Got a broken doo-hickey on your blog that you can’t seem to get fixed?
Want Google Analytics for your blog but don’t know where to put the code?
Are you deathly afraid to enter the HTML or CSS world?
Is your blog driving you batty because it refuses to do what you want it to do?
Starting next week, we will be holding face-to-face Blogger Office Hours at Thinkhouse Collective so you can get the help you need. Hopefully. We can’t guarantee it, but we will try our darndest. The first session will be held on Tuesday, March 19 from 6pm-8pm. Just drop on by anytime during those hours and bring your problems, your questions, your huddled blog masses…
The plan is to hold these Office Hours once a month and they will appear on the Sacramento Blogger Event Calendar as they are scheduled. These are open office hours, so no RSVP is required. And it’s free.
You may meet other fellow bloggers while you’re there and YOU may even help someone else fix their quandaries – how awesome would that be?
Speaking of which, if you’re not having blog problems, but want to hang out and chat or possibly just be of help to someone else, please do come!
This is kind of an experimental thing to see if it’s useful. So even if you want to come to the first one, but can’t, do you think it’s useful? Let us know in the comments.
Thinkhouse Collective
1617 18th St.
Sacramento, CA
(Image Source: Wikimedia Commons)
What a great idea! I won’t be in town but I think this is a really great way for people to get together. Looking forward to joining more activities when I’m back in Sac. 🙂
And we look forward to seeing you when you get back to Sac! 🙂
Cannot wait!!!
Love the idea and would definitely want to be there, but distance is an issue. Would you ever consider a satellite office (of the Starbuck’s variety) session?
Where are you, Chris?
I live in Cameron Park in El Dorado county. I came the farthest at your first ThinkHouse gathering some months back. I know the Santoro’s with the area’s fav coffee shop.
How did it go?
It went well. A few people stopped by, and we’ll see how the next one goes to determine if this experiment is worth it to the group to keep it going.