Wikibility Cultural Key Drivers: Peering
A common element between Wiki philosophy and innovation successful case histories, is the partial or total absence of structure or, saying better, of hierarchy. The possibility, in fact, to contribute in the same way, indifferently at which level you are involved in the organization, is one of the first steps towards the reduction of barriers to collaboration, participation and involvement in the organizational life.
Cammarata, Vincenzo. Grow Your Wiki (2008). Articles>Content Management>Collaboration>Wikis
Wikibility Cultural Key Drivers: Sharing
The possibility of sharing improves an effective distribution of common resources (meeting room, projector, corporate car...). In a more general acceptation of the term, the availability to ideas or previous solutions useful for different use is an advantage that make co-creation of new knowledge and a healthy circulation of knowledge possible.
Cammarata, Vincenzo. Grow Your Wiki (2008). Articles>Content Management>Collaboration>Wikis
Wikis Are Coming: An In-Depth Exploration of Using Wikis in Documentation
In this podcast, Katriel Reichman, a technical writer at Method M in Jerusalem, Israel, talks in-depth about how to use wikis for documentation.
Reichman, Katriel and Tom H. Johnson. Tech Writer Voices (2007). Presentations>Documentation>Content Management>Podcasts
Wikis, Docs, and the Reuse Proposition
The Darwin Informaton Typing Architecture (DITA) is an XML-based document format that was designed from the ground up for reuse. It rocks. Content Managment Systms (CMSes) are designed to hold XML data. So in theory, a CMS system that lets you edit like a Wiki would be everything you need. But getting a system like that to work is a pretty tricky proposition.
Armstrong, Eric. Sun Microsystems (2007). Articles>Content Management>XML>DITA
Words Drive Action: An Interview with Gerry McGovern
Gerry McGovern is a world-renowned content-management expert and author of the books, 'Content Critical' and 'The Web Content Style Guide'. User Interface Engineering's Christine Perfetti and Josh Porter recently talked with Gerry about the importance of an editorial perspective in a web development process. Here is what Gerry had to say about his experiences.
Perfetti, Christine and Josh Porter. User Interface Engineering (2002). Articles>Content Management>Web Design
A Writer's Guide to XML Content Management 
A discussion of how XML changes what you do as a writer.
Hackos, JoAnn T. and Tina Hedlund. ComTech Services (2000). Articles>Content Management>XML>Writing
XML and Content Management Systems
This article explores the role of XML in the context of content management systems, focusing specifically on the business issues.
Robertson, James. Step Two (2003). Articles>Content Management>Single Sourcing>XML
XML and Single-Sourcing with FrameMaker, Word, InDesign, XMLSpy, and More! 
Getting software to cooperate reduces the amount of editing you need to do, and creates better documents.
Aschwanden, Bernard. STC Region 7 Proceedings (2003). Articles>Content Management>Single Sourcing
XML Authoring: Coming to a Desktop Near You
XML for use in technical publications is growing in popularity. As the author explains, technical writers are likely to become more and more involved in XML document production in the future. This article looks at the many benefits of XML authoring and the trend that's moving technical publications toward structured content.
Abel, Scott. Writing Assistance (2007). Articles>Content Management>XML>Technical Writing
XML Repositories: An Idea Whose Time has Finally Come
This white paper discusses the role of an XML repository into today’s enterprise infrastructure. Virtually every database and repository provide some degree of XML support; however, there are important distinctions between support for XML as a data type and the role of a repository whose architecture and operations are optimized to support the broad family of XML recommendations and standards. Specifically, this white paper will explore: The nature and extent of XML use across the enterprise, cost and quality of service implications of an infrastructure with, and without, an XML repository, the evolution of XML repositories from both a technology and a market segment perspective, criteria to determine when an XML repository would add significant value to an existing infrastructure, and capability and packaging recommendations for XML repository functionality that can be used to evaluate specific offerings.
Holst, Sebastian. Gilbane Report (2004). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>XML
XML Solves Tech Publishing Problems
If you are a technical writer or manager of a documentation group you have probably encountered or been faced with solving problems like: single-sourcing, collaborative authoring, cross-platform editing, multi-channel publishing, improving information quality and consistency, enhancing functionality of electronic output, negating technology lock-in, and even reducing costs without reducing team head count. This article explores how the use of XML technologies within your authoring system can help you achieve each of these objectives.
InWords TechDoc Solutions (2003). Articles>Content Management>XML
XML Syndication Set to Explode - Are You Ready For Big Change?
Since version 1.0 of XML was released by the W3C in early 1998, its use has been growing by leaps and bounds. Content managers and software packages were early adopters and enterprises are increasingly implementing XML-based systems. A number of events are now converging which will make available an unprecedented number of XML documents on the internet. The implications are numerous and will have trendendous impact on many of the fundamental dynamics of the Internet as we know it today.
