Doing a Content Inventory (Or, A Mind-Numbingly Detailed Odyssey Through Your Web Site)
A content inventory is a relatively straightforward process of clicking through your Web site and recording what you find. We’ve developed a simple Excel spreadsheet to help you structure your findings, and some tips on how to get through it.
Veen, Jeffrey. Adaptive Path (2002). Articles>Web Design>Content Management
Do You Manage a Website or a Warehouse?
There are two types of people involved in websites today: those who see content as an asset, and those who see it as a commodity. The latter better start looking for a new career.
McGovern, Gerry. New Thinking (2004). Articles>Web Design>Content Management
Measuring Your Web Publishing Processes
What's really important to measure for your website? Firstly, you need to measure how successful you are at creating, editing and publishing content. These are your web content management processes. Secondly, you need to measure reader behavior. There will also be some core website performance issues to measure. This week, I'd like to examine key web content management process measurables.
McGovern, Gerry. New Thinking (2003). Articles>Web Design>Content Management
Quality Publishing is About Saying No
Are the people who have least to say in your organization publishing most on your intranet or public website? Are the people who have most to say publishing least? You're not alone. Organizations are slowly realizing that managing a website is as much about what you don't publish as what you do.
McGovern, Gerry. New Thinking (2003). Articles>Content Management>Web Design
Should You Centralize or Decentralize Your Publishing?
Large websites often struggle to develop an efficient and cost-effective publishing model. Centralizing publishing ensures a consistent quality of what is published, but is often slow and frustrating. Decentralized publishing is faster and often more cost-effective, but can result in inconsistent quality, unless rigorous publishing standards are adhered to.
McGovern, Gerry. New Thinking (2003). Articles>Content Management>Web Design
You take a content inventory because, before redesigning a website or intranet, you need to know what you have. This is especially important if you will be migrating your content to a new structure or new CMS - at some point you need to know every single content element.
Spenser, Donna. DonnaM (2006). Articles>Content Management>Web Design
Taxonomy and Metadata Strategies for Effective Content Management
There is a lot of mumbo-jumbo like the word "taxonomy" that is being thrown around to describe how to manage so-called unstructured content like business documents, web site pages, and old fashioned technical reports and articles. On the one hand, we want to remember what we already know about how to create a useful core catalog record to describe a content object so it can be found again later when needed. On the other hand, there are some bad habits and obsolete ideas like inverted file indexes that we need to get beyond. This talk is about what we have seen in dozens of applied information management projects over the past few years, and how you can take advantage of what you already know to solve big problems like these in your own organizations.
Busch, Joseph. ASIST (2004). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>Metadata
Why Personalization Hasn't Worked
Personalization hasn't worked because most people don't have a compelling reason to personalize. It hasn't worked because the cost of doing it well usually significantly outweighs the benefits it delivers. It hasn't worked because managers have seen it as some Holy Grail of content management.
McGovern, Gerry. New Thinking (2003). Articles>Content Management>Web Design>Personalization
Information Technology: Trojan Horse of Information Overload
Information technology has become the Trojan Horse of information overload. It has been invited into the organization as some magical gift that will bring greater efficiency and reduced cost. Once inside, it feeds on resources and spews out unimaginable quantities of low quality data. Information technology has become the problem. The solution is to invest in people again.
McGovern, Gerry. New Thinking (2002). Articles>Technology>Information Design>Content Management
Managing the Complexity of Content Management
Content management systems suck. Or so you would think from the strife heard from analysts and practitioners alike. And yet, many websites regularly publish vast amounts of information with superior control and ease compared to manually editing pages. So where’s the disconnect between what’s possible and the too-often failure of CMS?
Lombardi, Victor. Boxes and Arrows (2004). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>Content Strategy
Social Publishing ≠ Social Networking - So What Is It?
John Willis recently published a post that equates social publishing with social networking. While the post is pretty good, and I agree with most of the points, I need to correct the bit about the definition of social publishing. It’s way more than social networking. Let me explain.
Whatcott, Jeff. At First Light (2008). Articles>Content Management>Web Design>Social Networking
Business integration is at the heart of many of today's industry trends. As businesses consolidate infrastructure, and look at rolling out service-oriented architectures, they are finding they need to link previously isolated applications. It's not easy. You can't link applications without some form of middleware, an extra application layer that lets their various systems communicate. Whether you use web services, or a message-based solution, there's one key feature that's at the heart of modern integration technologies: XML.
Bisson, Simon. Guardian Unlimited, The (2003). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>XML
Building a Document Delivery System from Off-the-Shelf Standards-Conformant Parts
OK. So you have your documents in XML. How do you deliver them to readers? You've heard great things about separation of form and content, and would like different kinds of readers to see the documents styled in different ways. And in order to make the collection of documents more useful, you would like to have full-text search. The quality assurance people would like some help with tools for checking documents and finding errors and inconsistencies in existing ones. Oh, and by the way, we just took a budget cut, so can you do it without breaking the bank?
Sperberg-McQueen, C.M. IDEAlliance (2004). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>XML
Real World XML: Using Content Management Systems in Higher Education Course Catalogs
CMS is revolutionizing the way higher education handle online content. So why are most universities still managing their course catalogs by hand? Join David Cummings for an in-depth look at how XML can improve a university beyond its website.
