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04 October 2006

All About Content Management Systems


By: Richard D S Hill

There has been more and more talk about Content Management
Systems as organizations decide that they need direct control
of their websites.

Once they have this, many soon learn that the technology also
allows them to change and improve their internal workflow,
processes and procedures for acquiring, filtering, organizing,
and controlling access to information and create an intranet
and / or extranet too.

Creating an intranet and / or extranet thus giving staff,
suppliers etc secure, remote, 24/7 access to information has
been shown to increase turnover, reduce costs and improve
profits because the right data is communicated to the right
people at the right time.

After all what is an intranet or extranet other than a
restricted-access network that works like the Web, but isn't on
it?

An intranet and / or extranet enables a company to share its
resources with its employees, customers, suppliers etc without
confidential information being made available to everyone with
Internet access, it can share organization policies and
procedures, announcements or information about new products -
anything that can be held in electronic form.

What is a CMS?

So what is Content Management (CM) and what are Content
Management Systems (CMS)?

A CMS is a system used to manage the content of a Web site.
Typically, a CMS consists of two elements:

- Content Management Application (CMA)

- Content Delivery Application (CDA)

The CMA allows anyone without HTML skills to manage the
creation, modification, and removal of content from a Web site.
The CDA automatically uses and compiles that information to
update the Web site. The features of a CMS system vary, but
most include

Web publishing. Page templates and other aids help authors to
produce high quality pages and documents that can automatically
be reused and co-ordinated.

Format management. In many authors can publish automatically in
a format suitable for Web publishing such as HTML or PDF.

Version & revision control. Multiple authors can update files
and yet the changes traced to individuals for security
purposes.

Index, search & retrieval. For data to be valuable, it must be
relevant, accessible and timely. Web content being electronic
is easy to index search and retrieve.

CMS benefits

The benefits of a CMS can be dramatic; for example amongst
others:

- You are in control. No longer do you need your web designer
just to put on new pages. You can spend that money on mire
important things such as search engine optimization and pay per
click marketing.

- Customers can find what they need - you are in control so you
also can control the navigation so that it continues to make
sense as a site grows and changes. Design and layout is
templated properly so all pages fit your brand image.

- The site is kept up to date easily and therefore quickly.
Whether a price list, a product description or a photo needs
updating you don't have to rely on IT or your web designer;
just about anyone can do it.

- Version and revision control makes it easy to roll-back the
site or a document to the 'correct' version.

- Database driven - products, articles and news may all be
separate but CMS' have databases that can allow for
associations between various content elements on a site.

- Controlled access. You can control where files are and who
gets access to them. So content can be tailored to the specific
groups with different access such as staff, suppliers etc

- Approvals and authorities. Good CMS provide the ability for
content managers to approve and validate content before it goes
live. They can also control the time a content element goes
live, the day and time is it removed from the site, and the
locations on the site that the content element appears.

Specifying your CMS

You need to consider a number of factors when you decide to
invest in a CMS. They range from "corporate solutions" that
have everything and cost an arm and a leg to free 'Open Source'
tools you can set up and maintain yourself.

- Do a requirements specification. State your business needs
don't try to design the CMS. Do not get wrapped up in too much
detail, if you and an 'outsider' can understand it your
requirements specification is there.

- Do not expect a CMS to meet every single one of your
requirements perfectly, you'll never find one or spend huge
amounts of money on customization.

- Think about changing the way you work to match the way the
CMS does it. Many CMS have sensible, well-established workflow
systems. If you're working differently from most people perhaps
you should look at why that is.

- Consider your entire organization and all its systems
(infrastructure, other applications, range of your electronic
data, etc.) when you determine the requirements for your CMS.
It's not going to be working in isolation, so it ought not to
be defined in isolation.

- Don't buy what you don't need but do buy something that gives
you room to change and expand.

- Finalize your requirements. If you change requirements during
the project your chance of failure increases exponentially. You
can make changes, but understand that every change is going to
result in higher costs and a longer schedule.

Buying a CMS

So, now that you have a good idea of what you need what next?

- Ask friends, colleagues and a man in the pub what they think
might work?

- Check competitors. Find out what systems competitors use.

- Pick one with a pin. This might work, but it is difficult to
justify to your boss or bank manager.

- Hire a consultant. This can work. OR..... [more likely]

- Contact us on + 44 (0) 1 225 840 490 or ... if you have the
time ...

- DIY!

To DIY:

Start with a long list and compare offered solutions to your
requirements; remove the 90 percent you can see aren't going to
work by checking Web sites, reading reviews and using your
intuition.

Look at the remaining systems. Download product information
sheets and whatever else is available. Take a longer look at
how these systems' features compare to your requirements.

Contact potential suppliers. Sending them your requirements
specification and any other information you think might be
important. You need to be confident that the CMS will meet most
of your important needs. Ask for demos, in-house presentations,
or whatever it takes to be sure their solution meets your
requirements.

Check for government grants.

Just one minor caution, having CM and a CMS does not solve
everything overnight with no hassles. You also need training
staff and develop different processes and procedures for how
you handle web based content whether that be on the internet,
intranet or extranet.

But, once you have one, you will never look back.

About The Author: Richard Hill is a director of E-CRM Solutions
and has spent many years in senior direct and interactive
marketing roles. E-CRM [http://www.e-crm.co.uk ] is involved
in ECommerce and Emarketing and helps you to grow by getting
you more customers that stay with you longer. We provide
practical solutions that pay for themselves.

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