Ismail, Salim. Rockley Bulletin (2006). Articles>Content Management>XML
XrML and Emerging Models of Content Development and Distribution 
With the publication of XrML 2.0, ContentGuard provides an open, flexible, and extensible means of expressing digital rights that not only addresses copy protection, but, as importantly, offers a much broader and powerful means for publishers to experiment with and deploy new business models.
Trippe, Bill. Gilbane Report (2005). Articles>Content Management>Standards>XML
Developers as Users of SharePoint
In SharePoint, we are likely to think of developers as people who work to customise SharePoint, but there are a lot of developers out there who are simply end users of SharePoint. How do they like the system?
Technical Writer (2007). Articles>Content Management>Software>Microsoft SharePoint
Joomla: Another Simple Content Management System
Joomla is more complex than WordPress but it has more power. Because it’s a real content management system—unlike WordPress which is a blog with content management capabilities—you don’t have to customise it to make it look like one. Other people have also created templates you can use.
Technical Writer (2007). Articles>Content Management>Software
WordPress as a Simple Content Management System
I know that some users of high-end CMS’s may dispute this definition, as a high-end CMS does a lot more. But what is a content management system really? It is content, stored in some kind of database, accessed via a front end. That is exactly what WordPress is.
Technical Writer (2007). Articles>Content Management>Software
Using DITA to Develop a New Information Architecture at BMC Software
The need for us to customize BSM solutions by integrating different software solutions, combined with the maturation of tools for XML-based authoring, make this an ideal time to implement a new information development strategy. After researching materials about content management and studying success stories from companies who have implemented structured authoring, we launched a pilot project.
Rockley, Ann. Rockley Group, The (2007). Articles>Content Management>Case Studies>DITA
Case Study: Discovering Plone Content Management System (Part 1)
DISCOVER Magazine, one of the most widely read science mags in the US, had out grown its dated Web Content Management infrastructure for www.discovermagazine.com. Times were changing, multi-media was big and in general Web and CMS technology had moved forward significantly. After analyzing current needs and taking stock of the Web CMS landscape DISCOVER ultimately selected the open source Plone platform. This is a two-part series where we look at the CMS features which convinced DISCOVER to chose Plone.
Paley, Scott. CMSwire (2007). Articles>Content Management>Case Studies>Plone
WordPress as a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Application
I'm amazed at how easily people can make sites look both professional and functional in a short period of time using WordPress. Clyde Parson, the STC-Suncoast chapter in Tampa, just redid the Suncoast STC with a new WordPress theme. It looks pretty cool.
Johnson, Tom H. I'd Rather Be Writing (2008). Articles>Content Management>Blogging>WordPress
Getting FLOSSy: Acrobat Killer Or HAT Replacement?
Some writers truly hate Adobe Acrobat and any tool that can do the job better is worth a shot, particularly if it’s open source and easily navigated. Flossmanuals.net introduces FLOSS which does a lot of the single desktop Acrobat Pro’s job - collaboratively and open source.
Jeter, Charles. Charles Jeter (2008). Articles>Content Management>Documentation>Software
The 4J's Group Blog featuring, thoughts and observations on the many facets of corporate publishing.
Content Pool, The (2008). Resources>Publishing>Online>Content Management
The Why and How of Content Convergence and Integration
Content producers are about to live through interesting times, to adapt the popular saying, with the dawning of The Age of Content. Industry is discovering content as a commodity; the rules are changing, and fast.
Bailie, Rahel Anne. TechCom Manager (2008). Articles>Content Management
Understanding the Need for Content Quality Management
An interview between Diane Wieland, a technology writer in Indianapolis, and Scott Abel, publisher, The Content Wrangler.
Wieland, Diane. TechCom Manager (2007). Articles>Interviews>Content Management
Content Management -- A Career Path for Tech Comm Managers
If you are a technical communications manager, chances are you are working for an organization that has existed for far too many years to be considered a start-up. And if your organization is relatively mature, then at this stage, the organization is also swimming, if not already drowning, in information.
Bailie, Rahel Anne. TechCom Manager (2006). Articles>Content Management>Management
An Interview with Dr. JoAnn Hackos
Implementing a content-management system may seem a little outside the purview of the technical documentation manager. But, according to JoAnn Hackos, managers and their staff can play a pivotal role in the success of a content-management project. In this interview, guest editor Scott Abel, publisher of TheContentWrangler.com, chats with Hackos about how to prepare for a move to content management and explores who needs to be involved in the process and why.
Abel, Scott. TechCom Manager (2006). Articles>Interviews>Content Management
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