Content Management
The Past
Traditionally web sites were treated like brochures. They were designed by
firms like ours and handed over to you as a done thing. If you wanted it
changed you had to go back to the web site design company and ask them to
change it for you.
The consequence of this was that the web site rapidly became out of date, or
you ended up spending a lot of money with your web site design company.
A New Way
Our solution to this problem is "content management". The way this works is
that the text for your web pages is stored in a database on the web server and
the web pages are created "on the fly" when a page is requested. For example
this text that you're reading is stored in article number 34 in our database
for this web site. You can see that in the web page's URL above (URL
don't have to be that obscure by the way, Opus can use "URL remapping" to give pages more meaningful URLs if that's what you need you can see that with the URL of our portfolio page for example).
Holding the text in a database means that it can be updated from a web
browser using a web form. So for example if we want to change this page we
can do it by calling up the text in a form on a password protected web page,
modifying it and saving it. Then
the next person to view the web page sees the new text.
How This Works for You
So imagine this is your site, which we've designed and implemented
for you, and one day you decide to change this paragraph to add some extra
text, or put in your new salesman's name, or change a phone number. In the
traditional model you would have to ask your web design company and then
wait for them to find time to make the change. But with our solution you
can make the change yourself and it's there instantly.
Taking this a stage further you can add new pages to the web site.
For example you might put up your press releases or your news as
Ormiston Children & Families Trust do. You can
even embargo a page so that it only appears when you want it to
appear, automatically.
The Engine
The software we use for this is a content management engine
called Opus. It's Open Source, it's secure,
and it's in use now by a variety of organisations. For example on the
Milton Village site where news is added every
week, and the Prisoners' Families Helpline site where the
directory
of useful organisations is continuously being updated by the site owners.
Using Opus requires only minimal training: most people are confident to use
Opus to modify pages after only an hour's training.
Other Features
Opus lets you put non-HTML documents, in formats such as Word and PDF, on
your web site, and to treat them just like other Opus articles.
Opus comes with its own search engine, you can see that on this web site:
it's the "quick search" box on the left side of the page, so you can be sure
readers can find the information they're looking for, and our comprehensive
hit logging ensure you know who's looking at what on your web site. It even
searches your non-HTML documents in most cases.
Opus uses templates which allows us a great deal of flexibility in designing
your web site for you. We can put the navigation on the left, as here, or at
the top, or wherever you want it, or have no navigation at all. We can lay
the pages out however suits you and we can give you different templates for
different types of page. We can also make Opus use different templates for
different web browsers, so that the page generated can be tuned to best fit
the user's browser so that they see your site to best advantage.
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