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Content management

A Manifesto of Contentology (version 1.1)

"In this Manifesto, Contentology is a coined word that, in its strictest etymology, could mean 'the science of content' or 'the study of content'. The word 'Contentology' is supposed to make people stop and think for a moment, and if it sounds absurd, then we have to ask ourselves why it sounds absurd." - (Garth A. Buchholz - Digital Practices)

Posted on January 31, 2008 | Permalink

Bob Boiko's Papers and Presentations

Bob Boiko (author of the 'Content Management Bible') published various white papers and presentations on Content Management, XML, and Information Architecture. (Metatorial Services)

Posted on January 14, 2008 | Permalink

The Intranet Maturity Framework

"Over the years, Avenue A | Razorfish has designed and built enterprise wide intranets for industry leading companies across the United States. In defining the strategy, designing the user experience and building these solutions leveraging enterprise strength software packages, Avenue A|Razorfish has been able to observe not only how enterprise intranets are being implemented and used but also how they are maturing over time. These insights have been encapsulated into a proprietary framework, that shows how, why and with what business benefits intranets grow over of time. The Intranet Maturity Framework, which is described in this report, summarizes best practices along the dimensions of intranet sponsorship, governance, user needs, experience design, technology implementation, training, adoption, and ROI metrics." (Avenue A | Razorfish Enterprise Solutions)

Posted on June 05, 2007 | Permalink

Content Strategy: The Philosophy of Data

"(...) content strategy is to copywriting as information architecture is to design." (Rachel Lovinger - Boxes and Arrows)

Posted on March 27, 2007 | Permalink

Better Content Management through Information Architecture

"Content Management Systems promise so much: content is easier to publish, easier to update, and easier to find and use. Lots of promises, but do CMSs really deliver? Masood Nasser examines why Content Management Systems often fail and shows how Information Architecture can come to the rescue." (Masood Nasser - Boxes and Arrows)

Posted on March 09, 2007 | Permalink

What If Our Systems Could Do The Rest?

"What if, in addition to (or perhaps even instead of) managing content types, templates, and taxonomies, our CM systems managed stakeholders, goals, audiences, information, and publications. What if instead of simply automating Web site creation, our systems managed the full domain of issues involved in collecting and distributing information? Systems these days are quite good at making the details of CM easier, but are no help at all with the big picture. In fact, they leave most organizations with the mistaken idea that they have confronted their CM problems simply be installing a CMS. In this talk, I'll lay out the contours of the full CM domain of issues and discuss what you can do to confront them with or without software." (Bob Boiko - Plone Conference 2006)

Posted on January 25, 2007 | Permalink

KeyContent: Unlocking communication

"Our mission is to provide a place where expert content developers, technical communicators, information architects, and web designers can come and express their views about the profession. Whether you are publishing an article or commenting on someone else's, or collaborating with others to write an article, or submitting one you have already written, we have a place and the tools for you. These collaborations and resources are created for and by professionals who want to keep up with the important issues in the transformation of technical communication." (KeyContent.org blog)

Posted on January 24, 2007 | Permalink

What is Customer-Centric Content Management?

"Customer-centric content management addresses customer needs at every touchpoint, while driving down content costs and improving processes. This article identifies why we need to move to a customer-centric content management focus and provides an outline of its components." (Ann Rockley - The Rockley Report Dec. 2006) - courtesy of thomhaller

Posted on December 07, 2006 | Permalink

Redefining Content Management

"Content publishing and management can be extremely complex, and therefore not surprisingly hard to do. Having said that, the biggest problems with content management lie not in that complexity, but in how we approach our solutions." (D. Keith Robinson - Vitamin)

Posted on October 08, 2006 | Permalink

When you need to localize and categorize

"The creation of a localization taxonomy can become a significant piece of an entire CMS implementation project, particularly when your regional offices are in control of their local taxonomies and want to serve local customers in the best way. As you have seen, the concepts available for simple application localization are insufficient for the localization of complex international content. To get it right, you must be prepared for a substantial amount of analysis and the price tag that comes with it." (CMS Watch) - courtesy of columntwo

