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Defeating Content Zombies: What “The Walking Dead” (+ a Massive Redevelopment) Taught Me About Web GovernanceTim NekritzAssociate Director of Communications and MarketingDirector of Digital CommunicationsSUNY Oswego
Disclaimers
• Knowledge of “The Walking Dead” is useful but not required.• Graphic violence is not anticipated.• No humans or animals were harmed in the
making of this presentation.• Images in this presentation do not represent
endorsement by The Walking Dead or representative living or undead
What is “The Walking Dead”?
What’s web (digital) governance?
“Digital governance is a framework for establishing accountability, roles and decision-making authority for an organization’s digital presence – which means its websites, mobile sites, social channels and any other Internet and Web-enabled products and services.”
-- Lisa Welchman“Organizing Chaos”
Parts of governance
• Strategy: who determines direction?•Policy: who creates/curates
to-do/don’t do lists and how strict are they?• Standards: who decides how your
digital portfolio looks and reads? (Welchman)
Strategy
Produces “a statement on the organization’s approach to digital and the development of performance measures – not a plan.”
But it underpins your plans and tactics.
(Welchman)
Policy
•Who determines what can/can’t go on web?•Why?•How is this disseminated?•How do you handle requests that
don’t neatly fit in the policy? (Welchman)
Standards
“… when you have standards in place, more time can be spent having conversations about the substance and purpose of the work that is to be done instead of arguing about the details of execution or who has the authority to make decisions …”
(Welchman)
Governance, from a content strategy standpoint
•Who decides what content appears?•Who creates the content?•Who reviews the content?•What standards do you use?• How do you measure success?
“Content Strategy for the Web,”Kristina Halvorson
Process, not product
“Useful, usable content is a process, not a product. It requires our time and attention.”
(Halvorson)
Stop! Survey time!
Success via distributed model?
A. ImpossibleB. Nearly impossibleC. Difficult but worth tryingD.Easy peasy
Seriously, how are they related?
• Zombie content is the scourge of your site and web in general
• For several years after a formerly faculty member died, he was still listed as a key contact in our online faculty and staff handbook (that people said they kept updated)
• Your audience desires timely, helpful, accurate information, especially when you have key calls to action
Two opposing forces
Centralization vs.
collaboration
Or Rick and Daryl
Need both to conquer zombie content!
Control = Rick
Control/centralization
[Rick is a law-and-order/moral absolute]• Dictate terms of web governance• Sole, centralized decision-making person
or entity• Lack of trust in others• Lack of collaboration
“Rick’s greatest fault, perhaps, is his uncanny ability to place responsibility on himself and set for himself goals that are impossible to reach.” – WalkingDead.wikia.com
Situational = Daryl
Collaboration/situational
[Daryl works on the fly, resourceful, takes situational approach]• You don’t know everything• Listen and pay attention•Work with others to achieve solutions• Can evolve
“Daryl has often shown to be caring and selfless … Daryl has a keen sense of intuition … he is well-liked and respected by the entire group.” – WalkingDead.wikia.com
Two sides work together
Teamwork matters
• Control-driven Rick learns to rely on others and not take everything on by himself• Formerly lone wolf Daryl learns how to
work within a structure for group goals
• Central focus is important• Collaborating with others is important
Views of TWD/governance
• Zombies/chaos•On the road/moving targets•Hershel’s farm/your first CMS•Prison/ultimate control• The Governor/vendor from hell• Sanctuary/giving up governance•Alexandria/collaboration
Zombie chaos
Chaos
•No governance• Zombie pages live on•Devours site usability•Branding – whose site are we on?
On the road
The road to …
• Structure?• Sanity?•Policies?•A home base?
Hershel’s Farm
Hershel’s Farm
• Your first CMS: This will solve things!• Idyllic•But not enough hands• “Carl, get in the house!”• Skillsets don’t always mesh• Zombie content can still overrun you.“A content management system creates neither content, nor management, nor a system.”
The Prison
The Prison = control
• Locking down creativity• Locking out collaboration•Central control and authority (“this
ain’t a democracy!”)•No mobility or evolution possible
Woodbury/The Governor
Don’t contract it out
•Governor appeared to be kind leader but had many secrets• IT vendor: “Please clear your cache of
ammo and reload”•More selfish than concerned with
stakeholders• Evasive: “That feature is on the
roadmap”
Sanctuary
Sanctuary?
• Yielding all governance leads to cannibalization•Disrespect for humans• If you’re not preparing the meal, you
are the meal
Alexandria
Alexandria = collaboration
•People start well-meaning but green•Collaborate and build skills• Experience can teach•All found common goal• Learned to fend for themselves, but
first needed leadership, skills-building and inspiration
Chaos
On the road
Hershel’s Farm
Pre-redevelopment
Finished (for now) product
Our project scope
• CMS better fits college needs, scalable to future• Make web content more user-centered• Easier access to content editing (including
mobile)• Implement open-source, more widely used CMS
(Drupal) that also allows for editor skill building• Change from scheduled publishing (hourly) to
(almost instant) updates • Simplify templates/calls to action
Not so small
• Rebuild 132 sites (starting with 150+)• Migrate nearly 13K pages/components• Restructure navigation architecture• Train hundreds of editors• Build custom theme/install• Create custom page types (program pages,
faculty/staff bios, landing pages) and custom modules• OPEN DIALOGUE ON COLLABORATION
Photo of our digital strategy
Tools/tactics for collaboration
• Web content brief: Who is your audience, what tasks do they need to accomplish, why should they take action?• Meet with department chairs/lead editors• Link-checker, esp. for zombie link farms• Web content audit• Iterative development• Shared understanding of goals• Roles/responsibilities for all parties
Web content brief
Web content audit
Review pages with analytics and for accuracyPlace into categories, that could include• Keep (more or less as is)• Review (ask subject expert to see if
accurate/updated)• Revise• Delete (my favorite!)
Web content audit
When do you step in to help?
Continuous learning
• Now offer service-level model: People can submit updates to us (might be easier than if they use CMS once a year)• Rolling audits and follow-ups• Blog and touchpoints when we create new modules• Online documentation• Factor what our editors want or suggest in future
build priorities• Less about technology, more about content
Refreshing Oswego blog
Road ahead
• Establish digital strategy• Governance Bill of Rights --
@ShelleyKeith, thank you• Extreme makeover of more sites, which
partners welcome• Continue rolling out/communicating new
features•More regular review/feedback of sites
Success via distributed model?
A. ImpossibleB. Nearly impossibleC.Difficult but worth tryingD.Easy peasy
Believe in possibility