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Metadata and Web Content Management. Sam Gallagher Departmental Web Manager U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Role of Metadata. What is the role of metadata in web content management? The answer varies from office to office, agency to agency. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Metadata and Web Content Management
Sam GallagherDepartmental Web Manager
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
What is the role of metadata in web content management?
The answer varies from office to office, agency to agency.
The role of metadata varies from “none at all” to being an integral tool in managing web content.
Role of Metadata
For most of us, metadata isn’t new, just reborn.– Many agencies have been using “description” and
“keywords” for years with little guidance and no consistency.
Agencies that do use metadata consistently, built it into the content creation process.
The rest of us are trying to find our way through the jungle of terms, standards, and concepts.
Role of Metadata
Web Content Management also varies by agency– Some content managers are also content owners– Some are editors– Others simply manage the content design/flow,
but rely on content creators/editors– There are varying levels of understanding of the
concept of metadata
Web Content Management
However, there are some commonalities– Our websites are huge
» HUD’s for example is something over 200,000 documents
– Our websites change frequently» Last Friday alone, HUD made over 700 changes.
– Our website have become increasingly difficult to maintain
Web Content Management
In addition to having too much content, there are also too many websites: more than 24,000 government websites at last count.
The total number of web documents in the Federal space isn’t known: easily millions.
There is a proliferation of portals.– FirstGov lists more than 90 Portals.– Instead of reducing the clutter, many portals end
up as duplicating navigational structures to content that already exists.
Web Content Management
And, there are a host of regulations and standards to follow.– The Web Content Managers Working Group
found over 16 laws, regulations, or policies directly affecting federal public websites.
Web Content Management
What we are beginning to learn is Metadata can be a tool for helping us meet some of these demands.
Role of Metadata
Created in January 2004 as part of the Interagency Committee on Government Information.
Originally known as the Web Content Management Working Group.
An interagency group of 30 web managers, with representatives from every cabinet-level agency and many independent agencies.
Web Managers Advisory Council
Web Managers Advisory Council
Tasked with recommending policies and guidelines to OMB for all federal public websites.
Group issued its recommendations in June 2004 to OMB.
OMB issued policies for federal public websites on December 17, 2004.
Web Managers Advisory Council
After policies were issued, web managers saw the need for continuing discussions.
The Web Managers Working Group became the Advisory Council: a community of web managers helping web managers.
One of the recommendations to OMB was the use of a standardized set of metadata.
“Federal public websites must include metadata on the homepage and all major entry points”
The Metadata Discussion
The Metadata Discussion
The arguments for standard metadata included:– improve search relevancy,– provide an audit trail,– support website maintenance and
administration, and– allow information to be tracked and
assembled government-wide.
The Metadata Discussion
The arguments against standard metadata included:– Commercial searches don’t use metadata – Time/resource consuming– Education requirements– Too many documents to encode
The Metadata Discussion
During the comment period, 38 comments were received specifically relating to metadata--nearly all were positive.
In the end, the consensus was that the potential benefits could outweigh the costs.
Discussion then centered on how many and which elements to promote.
The Recommendation
The Working Group agreed on:
– Mandatory use of 6 elements– Require use of metadata on homepage
and major entry points only– If an agency wanted to use more
elements, refer to Dublin Core
The Recommendation
The 6 elements agreed upon were:– Title– Description– Creator– Date Created– Date Reviewed– Language
OMB’s Policies
OMB did not choose to specifically include metadata in their policies.
However, the Web Managers Advisory Council continues to promote the use of standard metadata.– Created the Metadata Task Group to continue the
discussion and promote the use of metadata.
Metadata Standards
While no standard has been issued, consensus has centered on the use of the Dublin Core metadata standard.
– Already existing international standard– Relatively easy to implement– Already used by Great Britain, Canada,
Australia and several federal agencies in the U.S.
Metadata Standards
Based on the consensus to use Dublin Core, the Web Advisory Council is now advising agencies to use the following elements:
– dc.title– dc.description– dc.creator– dc.date.created– dc.date.reviewed– dc.language
Metadata Standards
While not yet a “recommendation,” there is a growing discussion on the need for standardized vocabularies for:– dc.audience– dc.subject
Some limited work is underway to create a controlled vocabulary for audience.
The Role of Metadata
Web managers throughout the federal government struggle with some of the same issues:
– It is often difficult to find out who “owns” content
– Ensuring content remains current and accurate is a monumental undertaking
– Competition for space on the front page makes it difficult to get people to the content they need.
The Role of Metadata
The role of metadata in web management comes back to those “pros”– improve search relevancy, – provide an audit trail, – support website maintenance and
administration, and– allow information to be tracked and
assembled government-wide.
Improve Search Relevancy
While commercial searches like Google and Yahoo may not use metadata YET:– We could use metadata to improve the
searches on our own sites– FirstGov, while not currently set-up to take
advantage of metadata, could be in the future
– “If you build it, they will come…”
Provide an Audit Trail
Several of the elements were selected for their ability to create an audit trail. For example:– Creator identifies who/which office is
responsible for the content– Date Reviewed identifies old, possibly
obsolete, documents
Support Website Maintenance
Metadata gives us a method for:– Tracking down who is responsible for
content– Ensuring content is current/accurate– Archiving appropriate content from one
administration to the next– Identifying content by language
Aggregate Content
With the use of Audience and Subject, we could:– Discover redundant/duplicative content– Find content that needs to be “brought up”
to higher levels of the website
– Aggregate content from within our organizations and across organizations
» This could lead to reducing the need for portals.
What is being done now?
Metadata has been the subject of a session at each of the last three web content managers conferences.– Interest is high, but there are still doubts
Metadata task group of the Web Advisory Council is:– Creating guidance/tools for implementing
metadata – Beginning work on a controlled vocabulary for
Audience
Next Steps
There needs to be a proven benefit– We’ve made one attempt to show how
metadata could be used across agencies
Next Steps
Metadata has to be easily implemented– Simple tools need to be developed– Tools should be integrated into the content
creation process– Education developed on the benefits
gained by the consistent use of metadata
Conclusion
The role of metadata in web content management is just beginning– We see the potential– We have some tentative first steps– We need successes to trumpet to build the
momentum
Conclusion
Web Advisory Council:– Continues to meet once a month.– Plans and holds web manager
conferences– Manages a website:
www.webcontent.gov
– Hurricane Katrina: www.youragency.gov/katrina
Conclusion
Contact info:
Kate Donohue
E-mail: [email protected]
Phone: 202-874-4976
Jeffrey Levy
E-mail: [email protected]
Phone: 202-564-9727