|
Ten
questions to ask before you buy a CMS
Every
corporate intranet needs a Content Management System (CMS).
But buy the wrong one and you could be in years of heartache.
Here, Steve Nichols of InfoTech Communications (www.infotechcomms.co.uk)
gives 10 questions you should ask before deciding which Content
Management System to buy.
A Content
Management System (CMS) underpins a corporate intranet. Without
one, users are left to produce pages and code HTML themselves.
At one end of the spectrum, the result can be a hotch-potch
of designs, fonts, colours and sizes as users are let loose
with a program like Microsoft FrontPage.
At the
other, you could end up with no content at all as users quickly
switch off to the complexities of tables, tags and FTP. A
CMS is a way around the problem, letting users create pages
via their browser with no real knowledge of what is going
on behind the scenes.
The design
is then fixed, leaving them to worry about the words and photographs.
But enter the world of CMS at your peril! There are many on
the market, ranging from absolutely free to incredibly expensive.
And to be honest, you don't always get what you pay for. Here
is a checklist of questions to ask any provider before you
sign on the dotted line:
-
Is the CMS intuitive? Can you learn how to use it in half
an hour?
A CMS that is designed with techies in mind and is so complex
you can't make head nor tale of it will become a nightmare
to implement. The end result will be content that never
gets updated or endless phone calls for support. If the
CMS terminology make no sense to you then it was not designed
with the end-user in mind.
- Can
you paste in text from MS Word and retain all the formatting?
Most corporate users will want to prepare their text in
Word and then paste it in. If they then have to go through
the whole document and use HTML tags to re-add bold, italic
and bulleted items they will soon get fed up. Some systems
work by uploading MS Word documents that are then converted
to HTML. These can produce bloated HTML code and the finished
item often looks nothing like the original document. The
acid test of any CMS is to create a table and then import
it. Table conversion can be a nightmare and will soon show
any deficiencies.
- Does
the CMS let you preview the page before you publish it?
With the best will in the world, everyone makes mistakes.
A headline that seemed like a good idea at the time, or
a caption that runs to 100 words, can look hideous when
viewed as the finished item. A good CMS should let you preview
the page in all its splendour. Only then will you easily
spot mistakes. This is also essential where you need pages
to be approved before they are published.
- How
good is the search facility? Does the CMS generate proper
URLS that can be searched for in the future? Some systems
generate the URL when the page is selected and can create
hideously long URLs. These are not user-friendly and do
not work well with some search engines. Others produce real
".html" addresses that are easier to remember and work with.
- How
easy is it to integrate the CMS into my site design?
Most CMS systems work by using a database to hold the content.
This is then called onto the page at the time a page is
selected. Some languages are horrendous to code and a simple
change to a home page will have you running to a specialist
developer. Make sure you have access to someone who can
make the changes that you require. Some CMS are extremely
difficult to incorporate changes.
- Does
the CMS have a WYSIWYG editor? Does it work with all
the platforms used in the company? Most WYSIWYG systems
tend to work with later versions of Microsoft's Internet
Explorer. If you use Apple Macintosh machines or Netscape's
Navigator software the editor may lose its WYSIWYG capabilities.
- How
easy is it to incorporate site redesigns into the CMS?
Some systems keep the content and the look and feel very
separate. A change of font, say, from Arial to Verdana can
be accomplished with a single five-minute change of code.
Others hard code font size, colour and type into the document
which means site redesigns (which happen on a regular basis)
become a nightmare.
- What
is your upgrade policy? Is the CMS upgraded on at least
an annual basis? Do you have to pay for upgrades? Does the
provider operate a wish-list service where you can influence
the development of the CMS?
- Can
I have a copy of all the manuals and training materials
for the system before we buy? While one-to-one training
is ideal, when the trainer has left the office you are going
to be on your own. A good manual should let you find out
how to access many of the functions yourself. Good self-training
materials will also let new users learn how to use the system
in their own time. If training is left to an existing member
of staff you will get a dilution of skills. That is, the
new entrant will only learn about the functions that the
existing user understands, not the whole system.
- Can
you give me the names, addresses and telephone numbers of
five existing users in this country? Make sure you get
five and make sure you ring them all. Find out how long
they have been using the CMS, what they think of it and
what the back-up has been like from the provider. The only
way to really get to know if a CMS does what it says on
the tin is to use it over an extended period. Those phone
calls, or perhaps even visits, could save you from big headaches
later.
Steve
Nichols (steve@infotechcomms.co.uk)
runs InfoTech Communications, which publishes this ezine. InfoTech
specialises in online communications and has acted as consultant
and trainer to many blue-chip companies including Aviva, Shell,
Standard Life, HBOS, BNFL, Accenture and Australia New Zealand
Bank.
|
|