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Contented Management

The marriage of content strategy and online engagement

Wedding cake

Some people seemed a bit miffed by my last post. All that silence and then I say their product’s not as beautiful as some others. But as Arsène Wenger said, “Everyone thinks they have the prettiest wife at home.”
Well I’m not in the business of software-bashing. I deal with clients who have complex systems that they’re trying to get the most of in order to boost their business. So I do want to highlight a point in the last post that some readers seemed to have missed: Tridion is a really useful tool for supporting a content strategy.

What do I mean by that? Well, as Brain Traffic tells us:

Content strategy plans for the creation, delivery, and governance of useful, usable content.

And isn’t that what you want WCM software to do? I’ve recommended Tridion on the basis that it gives web managers good visibility over who owns content on the site and where it should belong, as well as providing powerful ways to devolve ownership. There are few products that do this as well as Tridion in my opinion; although I seem to be in a minority when I say that I like the way TeamSite does it too.

But that doesn’t mean I have to like everything about the product. User interface may be a matter of personal taste (and one of the posts that I still haven’t written questions how important editorial UI is anyway). But I’m yet to see a really good demonstration of a product that supports both content strategy and customer engagement in an integrated way. I’ve seen bits and pieces in different products, but:

  • where are the security and content-type models that we see for standard content being applied to UGC?
  • where’s the personalisation of content based on a visitor’s publicly-shared profile, e.g. Twitter and Facebook?
  • how are you tailoring your website content to relevant trends on the rest of web?
  • how are the performance ratings of your page content then reflected in the way other users navigate content? Does your WCM even let you track those KPIs?
  • can you promote content to a visitor based on what other people – and most specifically people that they trust – found useful or enjoyed?

Those are just examples, but fundamentally I think vendors have found this kind of integrated content engagement strategy a challenge because WCM and UGC approached content from polar opposites. I don’t think they’re wholly incompatible, but I think we’re still in an earlier stage of evolution than most vendors would want to acknowledge.

So let’s just say that true web engagement on content-driven sites is still somewhat immature, as I would suggest that there are others who might prefer to express that more robustly.

Philippe Parker on , | 16 December 2011 | Tweet this |

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SDL’s takeover of Alterian

SDL – who supply Tridion web content management – first announced it wanted to take over Alterian – purveyors of the CMS formerly known as Morello (Mediasurface) and Immediacy – in October. This week the Financial Times confirmed that an offer had been accepted. You can get the financial background to the takeover from the FT article, but while the companies are close to a formal merger, the software they supply remain poles apart.

As SDL continues to release modules and connectors to enhance the breadth of its web engagement offering, many of its customers find themselves operating dated user interfaces and struggling with the obscurities of Visual Basic scripting. If you put Tridion side by side with newer .Net CMS like Sitecore or EPiServer, you’d see the difference straight away.
Alterian’s WCM has a much slicker editorial user interface and delivers dynamic rather than static content. How you scale your website, integrate with other systems and personalise content therefore requires a completely different technical approach.

This personalisation aspect is particularly relevant as both vendors have been positioning themselves in the web engagement / customer experience market. Even though SDL is at the crest of Forrester’s online customer experience wave (and remains firmly ensconced in Gartner’s magic quadrant for web content management), I would argue that neither tool is that well-suited to handling the kind of user-generated content that some lighter weight open source tools like Drupal can offer. SDL seems to me to be particularly well geared to organisations that have a thought-through web content strategy, while what sets Alterian apart in online engagement is its social media marketing tool, SM2. Indeed, this is what SDL seems to covet most:

“We think that there are synergies with the marketing analytics and content delivery,” Mark Lancaster, SDL executive chairman, told the Financial Times.

Allow me to express some degree of scepticism here. Alterian have owned both WCM and SMM technology for over three years and made little (if any) headway in their integration. SDL may have greater resources to achieve this, but we’re looking at completely different products here. Any quick fixes would simply be a rebranding exercise with no under-the-bonnet coordination. Of course, SDL may have a clever plan and I stand to be corrected on that point.

Overall, I’m quite positive about the takeover. I think SDL will benefit from the niche benefits that Alterian brings, particularly in terms of focus on improving editorial interfaces. I think there’s a great opportunity for Alterian partners who previously worked with Immediacy to get to grips with a Tridion CMS that’s similar but more powerful than what they were previously used to. And I think that customers, particularly in Europe, will get a broader set of implementation partners to work with who have great web experience.
Yes, it’s yet another merger and apparently less choice in the market, but actually for the two software development teams, I hope it’s an opportunity for them to learn from each other and for synergy to mean establishing a really good, forward-thinking product rather than just an excuse to downsize.

