Content Management

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  The Content Management Process

Content Management procedures enable the design, authoring, review, approval, conversion, storage, testing, and deployment of the content in an effective way. In any service, content needs to be maintained, monitored, updated, and eventually expired and archived. 

Effective content management requires clearly defined roles and documented workflow for all forms of content. This includes review and approval processes and clear interdepartmental hand-offs. The overall process of managing Web site content may or may not be supported by specific commercial or in-house tools. 

Common Functions of Web Content Management Process

 Design: Design is part of the initial phase of the content management process. The content to be published on the Web site is defined here.
 Authoring: This role is performed by graphic artists, video-graphers, photographers, technical writers, application developers, Web page developers, marketers, or anyone else that produces original material for the Web site. Authored content is often put under version control through the use of document management systems.
 Review: A review process is required for all the content authored. Reviewer is responsible for understanding the document flow throughout the content deployment process.
 Approval: Well structured multi-level approval process is required as per the policies and companies guidelines. 
 Conversion: Conversion process is where the created content, such as images, multimedia, and text documents are transformed to different formats and styles by the developer, for example: transforming word processor documents to formatted HTML text, modifying bitmapped images to low band width formats to load faster on the Web, and modifying database elements. 
 Storage: Content is usually stored directly in file systems or version control systems. Integrated application development systems store varied Web content in the file system that replicates hierarchical structure of the Web site.
 Testing: Testing process may include tests for various operating systems, browsers, speeds, identifying broken or missing links; identifying slow loading pages; load testing; component testing; database access; script testing. The final integration test may occur on the staging servers and should be comprehensive. 
 Staging: Large sites sometimes differentiate between testing and staging servers. If this is the case then the staging servers are used to assemble all content after it has been thoroughly tested and before it is replicated to the production system.
 Deployment: Replication to the production system is done in several ways so that all content gets pushed to the live system, including middle-tier components and transactional packages. Some e-commerce enterprises have developed extremely sophisticated multi-threaded replication mechanisms that automate the process of deployment for multi-location Web farms.
 Maintenance and Updates: The content management process does not end when content is published.  The task of monitoring the content and updating it when necessary will keep the site fresh and working properly.
 Retirement and Archival: Having old and out-of-date content removed from the production system and archived for the future references. Old and out dated misleading information on a public Web site could lead to legal trouble. 
 Reporting and Analysis: Site statistics and customer analysis needs to be an ongoing process for implementing new features and a successful business.


 
 
 

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