University Web Developers

University Web Developers

If we adopt a CMS, what else should we have in place before choosing one, assuming we should have one at all? What kind of problems will it not solve for us? I am with a small private college (under a thousand students) with limited human and financial resources. Most of our staff and faculty are 50ish, and not Web-savvy.

Our current website is built and maintained in the traditional way with Dreamweaver. We want to empower people to create their own content, and I wonder if there is some way other than a CMS so that they can have the basic necessary permissions to do so.

I'd love to hear from anyone who has been through this decision making process or could point me in the direction of how to find out more about how to create such a process.

Tags: college, content, decision, management, private, process, small, system

Views: 400

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

A CMS comes with its own grab bag of problems to consider. You'll have to have individual departments determine who is responsible for maintaining their content, and make sure they're in charge of it (put it in their job descriptions). Then you'll have to train them. And that means training them over, and over and over, because many of them will only touch the CMS once per semester, and then they'll forget. You'll have to train them to use the thing, but also train them to write good web copy; train them to not use animated gifs and make everything purple and bold; train them that there is a right and wrong time to use the school colors and that "creativity" is not the enemy of consistency, but that subtlety is creativity's best friend.

And when you've done all that, then you'll still have to spend a bunch of your time auditing the changes they've made.

 

CMSs are also fairly complex, so if external hosting isn't your cup of tea, you'll need to make sure you have adequate in-house support. I don't have statistics, but I have no doubt CMSs play a significant role in website outages when they're on the front lines without adequate support.

 

That's all I got for now -- if you want to discuss this in depth, I'd be happy to help.

 

-Mike

Mike Smith,

Thanks so much for your help and your offer of more. One other human resource issue that concerns me is, job description or not, I think many department heads will use their people in ways they consider more crucial than supporting their websites. Not only because they are short of staff, but because their focus and their skills are not in creating and maintaining web content. So, I wonder how it would work if we assigned support people to work with those departments but they are under the supervision of the chief web officer. Then they would do this work regularly, not just once a semester, and the training could be better used. What do you think?

I'm always ancy about changing people's roles, even in a controlled way. There will probably be some organizational discomfort no matter how you do it, but it's bound to be better than having one team or person responsible for all the edits on a 900 page site.

A CMS is essential for any website bigger than a 4-5 pages. And there are all sorts of options, both local and hosted, WordPress and Sharepoint are both CMSs. Plus there are free open source options like Drupal and Joomla. And many, many fine higher-ed only choices, we use Ingeniux. Also, you can do quite a bit internally with some php and mysql code.

I would look to a CMS first and foremost to streamline your process, and look to bring users in later.

Good luck, I am happy to chat with you anytime!

Michael Santoroski,

Thanks much for your reply. Well, our website is a lot more than 4-5 pages; I alone manage more like 900.

How will a CMS 'streamline my process'? If anything, I see obstacles to such tasks with a CMS. For example, I can do search-and-replace across static web pages, but how is that done with CMS articles?

It depends on your CMS. For example, in our CMS, Plone, a global search is trivial, but a search-and-replace on the editable part of articles would require an experienced Python developer to step into the back-end. On the other hand, it's never happened, because there isn't much repetition on that part of the site. The CMS allows users to replicate content across site hierarchies (so down entire branches) so it only need to be changed in one place.

But that's a great specific point to keep on your requirements document as you search for a CMS.

Seriously, this is a Michael heavy thread!

I just caught this:

I wonder if there is some way other than a CMS so that they can have the basic necessary permissions to do so.

Please do not get tempted by Adobe Contribute. It may sound like exactly what you're seeking, but it will not make your life easier. We switched from Contribute two years ago after a painful three years with it. If you find yourself considering a distributed CMS like this, ask me for a list of reasons why you should avoid that style of content management.

THIS
I second this.

This. A billion times this.

 

-- SUNY-ESF's Contribute admin here...

I got into higher edu web development back in 2010. We had Contribute when I arrived and it gave us more than a few headaches. We got away from it earlier this year.

