Managing Content Hypergrowth
To cope with a flood of assets, site owners turn to content management software. As they outgrow their “home brew” solutions, they buy packaged applications -- even though today’s products are immature.
View ArticleWho is in Control?: The Logic Underlying the Intelligent Technologies Used in...
Performance support (also called EPSS, for electronic performance support system) emerged from the instructional design and training communities because corporate enterprise systems were difficult for...
View ArticleManaging Life Sciences Content
Life sciences have been called the least automated industry in the world, but some pharmaceutical companies, medical device manufacturers, and healthcare-related organizations are working to dispel...
View ArticleTools and Technology: A Work-Flow Paradigm for Single-Source Publishing
Today's organizations must consider the effect that new tools and technologies are having on work flow. Web technology has raised the importance of information. This change in the customer/supplier...
View ArticleAfter the CMS Implementation Project
Much effort is focused, on the selection and subsequent implementation of a content management system (CMS). While it is obviously vital to ensure that the initial implementation project is successful,...
View ArticleDesigning and Planning Modular Content Projects
Modular writing involves writing, labeling, storing, and assembling content modules. Read about how to design and plan a modular writing project and how this writing system affects traditional roles...
View ArticleWikibility Cultural Key Drivers: Flexibility
A flexible workplace is characterized by the capability of individuals to manage not only their work, time or resources, but also the possibility to influence and operate in an active way inside the...
View ArticleRequirements of Content Management Systems: Definition According to Need
In all companies, the requirements of an editorial system are worked out individually from the analysis of existing functioning and the definition of editorial and publication processes required in the...
View ArticleThe Importance of Articulation Work to Agency Content Management: Balancing...
This paper describes the initial results of a qualitative field study of the work required to review and approve the content on government agency web sites. The study analyzes content management work...
View ArticleMoving Toward a Content Reuse Strategy, Slowly and Carefully
The authors of this article use their own experience in implementing a content reuse strategy to assist the reader in effectively making the changes necessary while minimizing the effect on the...
View ArticleReporting XML Errors: Optimizing the Workflow
The Darwin Information Typing Architecture (DITA) is an XML-based, end-to-end architecture for authoring, producing, and delivering technical information.This paper describes how DITA-based...
View ArticleExtending XML in the Enterprise
This presentation explores how recent advances in user interfaces have blurred the once clear distinction between structured and unstructured data. It examines how these tools can be used to empower a...
View ArticleBuilding Efficient Multilingual Workflows
O’Keefe gives detailed information on two technology standards that may be used in multilingual workflows: XSL and XLIFF.
View ArticleContent Lifecycle: Closing the Loop in Content Strategy
The process of publishing content, particularly when it includes content destined for the web, continues to be a mysterious process for corporate stakeholders, and sometimes for those involved in the...
View ArticleForum → Wiki → Blog Workflow
Regardless of the overlap problem, combining a forum with a wiki and blog has tangible benefits. It helps solve the participation problem with wikis. Users are more comfortable asking a question in a...
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