See also:

Philippe Parker on , , , , | 9 December 2011 | Tweet this |

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Three things happening now in web content management

There are many views on the future of content management, but what of the present tense? I wanted to highlight a few trends that we’re seeing from WCM software vendors.

Social WCM
Of course the web is social, but WCM has traditionally made quite clear distinctions between authoritative content that’s created and approved by authenticated users, and content that’s produced by non-authoritative sources, i.e. external users. This distinction has been somewhat blurred by people recently and vendors have had to respond to blogging software like WordPress that makes it far easier to add comments and user profiles. Many WCM vendors who previously didn’t provide social features now tout their software as web 2.0 ready and this is a signficant area of product development. Moreover, if you look at the ECM sector, vendors are focussing heavily on use of these social features to improve internal business processes, aka Enterprise 2.0.

Web campaign management
Your website is a marketing channel: understanding your market and its responsiveness to campaigns is increasingly important. Many WCM vendors are heavily promoting the campaign management side of their products and developing improved campaign reporting features. The aquisition of Mediasurface by Alterian and the inclusion of content management as part of an “integrated marketing platform” is a good indication of where one branch of the industry is heading. FatWire is also developing marketing products as part of what it calls its Web Experience Management Suite.

Content quality
If you’re going to use the web to market heavily and you have a lot of content, you need to ensure that your website meets the standards you have set your organisation. There are a number of tools on the market that help editorial teams assure that quality (such as those from Vamosa and SiteImprove). We’re also seeing vendors like SDL Tridion adding these modules to their core product offering. Assuring the quality of your web content should be a key aspect of WCM and these features are particularly welcome for distributed authoring teams.

Clearly, these three trends represent a far from exhaustive list, but they do go some way to illustrate how suppliers are positioning themselves in the WCM market. Hopefully this will give clients some degree of differentiation and an awareness of possibilities that web content management can offer them now.

If you want to know more about trends in the industry, take a look at this list of feeds.

Philippe Parker on , , | 10 September 2009 | Tweet this |

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Is SharePoint viable as a cheap ECM?

Many organisations acquire Microsoft SharePoint as a tool to manage all their organisational knowledge: documents, wiki, web. As such it serves as a cheaper alternative to the top of the line enterprise content management products. It’s certainly cheaper to implement if you just run it as out-of-the-box as possible.

It also addresses the widespread issue of how you manage version control of documents that then need to be published directly to a website, which is why so many mid to upper tier web content management vendors provide SharePoint “connectors”: Morello and Tridion are good examples.

You need to take care before asserting that SharePoint is true ECM, however. It offers practically no document automation, no business process modelling and poor integration to other applications, particularly if they’re not Microsoft based. What you get from SharePoint is a collaborative document repository that offers you pretty limited web publishing capabilities. You wouldn’t want to use it to drive a busy transactional website.

You also need to look at your website’s publishing model before considering SharePoint in any context. The SharePoint – WCM model is best suited to a very devolved authoring group publishing what’s essentially extranet-type content. If you’re publishing marketing copy, you need a specialist team of copy writers and a centralised platform for publication.

SharePoint is undoubtedly cheaper than implementing true ECM, but you get what you pay for. Before you buy, make sure that:

  • You only want to integrate with other Microsoft software packages.
  • Your audience will relate to content being produced by a wide group of authors.
  • You require minimal automation of business process through the website.
Philippe Parker on , , | 11 May 2009 | Tweet this |

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Stand and deliver

Adriaan Bloem points to the downtime on Oracle’s website following its acquistion of Sun as an indicator that dynamic delivery is generally unsatisfactory. Certainly that website looked like it needed a decent application server on Monday. I wonder where they could get one.

The static vs. dynamic delivery debate is specific to the kind of content you’re producing. Generally, dynamic delivery is well-suited to:

  1. Time-critical content, such as news or user-generated content.
  2. Content that requires lots of automatic relationships and “see also” type links, including product catalogues. This is easier to generate through dynamic queries than it is through a complex relational static publishing model. This is a particular strength of Vignette.
  3. Segmentation and personalistion of content; a strength of FatWire. It can be really hard to deliver content aimed at specific users if you deploy static publishing, although SDL-Tridion has a go by implementing custom server tags into the application server layer.

