Grab Your Free 17-Point WordPress Pre-Launch PDF Checklist: https://wplearninglab.com/17-point-wp-pre-launch-checklist-optin-yt/?utm_source=YouTube_Video&utm_medium=Description_Link&utm_term=Description_Link&utm_campaign=YouTube Download our exclusive 10-Point WP Hardening Checklist: http://bit.ly/10point-wordpress-hardening-checklist WordPress Revisions Plugin - Schedule Revisions To Live Posts in WordPress | WP Learning Lab One of the greatest features in WordPress is the ability to schedule posts and pages to be published in the future. But something that I've always felt is missing is the ability to schedule WordPress post revisions in the future. For example, let's say you have an eCommerce website and you are running a sale that ends at midnight in your time zone. It would be great if you could schedule a revision to the sales page that updates the page to say the sale is over at exactly midnight instead of you staying up to make that update happen. Well, there is a solution. It's called the Revisionary Plugin (https://wordpress.org/plugins/revisionary/). This plugin will allow you to schedule WordPress post revisions to your published posts. You can schedule as many revisions as you need. Using the plugin is pretty easy too, it's also free. You can download and install it right from the WordPress admin panel by going to Plugins then Add New. Then search for Revisionary Plugin in the search bar. When you find this WordPress revisions plugin in the search results click on Install and then Activate. This WordPress plugin doesn't have a lot of settings and the defaults are usually fine. The only default setting I change is the one that requires each revision to be approved. That is a great setting if you are running a website with a bunch of writers and editors. If you are doing it solo or with a small team you probably don't need the added step of approving every revision. Now that the settings are set, go to a published WordPress post, any post. Just above the blue Update button you will now see a checkbox with "save as a pending revision" beside it. All you have to do is make a change to your post, then select a time in the future by editing the "Published On" field, then check the box to save as a pending revision and then click "Schedule Revision" (the button name changes from Update to Schedule Revision). You will now see another entry in the posts list (click on Posts on the left-hand menu to see a list of your posts). That new entry is your revision. Once the revision is published that entry will disappear. That's how easy it is to schedule revisions and have ultimate WordPress control revisions. This will also work for WordPress page revisions. I hope this information helps you! If you have any questions leave a comment below or ping me @WPLearningLab on Twitter. -------------- If you want more excellent WordPress information check out our website where we post WordPress tutorials daily. http://wplearninglab.com/ Connect with us: WP Learning Lab Channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=wplearninglab Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/wplearninglab Twitter: https://twitter.com/WPLearningLab Google Plus: http://google.com/+Wplearninglab Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/wplearninglab/

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