tutorial from our video series introduces to editing posts or pages.

This video introduces users to:

  • Locating posts or pages to edit using Posts > Posts or Pages > Pages
  • Accessing the Post and Page action menu links
  • Open up a post or page in Edit mode
  • Changing text to bold and italics
  • Aligning text left, centre and right
  • Updating posts and posts

The Edit Post and Edit Page area in your administration panel where you see a listing of all the saved posts/pages, 20 posts per page, that you’ve written on your site.

In this screen you can search for posts/pages and once located you can either edit or delete them.

Hovering your mouse over the title of a post/page brings up four action links:

Page / Post action link menu items

Edit

Clicking the action link Edit opens the post into full edit mode where you can edit the post/page and/or configure post options such as passwords, categories, tags and the timestamp.

Quick Edit

Clicking the action link Quick Edit opens the post/page options letting you configure features such as title, status, passwords, categories, tags comments and the timestamp without having to edit the full post/page.

Trash

Used when you want to delete a post/page on your site.

View

Takes you to your site where you can see what the post/page looks like when viewed on your site.

WordPress – Using Lists

This short video tutorial from our video series introduces users to creating ordered (or numbered) and unordered (or bulleted) lists in posts and pages.

This video introduces users to:

  • the difference between ordered and unordered lists
  • how to create ordered and unordered lists in posts and pages using the WordPress editor

Lists are used to outline and organize information.  Bloggers use them to make their content easier to read.

Creating a lists is as simple as:

  1. Pressing either the ordered or unordered list button in the WordPress editor
  2. Typing in the individual list items
  3. Pressing the respective ordered or unordered list button once again
  4. Previewing the changes to be sure the lists look how you want them to

Ordered List

Unordered List

WordPress – Replacing Images

This short video tutorial from our video series shows users how to replace an image in a post or page

Replacing an image is a very common task when working with posts and pages, yet it’s as simple as removing an existing image and adding a new one .

WordPress – Uploading Media

This short video tutorial from our video series shows users how to add new media using the Media Library

This video introduces users to:

  • how to add new media using the Media Library
  • how to add or change the media file’s Title, Caption and Description
  • how to find the uploaded media file’s url (where it’s located)

Adding a new media file using the Media Library allows you to easily use that media file in posts and pages.

Adding a media file is as simple as:

  1. Navigating to the Media module and clicking Add New
  2. Clicking on the Select Files button and selecting the file you wish to upload
  3. Editing the information about the file after it’s uploaded, then pressing the Save Changes button

Uploiading media to your media library

WordPress – Editing Images

This short video from tutorial our video series introduces users to how to edit an image in a post or page

This video introduces users to:

  • how to edit an image in a post or page using the Edit icon in the Visual Editor
  • how to add and edit the image information in Edit Image screen
  • Image alignment, changing image size, Title, Alternate Text and Caption

Editing an image in a post or page from your computer is as simple as:

1. Hovering your mouse over the image you’d like to edit.

2. Clicking on Edit icon that shows over the image.

Edit an Image

3.  Editing the information you’d like to change such as Image alignment, changing image size, Title, Alternate Text and Caption.

4.  Clicking the Update button.

WordPress – Deleting Images

This short video tutorial teaches the user to delete images when editing pages or posts.

This video introduces users to:

  • deleting images from pages and posts
  • previewing post changes before publishing

You delete an image from a page or post as follows:

1. Click on the image in the page or post editor

Delete Image

2. Click the red No sign on the right that appears

WordPress – The Admin Bar

This short video tutorial walks you through using the admin bar built into the WordPress installation.

This video introduces users to:

  • visiting a site from the dashboard
  • using the admin bar at the top of a site

The admin bar is automatically available on all versions of WordPress 3.1+.

Here is what the left side looks like:

screenshot of admin dropdown menu left

And the right:

screenshot of admin dropdown menu right

WordPress – Using The Visual Editor

This is a quick video tutorial on how to use the visual editor inside the WordPress admin panel when creating a post or page.

This video introduces users to:

  • all of the tools available when editing text on a post or page

Text Toolbar