More generally, you need to weigh up whether you need a dynamic model because you’re publishing lots of content that needs to be up to date, or a static model because you want to guarantee that the content will continue to be served. Either way, you need to be sure that you can change or remove content quickly as well as publish it, and you should follow best practice for delivery performance:

  1. Ensure caching is in place and decent parameters are set; use a CDN if you have a global audience or lots of very large media files.
  2. Optimise your images, CSS and JavaScript and try not to have too many of these being called from a single page.
  3. Use compression techniques, such as GZIP delivery.
  4. Ensure your CMS gives you a tool to purge your cache when you need to.

If Oracle are really concerned about their own website performance, expect them to buy Akamai some time soon.

Philippe Parker on , , , , | 22 April 2009 | Tweet this |

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You speak the language, we do the grammar

When I was at university, I was one of a somewhat rare group who enjoyed structuralist critical theory. In a nutshell, this states that since all literature is made up of components of grammar (phonemes, adjectives, syntax, etc.) you can describe any text according to this grammar. At its most basic a narrative is state X → event Y → state Z which is different to state X.

Perhaps this is why content management appeals to me. There’s a set of paradigms (content types) that can be described through adjectives (metadata). There are verbs (workflow) and syntax (navigation), and content can be represented in different declensions (templates). But what the content management system is expressing is different each time. The content is the language, while the CMS is the grammar.

So an FAQ has similar composition whether it’s aimed at specialist user communities or the general public; a press release has the same structure whether it’s displayed in English or in French; content can have different “skins” depending on the person viewing the page. When implementing your content, I really don’t care what the content contains, just how people are going to produce and consume it.

A key point to remember about grammar however is that it evolves. Common usage changes the rules. How many supermarkets state “10 items or less” rather than the correct “10 items or fewer”? And how many people know the difference?

So you have to be aware that your requirements will change and the grammatical model for your CMS may need to evolve. If you pick a model with more complex content management processes — component-based systems like Tridion or Percussion say — you may find your users struggling initially. But if you pick simple page-based tools like EpiServer, your contributors may not be able to express themselves in the way they want, such as creating more complex content relationships.

So when picking a CMS technology, you need to think about the complexity of your content management tasks, the processes and structure you’ll want to exploit. Does the system speak your language? Try a few phrases and see. Get the suppliers to show you how you would achieve key tasks around content creation, publication and relationships and pick the language that isn’t double-Dutch.

Philippe Parker on , , | 19 December 2007 | Tweet this |

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Is it “what” or “how” that broke it?

A typical question I get asked when assessing failing CMS implementations is whether there’s a fundamental flaw in the product or in the way it’s been implemented. Some products are more difficult to implement than others, but businesses can be hasty in wanting to throw technology away when the implementation has failed to meet expectations.

While you can make any product do anything if you have an endless supply of time, money and ingenuity, it’s useful to have some idea about whether you need to throw your core product away to achieve your goals feasibly. So I thought I’d list a few typical warning signs that might prompt you to initiate a technology selection project:

  • Wrong technology stack — You’d have thought this would be obvious; but if you’re living in a Java world and you have a .Net, ColdFusion or LAMP product, you’re in trouble. This also applies to legacy systems coming out of support.
  • Unfriendly URLs — You could get around this with some clever rewrite rules, but it’s extremely tricky to do this in a really scalable and cost-effective way.
  • Incompatible workflow — If your CMS doesn’t allow you to implement your online publishing processes, you have a serious problem. Integrating a distinct workflow tool could be more trouble than it’s worth.
  • Running Active X components on a Mac — This is a way to alienate your user base. Don’t use anything that relies on Active X. Even if you’ve locked down all your editors’ PCs to use the same version of Windows, these components can be a headache. There’s plenty of tools out there that use cross-platform, browser-based technologies, so why give yourself this burden?
  • Auto-generated non-compliant mark-up — Many portals (including MOSS Sharepoint) provide you with default templates into which your content is published. Trouble is, they rely on HTML table layouts and JavaScript that are a long way off best practice for being well-formed and accessible. If this is important to you, it can take a lot of effort to fix. You have to weigh up this level of effort against the advantages the product gives you, or against simply throwing the tool away.
  • Poor security — A requirement that’s more obvious to some organisations than others. Some CMS (dynamic-delivery products tend to be more susceptible than those using static delivery methods) are prone to brute force attacks, so if you could be vulnerable to DDoS you should get this evaluated. You should also ensure that your product doesn’t suffer from SQL injections.
  • Lack of integration standards — If your CMS doesn’t work with your LDAP directory, you’re in for a world of pain…
  • Poor version comparison — As with workflow, does the CMS provide you with versioning and audit capabilities that match your business processes? If not, there are tools you can integrate with no little effort, but why wouldn’t you just pick a CMS that does all the red-lining and version comparison for you?

