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Published byBuck Simmons Modified over 9 years ago
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Implementing a Content Management System A Practical Guide
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Web Services About Missouri State Primary campus in Springfield with additional campuses in West Plains, Mountain Grove and China Approximately 20,600 students Over 200,000 web pages
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Web Services CMS Defined A web content management system is used to manage and control a large, dynamic collection of web material (HTML documents and their associated images). A CMS facilitates document control, auditing, editing, and timeline management. A Web CMS provides the following key features: Automated templates Easily editable content Workflow management http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_management_system
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Web Services Administration Buy-In Administration support is critical Many cost factors involved in CMS Software costs (may be mitigated by Open Source) Personnel costs University image/marketing costs
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Web Services Necessary Timelines Needs Analysis Where are we and where do we want to be Selection and Acquisition Develop RFP and evaluate responses Acquire selected product Implementation Install, training, rollout
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Web Services Formation of Committees Business Process Review Committee Build a business case Define Requirements CMS Selection Committee Develop RFP, review proposals, make recommendation Implementation Committee
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Web Services Types of CMS Staged vs real-time Component of larger system Editor interface requirements *User account authorization/setup
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Web Services CMS Research Education Related Networks Listserv U-WebD Conferences Web Sites CMS Matrix – www.cmsmatrix.orgwww.cmsmatrix.org CMS Watch – www.cmswatch.comwww.cmswatch.com Content Management Portal – www.contentmanager.net www.contentmanager.net Open Source CMS – www.la-grange.net/cmswww.la-grange.net/cms Reference checks for finalists
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Web Services CMS Research Costs – One-time vs ongoing License structure Administrator vs user Negotiable Sand box Level of IT staff hand-holding of users Training, open labs, etc.
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Web Services Purchase and Implementation Select and acquire product Select and acquire hardware Hire or reallocate personnel Install Initial training Develop templates Pilot project User training
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Web Services Staffing It’s a big software package so it runs on autopilot. Not! Systems support Expert designer Training Help desk
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Web Services User Training Critical to project success Methodical and ongoing Not everyone can attend an initial mass- training session New adopters New-to-campus users
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Web Services Rollout Your method of rollout can help determine the results. Isolated or large Huge success Visible failure Little notice Branding
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Web Services Post-Implementation Benefits Gained User-friendly, non-technical editing Staged solution with workflow Standard templates ensure accessibility and usability by computers, handhelds and other devices Web-based; no external editor
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Web Services Work That Remains More departments to convert Local extension and customization of CMS package Ongoing monitoring of new technology and devices
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Web Services Questions? Questions Comments
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Web Services More Information Brian Heaton Content Management Programmer/Analyst Web Services Missouri State University BrianHeaton@MissouriState.edu
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