- Attended a Community Meetup
- Author was Featured
- Beta Tester
- Bought between 10 and 49 items
- Contributed a Tutorial to a Tuts+ Site
- Exclusive Author
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Interviewed on the Envato Notes blog
Hi I just wanna thanks Siddharth – Themeforest Reviewer for posting this:
http://notes.envato.com/general/submission-tip-understand-the-themeforest-reviewing-process/
There seems to be a little confusion about how we review themes over at ThemeForest, our premium marketplace for everything from WordPress themes to email templates. In the interest of transparency and, hopefully, increased awareness among authors, here is a quick little tidbit explaining our typical workflow when reviewing a template.
The graphic describes the process for a WordPress template but it’s essentially applicable for each and every submission. Pay attention to the little notes on the side since they contain additional details about each section.
Ok why was my comment “Inappropriate”?
- Attended a Community Meetup
- Author was Featured
- Beta Tester
- Bought between 10 and 49 items
- Contributed a Tutorial to a Tuts+ Site
- Exclusive Author
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Interviewed on the Envato Notes blog
It wasn’t me.
ThemeProvince said
It wasn’t me.
Its ok.
I think this article was much needed, and Im glad Envato is starting to be more transparent about the Review Process.
Cheers
It wasn’t me either, but I suppose that’s because you post link to several items, which might be unpleasant for some author.
That’s very good one! thanks a lot 
Siddharth just posted another article on Envato Notes:
http://notes.envato.com/general/submission-tip-eliminate-php-errors-tf/A template’s PHP code shouldn’t raise any errors, warnings or notices. Most developers just deal with errors, since they’re showstopping, and call it a day. We’ll need you to go the extra mile and squash all notices and warning since notices can cause performance issues and it’s just not cool!
