Your clients need a Content Management System...
According to the ad, the day you realised there was no Santa Claus was an
epiphany. It claims that realising you needed a certain type of hardware was
another one. But I can go one better: the night your site advertised PCs at
$10.00 (rather than $1000) and you couldn't correct it until the design agency
came in the next morning. Now that's an epiphany.
All over the Web, marketing and sales managers are realising that manual
systems for managing their online offering could leave them vulnerable. And
this isn't just ad land spin - last year one online retailer received 6,000
orders for the $844 monitor it accidentally advertised for $264.
If that doesn't keep you awake at night, consider the following situations,
all drawn from actual events:
- It takes a month to sign off the site's Terms and Conditions because every
time any one of your organisation's lawyers changes a full stop, all the
other ones need to sign it off.
- You realise that your site's visual design isn't working, but it will
take a month to wrap a new design around the same words.
- Your web design agency insists on all content being signed off two months
before it goes live... and then transcribes it incorrectly.
- In a parting gesture, the Web publisher you fired replaced photos of board
members with sheep.
- You can't update one section of the site because another section has a
major overhaul underway. You can either publish the entire site, with both
complete and incomplete updates, or hold until both are completed.
- You have to work through the night to publish the company's results at
market opening time because you don't have a secure area to develop them
in advance.
- You send email promotions about 'upgrading' to Windows2000 to registered
Mac users.
- You're employing an army of skilled web publishers just to update the
system requirements of your software.
Make no mistake - if you are running a substantive web site without a CMS,
you will hit a wall where your eBusiness is no longer sustainable because
you can't update your site reliably or quickly enough. From that point, you
will need to tear down almost your entire web infrastructure to put a CMS
in its place.
As more and more companies are hitting this wall, it's no surprise, then,
that the CMS market is at the start of an escalator. In the six months ending
June 30, 2000, one of the leading vendors, Broadvision, grew its revenues
by 374% to $156.8m, while strong competitor Vignette grossed $55.2m, up over
600%. Faulkner Information Services conservatively estimates the entire market
will develop to $65billion by 2003 - hardly surprising as implementing a comprehensive
CMS may cost $2m - $5m; more if it needs to integrate with other systems.
What content do you have, and where is it going?
Think for a moment about all the content assets that you need to manage.
On your site, you might have:
- Your products' specifications, prices and benefits.
- Product illustrations
- Production information
- Product categories
- Special promotions
- Terms and Conditions
- Site navigation links
- Availability
- Support information
- Developer features
- Press releases
- Jobs
- Office addresses, maps and directions.
- Logos, photographs and diagrams
Even if you're not currently communicating multi-nationally, your site can
(and will) be seen around the world. Intentionally or not, you are communicating
- and potentially selling - to many cultures, and it's worth investigating.
However, to communicate effectively, you need to be considering publishing
in multiple languages. In Europe alone, this implies up to 15 different language
versions of your site, each with their own cultural sensitivities over imagery,
strength of sales pitch and so on. You may not be managing this effectively;
some of your competitors will be.
These might be sourced from:
- Internal systems
- External suppliers
- R&D
- Marketing
- Photographers
- Production
- Operations
- Site users
You then need to integrate this content into a consistent site and funnel
it towards:
- External customers, prospects, pressure groups, shareholders and other
external audiences (Internet site)
- Employees, including R&D, Support and Admin staff (Intranet)
- Sales force, suppliers and partner companies (Extranet)
- Non-PC access devices (kiosks, PDAs etc)
- Internal and external systems
- Intelligent devices
- with the appropriate story being told to each audience.
Add to the mix the spice of personalisation where each individual user may
have a unique version of the content and you have a recipe for extremely complicated
production processes.
CMS Benefits
No more accidents
With a CMS, it becomes very difficult for content assets to be on the site
accidentally. Any updates must pass through commissioning, creation and one
or more predefined signoff steps before the system will publish it. The resulting
audit trail provides accountability for each action.
Job sharing
A team distributed between offices operates many sites, companies or even
countries and notifying a participant of an assigned task becomes more complicated
than calling across the room. The CMS could notify a participant by email,
by SMS (mobile phone text messaging), by fax or even by auto-generated letter.
Because all the major tools have a web interface, participants can perform
their task and view its results from anywhere with web access. And with a
sensible CMS security model, you can be sure that only authorised people can
perform authorised tasks.
Advance and refresh
You can specify dates and times for the content to go live and be archived
or removed, along with the contents target audience segments. You can also
impose review dates to ensure that information is not simply left on the site
to rot until a new product replaces it. The responsible area will need to
rubberstamp the content as still valid, commission a replacement or archive/delete
it. If content is removed or archived, the CMS will ensure that the remaining
content is still structurally consistent, without leaving orphaned links to
the deleted asset.