Posted on March 15, 2006 | Permalink

Get smart about how you manage your content

"Bringing more science to content management is in no way dumbing down. Rather, it is about getting smart." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on January 16, 2006 | Permalink

Scientific Content Management

"Management is the pursuit of the best way. Content is an increasingly important resource and activity within organizations. It is time it was professionally managed." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on January 08, 2006 | Permalink

Content Management: Strategic Challenge

"The volume of product-related information in companies is increasing by leaps and bounds. The reason is the growing multiplicity of products, software and services that require explanation. After the EU enlargement, not only large companies, even small and medium-sized enterprises must come to terms with the multiplier effect of multiple languages. The challenge is to keep the information across the company both consistent and free of redundancy, to make it universally available, to publish it on paper as well as electronically, and to bring out the different language versions as simultaneously as possible. Companies that have not mastered the art of overcoming these challenges must suffer additional costs and time pressure in handling quality problems that are becoming more and more difficult to solve." (Daniela Straub and Michael Fritz - tekom slides)

Posted on December 16, 2005 | Permalink

CMSAdvisor Podcasts

The first podcasts on content management systems: (1) Ann Rockley (Founding President, The Rockley Group) on Enterprise Content Management and (2) Bob Boiko (President, Metatorial Services Inc.) on 'WordSoup'. (Hosted by Lisa Welchman - About CMSAdvisor) - courtesy of columntwo

Posted on November 23, 2005 | Permalink

Selecting a content management system PDF Logo

"The biggest risk is selecting the wrong product." (James Robertson - Step Two Design)

Posted on October 12, 2005 | Permalink

Web content management is not data management

"Web content management and data/document management require very different approaches. Data management is about storage; web content management is about using content to make the sale, deliver the service, and build the brand." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on May 23, 2005 | Permalink

Enterprise Content Management in Context

"I created this graphic to give everyone a starting point, a point of common understanding. The graphic depicts how enterprise information architecture (EIA) relates to enterprise content management (ECM). I originally envisioned the two things as being part of the same overall process, but I came to a realization that they are better understood as two separate activities." (James Melzer) - courtesy of bloug

Posted on May 18, 2005 | Permalink

The Content Inventory: Roadmap to a Succesful CMS Implementation

"This article focuses on the nuts and bolts of identifying content and coralling it in such a way that you have what you need when it comes time to populate your CMS. The key to achieving this goal is a process called the Content Inventory." (Kassia Krozser - alt tags) - courtesy of columntwo

Posted on April 07, 2005 | Permalink

Component Content Management in Practice

"As the market for content management technology continues to grow, so too do the ways in which organizations seek to use content management. What began as a market focused on web content management has grown to include document management, digital asset management, and records management. What has emerged along with this growth is the use of the umbrella term Enterprise Content Management (ECM) to describe a broad, enterprise-class platform of content management technology that can handle all kinds of content." (Bill Tripp - The Gilbane Report) - courtesy of elearningpost

Posted on March 22, 2005 | Permalink

IT is from Mars; Web content is from Venus

"The information technology (IT) industry fundamentally doesn't understand the true value of web content. This lack of understanding is just one more reason why IT will continue to decline in influence over the next five years." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on February 21, 2005 | Permalink

Do you make the most common mistake in content management?

"The biggest mistake in content management is writing for the organization and not for the reader. It is one of the hardest mistakes to correct, but there are ways to ensure that you don’t make it." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on January 30, 2005 | Permalink

Web content management: Top 10 predictions for 2005

"Web content management will continue its shift away from a technology focus towards a content one. 2005 will be the year when the professional editor will be given more responsibility in running the website." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on January 10, 2005 | Permalink

Web content management comes of age in 2004

"2004 was a year when web content came of age, as more and more organizations recognized it as an asset, not some commodity. More and more organizations have begun to put content first, technology second." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on December 19, 2004 | Permalink

Making A Better CMS

"Ultimately, a content management system should be designed to empower writers and editors to do content creation and maintenance themselves. I'd like to see it taken a step further: Empower designers, information architects, and site owners with the ability to make the CMS work for them." (Jeffrey Veen - Adaptive Path)

