Creating a Free Intranet Using Drupal™ Kelley Simon Royal Credit Union
Agenda Royal’s Content Challenges and Requirements Drupal™ and Core Functionality Royal’s Content and Site Design in Drupal™ Examples *Disclaimer*
Challenges of Existing Intranet Repository only Only two users were able to publish content, to ensure security of content Limited search options, key words manually entered Needed to be entirely supported by the IT department, as the tool was developed internally
Challenges of Email Marketing Initiatives Project Announcements Leadership Articles Condolences Pot Lucks Awards Drawings Births System Bulletins Branch Changes Work Anniversaries Required Training Volunteer Opportunities Thank You’s Procedure Changes Executive Messages Job Changes Recognition New Hire Welcomes Promotions Pictures Benefit Updates
Royal’s Content Management Goals Implement a team member portal that: Centralizes Information Relevant to All Team Members Promotes Engagement Reduces Email Reflects Royal’s Core Purpose and Values
Research Research Tasks Assemble a team that includes areas that create corporate-level communication regularly. In Royal’s case, this was Talent Services (HR), Training, Marketing, Administration, IT, and Operations. Inventory all documents currently on the static intranet site. Categorize emails that used the “all team member” distribution list. Send out an Information Use Questionnaire Hold Focus Groups with the Majority of Departments.
Open source software Modularity is a core principal Large network of developers, programmers, and other online contributors Creates dynamic web experiences
Who uses Drupal™? 71% of the top 100 Universities in the country, including all of the ivy league schools, MIT, University of Oxford, and Stanford. 150+ countries use Drupal™ in Government and intergovernmental Agencies, including the US Department of Energy. 73% of the top 30 media companies use Drupal™, including Walt Disney, Time Inc., Twenty First Century Fox, CBS, and Viacom
Why Drupal? Drupal™ is a blank slate, meaning we could set it up any way we wanted, for free. Additional functionality in Drupal™ meant downloading a new module, for no additional cost. We had control over all areas of the site, including how and where content displayed, who could use it and how, and themes (design templates).
Why Drupal? Drupal™ is designed with a WYSIWYG editor environment. Drupal™ is flexible enough to work with existing infrastructure. Drupal™ met our requirements regarding the ability to consolidate information, have multiple authors publish content, and having a robust search. It definitely fit into our budget.
Work Breakdown Structure
Drupal.org
Sandbox
Core Modules
Regions
Work Breakdown Structure
Basics of Drupal A node is Drupal’s™ basic building block and categorizes most content on the site. Nodes are created using administrator-defined content types and can have categories assigned to them. Content types and categories instruct Drupal™ on how a specific type of node should display.
Content Types
Admin Structure
Corporate Message Fields
Categories of Corporate Messages
Adding Content
Creating the Corporate Message
Selecting a Category
Team Member Portal Home Page
Project Page
Office Page
Integrating Systems
Custom Fields
Custom Fields
On the Horizon Classifieds Section Recognition Area Customizable Pages
Rcu.org
Questions?