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Praise for Web Content Management: A Collaborative Approach

“I thought this book was very good. Well-written, easy to understand, clear, good illustrations, and topical. This is complex, somewhat slippery material, and the author has made it clear and graspable.”

         —Mitchel Ahern, Director of Business Development, AdToolsInc.com

“I found myself wishing I had had this book two years ago. It explains better the real complexities of an enterprise web site. It's not a how-to in the sense of fixing what’s broken, but it is a comprehensive guide for web site planners and developers.”

         —Linda Brigman, Independent Consultant

Web Content Management: A Collaborative Approach provides sound principles and practices for designing, developing, and maintaining web-based projects of all sizes and audiences. The content management strategy described in this book is unique because it combines three critical components: processes, technology, and people. In addition, this book provides practical real-life examples and scenarios.”

         —John Wegis, Software Development Manager, Kana Software

“This book makes web designers and architects rethink their approach in embracing web content growth. It covers a detailed understanding of web technologies. Through this book, you will learn how to create and manage content to attract customers and suppliers and improve the usability of your web site.”

         —Ravishankar Belavadi, Senior Programmer Analyst, Kana Software

“Content management is one of the most important parts of web publishing infrastructure. Any company that thinks it can do without content management has its head in the sand. Business people and web developers alike need to understand the issues explored in this book.”

         —Mark Gilbert, Research Director, Gartner, Inc.

“...The best content management materials available on the market today.”

         —Robert Rasp, Manager, Content Management and Delivery, hsbc.com

For business managers and web practitioners, the success of their most vital web initiatives depends on doing one thing particularly well--managing web content. As web site content grows in volume and importance, its development and maintenance can no longer be performed either informally or by a single group. Instead, content must be systematically developed, deployed, and managed through standard techniques and processes that enable the site to scale.

Written by the leading visionary in the field, Web Content Management: A Collaborative Approach presents the principles, practices, and mindset involved in web content management. Learn the core issues of collaborative development, including versioning and managing concurrent changes. See how a solution framework used by many Fortune 1000 companies details a step-by-step process for designing and implementing a content infrastructure, including a workflow architecture and a task-based deployment methodology.

This book prepares you for the issues you are likely to face. It describes key tools, processes, and organizational approaches that support effective web content management and shows how all of these elements can be expertly integrated into a world-class enterprise solution--a web site with plentiful, current, and dynamic content that gets critical information to customers, employees, and suppliers quickly.

You will learn:

  • Development principles that allow you to scale web sites to enterprise class

  • Proven ways to organize enterprise web sites

  • The underpinnings of web site versioning, concurrent changes, and templating

  • The work area/staging area paradigm of development

  • How to distinguish source files from generated files

  • How workflow and approval patterns allow web sites to innovate continuously

  • How to handle multiple web initiatives

  • How web systems typically integrate with databases, template systems, document management systems, deployment, and backup systems

  • Current trends in content management and what these trends imply for the future

Real-world case studies drawn from the author's extensive experience consulting for large companies illustrate the practical use of content management techniques. In particular, new managers will find tremendous value in viewing the practices of other web organizations through these "day-in-the-life-of" examples.

With Web Content Management as your guide, you will be better prepared to elevate your web site--whether it is small, growing, or already large--to an information-rich, enterprise-scale solution.

Amazon.com® Reader Reviews (Ranked by Helpfulness)

Average Amazon.com® Rating: 3.0 out of 5 rating Based on 14 Ratings

Even at [a low cost ], Not Worth It - 2003-08-23
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
This book can commonly be found used for [a low cost ]. I think that says a lot.

Coming from an editorial and project management background, I found this book to be worthless. It's terribly written, the topics are covered in a very general way, and it ignores important topics such as information modeling.

A much better book on the subject is "Managing Enterprise Content: A Unified Content Strategy" by Ann Rockley. However, Rockley's book goes beyond Web content management to include all forms of enterprise content (print, etc.). I plan to read Boiko's "Content Management Bible" next, which I hope will answer some of the questions I still have.

More depth please Mr Nakano - 2002-09-12
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
As a System Architect working with Enterprise Content Management (ECM) and particularly with Interwoven's Teamsite, I was eagerly awaiting the publication of a book that dealt with Content Management.
However, on recieveing the book I was disapointed to release once again that the subject had been treated at such a high level as to be nearly useless to someone who already works within the field.
I agree with other reviewers of the book that it does present a reasonable overview for those first dangling their feet in the CMS swamp.
However, there is currently a great need for a book on ECM where the underlying principles and process of specifying, creating and validating a "Content Architecture" and Management System are seriously considered.
Unfortunately this book is not it.
If I had the time or money I would write one myself.
Until then I keep my fingers crossed that Nakano is already working on one

Nice explination - 2005-11-28
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
Unlike many books of this type, this book was actually well writen and interesting to read! Nakano makes what could have been very dry discussions more entertaining by including real-life scenarios.

The book takes you through web development processes, all the way from the one-man shop to the huge, mega-corporation. Yes, it does not give implementation details, but I think it does a very nice job at explaining the basic models in a black box way. (It is up to you to decide how you are going to do version control or enterprise content management.)

Shill for Interwoven - 2003-12-19
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
If you believe that Interwoven's software is the way to go, then read this book. Otherwise, save your money and look elsewhere.

Great for general explanation of web development - 2004-10-30
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
Interesting how polarized readers are on this book! I can see that folks needing specific details on web development would not appreciate this book.

However, for me, since I wanted a general discussion of how companies develop web sites, it was perfect. My experience in web development for small and medium-size companies tells me that the problems and solutions presented in this book are very real-world.

Unlike many books of this type, this book was actually well writen and interesting to read! Nakano makes what could have been very dry discussions more entertaining by including real-life scenarios.

The book takes you through web development processes, all the way from the one-man shop to the huge, mega-corporation. Yes, it does not give implementation details, but I think it does a very nice job at explaining the basic models in a black box way. (It is up to you to decide how you are going to do version control or enterprise content management.)

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Internet/Online

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Internet/Online > Web Content Management

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