RSS

Elsewhere

Latest Activity

Debbie commented on Debbie's blog post Web CMS evaluations project
"I had not recieved the evaluation form from Holly.  I'll send it along when I do."
59 minutes ago
Profile IconJulia Nelson, John McClimans, Doug Kern and 4 more joined University Web Developers
4 hours ago
Jeff Walberg posted a photo
6 hours ago
Colleen Brennan-Barry posted a discussion

Call for 2014 HighEdWeb Regional Conference Hosts

Have you attended one of HighEdWeb’s regional conferences, or heard the great buzz about the regionals, and thought that your institution would be an ideal future conference host? Then we invite you:Submit a proposal by June 30 to host a 2014 HighEdWeb regional.“Planning a regional event, while work-intensive, gives both planning committee members and conference attendees an incredible…See More
yesterday
Anne Swinton joined Stewart Foss's group
yesterday
Anne Swinton commented on Brent Hoard's group Sitecore
"We are about to implement Sitecore in the next few months, so I'm hoping to find some useful info here for our transition. We are currently in Ironpoint/Active CMS."
yesterday
Anne Swinton joined Brent Hoard's group
Thumbnail

Sitecore

For users of the Sitecore CMS
yesterday
Profile IconJon Adams, Christopher Spencer, Anne Swinton and 40 more joined University Web Developers
yesterday
Erik Hagen replied to Chris Lewinski's discussion Success metrics for web CMS implementation?
"As Annette said, it depends on why you're doing it. What are the problems that need to be solved, and what are the outcomes that can be measured? I'm planning to switch to a CMS from not having one this coming year, and most of our issues…"
yesterday
Liz Snow commented on Debbie's blog post Web CMS evaluations project
"Later this year, we plan to re-evaluate our CMS also.  I would be interested in material you were able to gather to support you such as the samples from Holly and/or the information from Miz."
yesterday
Erik Hagen replied to Kathy Jensen's discussion Content: Header and Footer
"For our global header nav, I've been tracking every click as an event in Google Analytics for several months. It's pretty clear now which links are popular and which are being ignored. I also use Crazy Egg to see clicks on the current…"
yesterday
Peter Sawyer left a comment for richeleine gandon
"Hi Richeleine,  Looks like your account is being used to send out spam. If you check your comments, your account has left the same comment for many others. Also, your website throws a 404.  Here is something good to think about…"
yesterday
Mark Greenfield's video was featured

HighEdWeb '13 Annual Conference - Buffalo Style

Much like #marks911 the HighEdWeb Annual conference is a beautiful thing to behold. http://2013.highedweb.org Get to Buffalo this October to network, share, ...
yesterday
Mark Greenfield posted a video

HighEdWeb '13 Annual Conference - Buffalo Style

Much like #marks911 the HighEdWeb Annual conference is a beautiful thing to behold. http://2013.highedweb.org Get to Buffalo this October to network, share, ...
yesterday
Daniel Bashaw replied to Daniel Bashaw's discussion What tech do you use for remote presentations?
"Thanks – I've also heard mention of Adobe Connect as a tool the #PSEWEB conference organizer has used successfully in the past -- I'll check it out as an option."
yesterday
richeleine gandon left a comment for Jesse Racine
"Hello Dear, I will like to get acquainted with You, I have something Special to share with You, Contact me via email: richeleine.gandon@live.comMiss Richeleine."
yesterday
richeleine gandon left a comment for Géna Thompson
"Hello Dear, I will like to get acquainted with You, I have something Special to share with You, Contact me via email: richeleine.gandon@live.comMiss Richeleine."
yesterday
richeleine gandon left a comment for Ed Hillis
"Hello Dear, I will like to get acquainted with You, I have something Special to share with You, Contact me via email: richeleine.gandon@live.comMiss Richeleine."
yesterday
richeleine gandon left a comment for Erin Leavitt
"Hello Dear, I will like to get acquainted with You, I have something Special to share with You, Contact me via email: richeleine.gandon@live.comMiss Richeleine."
yesterday
richeleine gandon left a comment for Sara Leavitt
"Hello Dear, I will like to get acquainted with You, I have something Special to share with You, Contact me via email: richeleine.gandon@live.comMiss Richeleine."
yesterday

UWEBD has been in existence for more than 10 years and is the very best email discussion list on the Internet, in any industry, on any topic

About

© 2013   Created by Mark Greenfield.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service