Speed to market
When you have a CMS, you suddenly have a tremendous advantage in the time
it takes to react to market intelligence. You can write, edit and publish
updates in a matter of minutes without suffering from "Webmaster Bottleneck".
If your product globally propagates a virus, updates at this pace could be
essential.
Alternatively, you take the decision that the visual design isn't working
on a Monday morning, and can have a new design implemented by Wednesday. Why?
Because your CMS is maintaining the site's structure, content and visual presentation
in separate layers (see Figure 1, below), and will pour your content and its
structure into a few visual templates.
Figure 1 - illustration of content layers
| Presentation |
| Content |
| Site Structure |
Similarly, you can restructure a site, merging and splitting areas, without
substantial manual intervention, as this layer is also maintained separately.
Reduced maintenance costs
By automating the building of pages on your site, you will cut substantial
sums from the site's maintenance costs. A reasonably content rich site could
need 250 or more updates a day, each averaging around 2 man-hours to produce
and test. As a Web Publisher with the competence to get the edits right and
not break the site will cost from $150-$200 per day, you could be cutting
$12,000 from your bottom line every working day.
Version Control
At its simplest, this means that you know, and can control, what content
is supposed to be live today, what is sitting ready to go live next week,
and what is being prepared by your team for the week after, and keep them
separate on an piece-by-piece basis.
It also means that you can have one version of a news story live now, one
being written to update it in an hour's time, and one incorporating the press
release which is embargoed until tonight.
Simplified CRM Implementation
In many traditional Direct Marketing scenarios, an audience may be segmented
into a dozen segments. In the online environment, where all user interactions
are mediated by IT systems, users may be segmented into unique individuals.
Managing many thousands of individually customised sites is no simple job.
Campaign Management tools will manage the users' preferences and behaviours,
while Content Management tools will manage content that they will access.
At the point of delivery (the web site, or email campaign), the two groups
meet and content will be selected for a user to reflect their preferences
and behaviours. Best-of-Breed players in each segment will relatively easily
integrate, enabling rapid construction of eCRM solutions.
Content Syndication
Many sites are now pulling content from, and pushing content to, systems
run by other organisations, best handled by a CMS. At its simplest, this will
allow you to pull headlines and articles from a relevant news site, or gain
an income stream by syndicating your own material to other site. Alternatively,
it could be a way to share product specifications, prices, marketing information
and availability with suppliers and vendors.
If you're selling to a large retailer, expect them to demand product features
delivered directly to their CMS within the next year. Planning and building
this facility before they do so will win you a major advantage. A CMS will
automatically handle the interfaces and pull content from multiple vendors
without missing a beat.
Control of non-web content, channel integration and business re-engineering
Companies traditionally put web-production into a silo. Often,
the first that a web team would hear about a new product would be when the
first public ads were released. To be really effective, the web channel needs
to be integrated into the core business as other communication channels are,
which has implications regarding workflow and signoff of communication.
In the journey towards an effective CMS strategy, conflicts between departmental
silos will be unearthed. Introducing a CMS can be the lever to ensure that
R&D talk to marketing, rather than throwing products over the wall and
expecting them to be sold without customer insight. If implemented completely,
product information can flow between marketing, R&D and suppliers in a
smooth flow, reducing departmental conflict.
Furthermore, it can be the lever which ensures that the eCRM nirvana of
cross-channel, single customer view comes about, as the customer will be able
to view the same content as the call centre and the sales force and the marketing
department.
What's the downside?
Introducing a Content Management System is no small matter for an eBusiness.
It is a strategic tool. In developing your system, you will expose process
and infrastructure issues that may have been papered over for some time, and
be forced to resolve them. However, as the scope and scale of content delivered
to customer touch points increases, it becomes a basic requirement of being
in eBusiness. Without it, your ambitions for growth are unsustainable.
6 core CMS requirements
Almost every CMS will require the following:
- Automated, audited workflow/signoff process
- Templating
- Roles-based security management
- Scheduled launch and archiving
- Integration with back office systems such as campaign management tools
- Scalability
You don't need a CMS (yet) if...
At least 4 of the following are true:
- You have a small organisation where web publishing is in-house, and can
communicate exceptionally well with content creation
- Your site is small and doesn't update frequently in content or structure
- Your online operation doesn't perform any personalisation
- You don't integrate content between the web site and retail outlets, call
centres, email newsletters or other channels
- You don't need to manage specifications from R&D to customer support
- You are not offering customers a community where they can contribute to
a site
- One individual has intimate knowledge of the entire site (and others have
intimate knowledge over their own sections)
You should revisit this regularly at least quarterly and whenever you add
additional functionality or content areas.