Cummings, David. IDEAlliance (2005). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>Education
Trends in Web Design Involving WordPress
This week I caught up with Debbie Campbell, a Colorado web designer and developer and the owner of Red Kite Creative, and asked her about the latest trends in web design. I’ve been following Debbie on Twitter for a while. This week she posted a few tweets about web design and WordPress, so I asked her to share a little more.
Johnson, Tom H. I'd Rather Be Writing (2009). Articles>Interviews>Content Management>Web Design
Topic Maps in Content Management
This paper shows how topic maps can address the limitations of traditional content management systems while building on their strengths. The term ITMS (Integrated Topic Management System) is coined for a content management system based on topic maps, and the paper shows what is necessary to build such systems, as well as what benefits they bring. The use of the WebDAV protocol to layer topic maps over content stores is also considered, and an abstract topic map-to-content store protocol is sketched, which corresponds very closely to WebDAV.
Garshol, Lars Marius. Ontopia (2008). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>Sitemaps
Topic maps are a new ISO standard for describing knowledge structures and associating them with information resources. As such they constitute an enabling technology for knowledge management. Dubbed “the GPS of the information universe”, topic maps are also destined to provide powerful new ways of navigating large and interconnected corpora. While it is possible to represent immensely complex structures using topic maps, the basic concepts of the model — Topics, Associations, and Occurrences (TAO) — are easily grasped. This paper provides a non-technical introduction to these and other concepts (the IFS and BUTS of topic maps), relating them to things that are familiar to all of us from the realms of publishing and information management, and attempting to convey some idea of the uses to which topic maps will be put in the future.
Pepper, Steve. Ontopia (2002). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>Sitemaps
Making the Most of XML with Adobe InCopy and InDesign
This session provides an overview of several real-world case studies describing publishers who have implemented an XML-based process with Adobe InDesign, InCopy, and editorial and production management systems, such as K4 and Woodwing. The session also provides best practices for incorporating these products in a production workflow covering activities such as: How to import XML into the Adobe products; How to export XML out of the Adobe products; How to structure templates (styles to tag and tags to styles mapping).
Edson, Mike and Mark Jacobson. XML 2006 (2006). Articles>Content Management>XML>Adobe InDesign
Much in the same way that Microsoft Word and PageMaker made desktop publishing more widely available and eliminated the need for tagging to achieve formatting, blogs and wikis are doing the same for the web. You can use WordPress to create an entire web site without knowing or using HTML. Editme.com is providing web site services using wiki technologies. These tools help users publish content with less knowledge of the underlying tagging.
Answers for All (2009). Articles>Content Management>Web Design>HTML
The User Experience of Enterprise Software Matters: Part 1
There’s one area that I believe user experience has lagged behind: the enterprise software space. I can’t tell you how many frustratingly unusable enterprise Web applications I’ve encountered during my 12 plus years in corporate America. As important as the user experience of enterprise software is to a business’s success, why isn’t its assessment usually a factor in technology selection?
Sherman, Paul J. UXmatters (2008). Articles>Web Design>Content Management>User Experience
The User Experience of Enterprise Software Matters, Part 2: Strategic User Experience
In this column, I’ll provide a technology selection framework that can help enterprises better assess the usability and appropriateness of enterprise applications they’re considering purchasing, with the goal of ensuring their IT (Information Technology) investments deliver fully on their value propositions.
Sherman, Paul J. UXmatters (2009). Articles>Web Design>Content Management>User Experience
Should You Cater to Younger Workers?
If you cater to the younger group, you risk alienating your most senior people (talented, expensive, hard-to-replace experts; people you don't want to lose to the competition; people with great political capital in the organization, who can perhaps defeat an IT initiative by pushing back hard). On the other hand, if you cater to the older group, you risk alienating the younger workers; and you risk keeping obsolete systems in place far longer than you should, making future replacement that much more difficult while also impeding business objectives, etc.
assertTrue (2009). Articles>Content Management>User Centered Design>Workplace
Combine JSONP and jQuery to Quickly Build Powerful Mashups
With the number of publicly offered Web service APIs, it's now much easier to get content from different Web sources and to build mashups—if you have access to the right APIs and tools. Discover how you can combine an obscure cross-domain call technique (JSONP) and a flexible JavaScript library (jQuery) to build powerful mashups surprisingly quickly.
Özses, Seda and Salih Ergül. IBM (2009). Articles>Web Design>Content Management>JavaScript
Users often see online content out of context and read it with different goals than you envisioned. While you can't predict all such goals, you can plan for multiple uses of your text.
Nielsen, Jakob. Alertbox (2009). Articles>Content Management>Writing>Information Design
Intro to Git for Web Designers
Unless you’re a one person web shop with no team to collaborate with, you’ve experienced the frustration that goes along with file sharing. No matter how hard you try, when multiple people are working on a single project without a version control system in place things get chaotic. In this article, I’ll give you a quick review of Git, an excellent version control system.
Webdesigner Depot (2009). Design>Content Management>Software>Graphic Design
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