This isn’t an exhaustive list. What characterises these issues is that while you could address them with some outside-the-box thinking, the problem is likely to be so ingrained in the product that dumping your current technology is a more viable approach. And at that stage, when you look to select a new technology, all the points listed above should be the technical prerequisites you have when inviting suppliers to tender. During the selection process, you can then concentrate on organisational fit. This is a subject I’ll return to later.

But what if the reason your implementation is struggling isn’t listed above? It could well be down to the implementation. Most common things people blame on the product, but are actually a problem with how the product has been implemented are:

  • Performance — Hardly ever down to the product, in my experience. Can almost always be improved, if not completely solved, by improving infrastructure (not necessarily more licences) and information architecture.
  • Unfriendly WYSIWYG editorial interface — There are lots of free or cheap tools out on the market which provide friendly and standards-based ways for editors to add rich content to your CMS.
  • Poor classification systems — Products have limitations about implementing taxonomies and classification systems, but typically if you’ve trouble managing these in enterprise products, it’s more likely to be because of how you chose to do it rather than a fundamental flaw with the product itself. It may well require some bespoke work, but doesn’t mean abandoning your entire system.
  • Having to publish in multiple places to generate a single piece of content — This problem is more often found with component-based content management systems, such as Tridion and Percussion. Editors have to publish blocks of related content that then go through independent workflow processes only to be assembled on the same page. There’s an advantage that these are re-used elsewhere on the site, or translated into other languages more efficiently, but the big disadvantage is that editors are confused by what needs to be published in order to make one simple update. In my experience, the business blames the technology when it’s just down to how it’s been put together.

Hopefully this will steer you down the right path when you need to decide whose arse to kick: software supplier or systems integrator / design agency. But more than that, it should give you an idea about where to focus your energy for new requirements: do you need to run a technology selection project or can you build on the platform you have currently? We all know that things break, but if you know whether it’s the what or the how that’ll do it, you should be able to put some contingency in place, saving some blushes and some money.

Philippe Parker on , , | 16 October 2007 | Tweet this |

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Enterprise too? ECM’s long tail

Over the years, the content management market has seen a great deal of consolidation through acquisition, creating vendors with more extensive product ranges that they tout as enterprise almost by default. If you have web, document, digital asset and records management then you must be enterprise.

There are a number of problems with this consolidation that are well-documented, notably the maturity of product integration; just because you buy Oracle UCM (Stellent) doesn’t mean it works out of the box with Oracle WebCenter. But there’s another issue too: not all the clients are enterprise. Once you’ve sold your massive projects into big corporate clients, how do you tap into the long tail?

Increasingly we’re seeing the larger vendors buy up smaller companies not just to become more enterprise, but to reach a broader market that can’t afford enterprise licence fees. We see this in SDL’s acquisition of Tridion, very much a mid-tier WCM. It’s also been in evidence with the RedDot / Open Text product offering, with the RedDot WCM being able to offer trendier features aimed a less “enterprise” installations, such as User Generated Content plug-ins.

Perhaps the most obvious example of this non-enterprise approach is Mediasurface. Even though Mediasurface is a WCM rather than ECM offering, it has many clients who would struggle to pay for the core product licence, Morello client, database licence, and Solaris servers. Yet it has many small clients who it does well from, particularly in UK local government. To increase its stake in this market, Mediasurface has acquired both Immediacy and the SilverBullet hosted CMS offering, rebranded as Pepperio. This enables the company to dip more easily into the long tail.

So why is this important for you, the customer?

On the positive side, it means that if you’re a small customer you can still get a product from an established vendor rather than a high-risk niche supplier. If you’re a large customer, it enables the vendor to leverage the features of the products in its portfolio to provide you with a more comprehensive system, potentially in a more agile way.

On the negative side, if you do go for a small product from one of these companies, you have to ensure that you don’t turn yourself into a small fish in a big pond. If you go for a small WCM package and you need something quick, you’re more likely to get it when you represent 10% of the supplier’s revenue than if you represent less than 1%. And if you are the big fish, don’t expect the small pond to be anything other than a set of nearly joined up puddles.

Philippe Parker on , , , | 3 October 2007 | Tweet this |