• Resolved njambassador

    (@njambassador)


    I am building a website for a church that I am not a member of. They have services on Zoom weekly. When I create the app that will connect to WordPress at zoom.us/developer, should I be signing into their Zoom account (as a developer) to create the app? So…

    1. Sign into the Zoom Developer account from the client
    2. Then create the app
    3. Get the API information from their account.

    Meaning, I do not go into my account for anything, not even as a developer.

    Would this be correct?

Viewing 4 replies - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
  • Plugin Author Deepen

    (@j_3rk)

    Hi @njambassador

    No, you will need to only create the keys from your main zoom.us account and add those keys in the plugin.

    After that you can add other users under your main zoom account (from which the keys were generated and used in the plugin) – You can see https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/201363183-Managing-users on how to add other users under one zoom account.

    This way other users would show up when you try to create meetings form the plugin. Hope this helps!

    Thanks for the quick response. So for clarity, though the church has their own Zoom account, I would use mine as the developer, even though I have nothing to do with the church other than building the website.

    So that means if I build similar projects for 1 or 2 more churches, again, I would use my Zoom account and make these churches users?

    Keep in mind I would have to train each user how to start the meeting via the website since I won’t be the one doing it, most likely.

    Plugin Contributor digamberpradhan

    (@digamberpradhan)

    Hi @njambassador7

    I would recommend using the churches own Zoom account.
    What Deepen was trying to say was if you want multiple Zoom accounts on a site – there needs to be a main Zoom account and Sub – Zoom accounts under the main Zoom account.

    If each church is going to have their own website and their own Zoom services i would recommend using their own Zoom accounts instead of yours.

    Thread Starter njambassador

    (@njambassador)

    Makes sense. Understood. Thank you!

Viewing 4 replies - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
  • The topic ‘Use Clients Account As Developer?’ is closed to new replies.