Content management Solutions
With the growing importance of the Internet in the marketing mix, companies have become aware of the necessity to establish a well-defined set of organizational rules and select a solid tool for their website deployment and maintenance.
Mission-critical web sites are facing a triple evolution: an increasing quantity of multilingual information to publish, a growing number of contributors involved in the content definition, writing and publishing, and more frequent site content updates.
Content management requires clear procedures and a clear roles definition: who is responsible for defining content writing, validating, and publishing. But content management also requires tools to reduce the time, cost and complexity associated with building, deploying, and maintaining mission-critical, content-rich web sites across multiple websites and portals.
Content management environments propose functionalities such as:
Dynamic management of the structure and of the navigation of the site.
Template-based content management that allows for decentralising the publishing of content pages while limiting technical knowledge required from the publishers. Publishing pages become as easy as processing text document.
Workflow tools that manage the page publishing and approval processes…
Security tools that manage roles and permissions of users who collaborate.
Content versioning and roll-back tools which allow rollback to older versions and version comparison of different versions…
UNIWAY has gained a valuable expertise in implementing such tools. Additionally, Uniway experts can carry out strategic and technical audits in Web content management, which takes place prior to the actual site implementation.
During the audit, all the facets of the site are re-investigated before migrating the content into a new content management environment: re-definition of the information structure, review of the site design, definition of the organizational aspects in content management and study of the most appropriate content management architecture. A migration plan (tasks, planning, and budget) is defined and proposed at the end of the process.