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Content Critical
The Web
Content |
July 08, 2002 Demystifying content management By Gerry McGovern In consulting, they say that the margin is in the mystery. Ironically, some managers prefer mystery to simplicity. If it sounds complex, many will pay more than if it sounds simple. Content management is a bubbling vat of hyperbole. It's time for some simple language. Content management is a new name for publishing. The core objective of publishing is to get the right content to the right person at the right time at the right cost. Publishers manage publications. Key staff include authors and editors. Authors create content. Editors decide what content should get published, and how much editing that content requires. When the printing press was invented, the whole process of printing was difficult and complex. The very act of printing was as fascinating as what was being printed. So too with the Web. The Web was invented by Tim Berners Lee as a publishing tool. That's why we have HTML, which is a publishing mark-up language. That's why we have web 'pages.' Content management is web-based publishing. The early years of web publishing, like the early years of printing, were very dependent on the programmer/developer (the printer). It was a major technical feat to publish a large website. Many people like to make their discipline sound complex because that makes them more valuable to the organization. Web publishing sounded very complex. Web publishing technology is becoming streamlined and standardized. The focus is moving away from the tools and towards the content. If you understand content, then this is your time to shine. Publishing content is a centuries old discipline. The basic rules and concepts are the same, whether you are publishing to print or to the Web. Let's take a publishing perspective to a sample of content management terms:
I've yet to come
across a content management issue that cannot be understood from a
publishing perspective. If you're managing a website, thinking like a
publisher can help you clear away the fog of hyperbole. It allows you to
focus on what you really need to do to achieve success.
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"Everyone involved in the Web should read Content Critical. It is Tom Paine's Common Sense for a wired world. Buy it now or watch your empire fall." Rob Benson, TrainingZONE "The term "bible" is now highly over-used in reference to tech books – but if it weren't, that's how I would categorize Content Critical." Rowan Wilson, Knowledge Management Review "Content Critical is the best non-technical book on the subject of web content that I have come across to date. Andy Harrison, Content Management Focus magazine Buy Content Critical New Thinking Newsletter Subscribe to this free weekly newsletter covering the role and function of content on the Web. More info | Privacy policy Read the current issue
I've yet to come across a content management issue that cannot be understood from a publishing perspective.
Gerry McGovern's books are recommended reading at the following universities
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