Posted on November 15, 2004 | Permalink

Web content management depends on trust

"You must be able to stand over everything that is published on your website and say that it is all accurate and up-to-date. Trust is a fundamental building block of professional web content management." - (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on October 24, 2004 | Permalink

Making A Better Open Source CMS

"Open source content management software sucks. It sucks really badly. The only things worse is every commercial CMS I've used. But it really doesn't have to be that way." (Jeffrey Veen)

Posted on October 04, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

CM Pros

"(...) content management is essential to organizations of every type. It harvests and promotes both financial and human value for the companies and organizations that can tap its potential. CM Pros is a membership organization that fosters the sharing of content management information, practices, and strategies." (About CM Pros)

Posted on September 20, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Introduction to Structured Content Management with XML

"At the heart of managing content for re-use, however lies the job of exposing the underlying structure of that information. This article is meant to serve as an introductory primer on how to define and use information structure when managing content." (Kay Ethier and Scott Abel - CMS Watch) - courtesy of columntwo

Posted on September 20, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Integrating CSS with Content Management Systems

"Building CSS editing features into our content management systems allows us to make style changes as easily as we make content changes. In the future, managing the design of a Web site at the tactical level will be as easy and efficient as managing content." (Victor Lombardi - Digital Web Magazine)

Posted on September 16, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Websites: Easy to start, hard to manage

"One of the biggest problems websites face is that they lack proper planning in the design and development phase. Generally, the design of the website tends to overreach, in that what is built requires more staff to professionally manage than are available." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on August 30, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Successfully deploying a content management system

"This article outlines a structured approach to deploying a CMS, as well as providing a range of practical guidelines and tips that will assist the implementation team." (James Robertson - KM Column)

Posted on July 03, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Managing Content with Automatic Document Classification

"News articles and Web directories represent some of the most popular and commonly accessed content on the Web. Information designers normally define categories that model these knowledge domains (i.e. news topics or Web categories) and domain experts assign documents to these categories. The paper describes how machine learning and automatic document classification techniques can be used for managing large numbers of news articles, or Web page descriptions, lightening the load on domain experts." (Rafael A. Calvo et al. - Journal of Digital Information Vol 5.2)

Posted on June 20, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Content management: design for rule, not exception

"If your website tries to be all things to all people, it will fail. It’s very easy on the Web to try to do too much. You need to relentlessly focus on what most of your readers do most of the time. Don’t let anything else get in the way." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on May 24, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Web content management a process, not a project

"Then something is new, we need to approach it in an exploratory manner. We need to experiment and try things out. And so it has been with the Web. That period is now over. We need to move from seeing our websites as a series of projects, to managing them as a well-planned process." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on May 10, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Planning: The Key to Successful CMS Implementation

"The Semantic Web is an on-going large-scale effort to improve the current architecture of the World Wide Web by adding a semantic infrastructure to web resources that can be used for sophisticated data-oriented applications. As its basis, we identify metadata, or information about information, that unambiguously specify machine-understandable facts about web resources." (Judy Glick-Smith - The Rockley Report)

Posted on May 04, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

The Structured-Unstructured Information Continuum

"If you've fallen into the trap of thinking of databases as 'structured' information, and files as 'unstructured' information, you're not alone." (Joseph Martins - Data Mobility Group)

Posted on April 05, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Why Content Management Fails

"This is more than just a way to manage content, it's the beginning of a content strategy - a plan for how your site will respond to your customers, inform them, and help them make decisions that will ultimately increase their loyalty to you and your site." (Jeffrey Veen - Adaptive Path)

Posted on April 01, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Don't make these mistakes when buying content management software

"Most organizations don't need content management software. Unless you have a very busy website with lots and lots of content being published, the return on investment is not there. The majority of those who do require such software need a very simple, streamlined solution." (Gerry McGovern)

Posted on March 28, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack

Fundamental concepts of reuse pdf logo

"Content reuse is fundamental to a successful unified content strategy. This chapter defines content reuse and the benefits of its use.It explores how other industries have employed reuse for decades to improve their processes and the quality of their products." (Ann Rockley - The Rockley Group)

Posted on March 07, 2004 | Permalink | TrackBack