{"id":232,"date":"2012-08-08T14:00:55","date_gmt":"2012-08-08T12:00:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wprealm.com\/?p=232"},"modified":"2017-12-27T20:04:46","modified_gmt":"2017-12-27T19:04:46","slug":"writing-a-better-support-forum-request","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/wprealm.local\/writing-a-better-support-forum-request\/","title":{"rendered":"Writing a Better Support Forum Request"},"content":{"rendered":"
Greeting from the not so cold or snowy Great White North. It is I, your intrepid reporter coming to you live from the support forum trenches. I’m Andrea Rennick, co-author of WordPress All-In-One for Dummies<\/a>, and part of the\u00a0excellent\u00a0support team at StudioPress<\/a>.<\/p>\n When I was first asked to contribute, one of the very first things that came to mind was covering the myriad of ways in which your users can provide information that we, the support team, can use to help them get the best help available. Send your users here and I’ll set them right.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The first step should always be searching the forums to find if there are previous threads about the issue. You may have to use different wording to find the results. Sometimes, even scanning the list of forum posts can be easier if you are not sure of the exact terminology used.<\/p>\n Once you’ve made sure that no previous threads exist, post a complete overview of the problem, including steps anyone else can take to replicate the issue. Forums posts like this one are likely to go unanswered at best or ridiculed publicly at worst.<\/p>\n “Help! It’s broke! Someone fix it!” (unlinked to protect the guilty)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Sometimes, no matter how good the support person is, there’s just not enough information there.<\/p>\n Better idea:<\/p>\n “I am using Wordpress 3.4 and Genesis 1.7 at domain-example.com. Every time I activate the XYZ plugin, I get a white screen. I read in another thread that this is a version issue. Can someone confirm and tell me how to recover my site?”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Post a link to your site as well. Many of us in\u00a0support\u00a0are quite puzzled as to why users do not leave a link to the site they are working on. When pressed, some users seem a bit\u00a0embarrassed\u00a0– “Oh, I’ve just started working on it so it’s not very pretty,” We know and we don’t care how it looks right now. We just want to help solve your issue – we weren’t asked to critique the site, so we won’t. Often, if you are using a purchased theme and are\u00a0receiving\u00a0help for it, we expect<\/em> to see it look rather plain. After all, you’ve just moved in. We don’t even expect to take out pizza if we just showed up to lug a few boxes. \ud83d\ude09<\/p>\n One way we use the link to your site is to view the HTML source of the front page. We can double check the theme you are using, see many active plugins mentioned in the header area and sometimes even check to see if your WordPress version is up to date.<\/p>\n Since I mainly do theme support, a neat little trick I do is visit the style.css location in the head of the page. This shows me in full plain text what theme version you are using, and I can even check the parent theme (in this case, the Genesis Framework<\/a>), since it’s the same folder on every install that uses it.<\/p>\nDoing your homework<\/h3>\n
How we work our magic<\/h3>\n