Showing posts with label user adoption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label user adoption. Show all posts

Thursday, June 17, 2010

The Essentials to Adopting a new CMS and Self-Publishing

One of the biggest hurdles after implementing a CMS in organizations, is preparing for the rollout and user adoption by self-publishers who have little or no HTML or coding skills. To increase internal user adoption by non-coders, your goal should be easy,  intuitive self-publishing. The easiest ways to do this is to strip down the admin interface to the bare essentials, after that, create a really terrific and engaging user tutorial. Doing both will reduce the never-to-be-underestimated "intimidation factor" of learning new software and processes.

Of course there are other needed requirements to adopting a new CMS like creation of a user support site, coaching, email support and of course a great CMS to begin with, but the two essentials for adopting and using a new CMS internally are:

- a user-friendly, intuitive CMS admin interface
- a user-friendly, engaging, step-by-step CMS user tutorial

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Successful Interwoven Teamsite CMS deployment

Imagine that! There is a successful Interwoven Teamsite CMS deployment in the Canadian federal government. Human Resources Development Canada (HRDC) deployed Interwoven with the Teamsite module.

Check out a successful deployment of Interwoven in the federal government: HRSDC website

HRDC has over a 100 self-publishers - so integration and user adoption were skillfully handled at HRDC. Congratulations to HRDC's IT and business teams. Quite an accomplishment!

2010 Update: Self-publishing in this instance required a two-person team per publishing division: an html coder and a web communications advisor. No WYSIWG editor was installed meaning specialized coding skills still required.

The search continues for the best-in-class enterprise CMS for non-coders!!!

Friday, June 12, 2009

Choosing a CMS

I have used a lot of Content Management Systems (CMS) over the years, everything from a custom developed CMS, to a simple CMS, to an industry standard CMS, to open source CMS. There are key factors to choosing, deploying, using, and widely adopting a new CMS. The most important factors relate to technology integration and self-publishing user adoption:

Technology integration

1. Review your existing technology environment. What technology stack are you using? Research and choose a CMS that integrates and deploys easily because integration will be one of the biggest sources of failure - and the biggest financial cost to your organization. Enterprises CMSs that I have used are Sharepoint and Interwoven

2. Your other choice is an Open Source CMS which can be deployed stand-alone to quickly migrate existing content and get your new site easily deployed. Once deployed you can spend the time integrating with the existing technology stack. Good open source options that I have used are Joomla, WordPress and Drupal. This CMS Rating Guide accurately describes how users rate the many OpenSource CMS options.

User adoption


Other than how easily your existing techology integrates, the only big thing you have to think about is how easy it will be to have internal users adopt and self-publish in your new CMS. This should be treated as a separate project, after the new site(s) is deployed.  Best practices include creating:
The big thing here is making sure the admin interface is easy to use - strip or comment out any fields that aren't required. Your users will thank you and your user adoption/self-publishing success rate will sky-rocket.
Check out the CMS best practice links posted on the side of my blog.