Title: Content Management Systems: Who Makes the Rules?
1Content Management Systems Who Makes the Rules?
- Jill Katte, Duke University
- David Mitchell, Wyeth Vaccines
- NHPRC Electronic Records Research Fellowship
- October 2006
2- Why this idea?
- Managing the Digital University Desktop data
- Websites as containers of archival content
- (see Pearce-Moses presentation, 2004)
- Duke University CMS initiatives
3- Assumptions and parameters
- Assumption webmasters and archivists may be
missing opportunities to collaborate - Parameter focus on website content management,
not learning management
4- Research questions
- How are our peer institutions using website CMS?
- How will a CMS affect information management at
Duke and elsewhere? - Do content managers follow official policies for
archiving expired web records? - Is long-term preservation a concern for CMS
administrators? - What CMS tools could be used to identify archival
content and transfer it to an archival repository?
5- Project Goals
- Identify opportunities/obstacles in collaboration
between archivists web content managers - Conduct small pilot program in preserving CMS
content in archival repository - Raise awareness of archives/preservation concerns
to CMS administrators
6- Scope and methodology
- Dukes peer institutions doctoral/research
universities, extensive - Brief initial survey of archivists and webmasters
to identify web CMS users, ER policies, interview
volunteers - In-depth telephone interviews
7- Initial Survey Questions
- Does your institution use a content management
system (CMS) to manage its Web site(s)? - Which CMS does your institution use (or plan to
use) to manage website content? (Please list all,
including home-grown systems) - Does your institution have a policy for
preserving website content? - Would you be willing to discuss the use of CMS in
greater detail as part of this research project?
(if yes, enter email address)
8- Initial web-based survey
- 95 total respondents
- 65 webmasters
- 30 archivists
9- Q1. Does your institution use a content
management system (CMS) to manage its Web
site(s)? - 39 Yes
- 28 No, but we plan to use
- 14 No, do not use, do not plan to
- 0 Previously used, but abandoned
- 19 Dont know
10- Q2. Which CMS does your institution use (or plan
to use) to manage website content? - Top three responses
- Home-grown systems
- CommonSpot
- Collage, RedDot, Stellent
11 Home-grown CommonSpot Collage RedDot CMS Stellent
Approximate Cost ? Starts at19,000 Starts at 10,000 Starts at 55,000 ?
Audit Trail ? Yes Yes Yes Yes
Content Approval ? Yes Yes Yes Yes
Granular Privileges ? Yes Yes Yes Yes
Versioning ? Yes Yes Yes Yes
Zip Archives ? No ? ? Yes
Static Content Export ? Yes Yes Yes Yes
Content Scheduling ? Yes Yes Yes Yes
Content Staging ? Yes Yes Yes Yes
Workflow Engine ? Yes Yes Yes Yes
Metadata ? Yes Yes Yes Yes
Document Management ? Yes No Costs Extra Yes
Data from CMSmatrix.org
12- Q3. Does your institution have a policy for
preserving website content? - 18 Yes
- 61 No
- 21 Dont know
13- Initial Survey Summary
- Web CMS becoming more widely adopted
- Home-grown systems prevalent
- Most products advertise versioning, metadata,
workflow management, of some kind - Web records policies either dont exist, or are
not well-known
14- In-depth phone interviews
- Five sections
- Planning and decision-making
- Implementation and workflow
- Web electronic records policies
- Archiving website content
- Collaboration
15- Interview Results and Conclusions
16- Sections 1-2 Planning Implementation
- Most web CMS
- In use for less than 1 year implementation
phase varies - Offers workflow management tools, but not being
fully implemented - Collects metadata about content, but not much
beyond standard file maintenance info
17- Section 3 Web Electronic Records Policies
- Most interviewed do consider at least part of
website to be an official university record - About half interviewed had electronic records
management policy - Most said web content was not included in those
policies - Most had no metadata guidelines for electronic
records
18- Section 4 Archiving
- Do content managers follow official policies for
archiving expired web records? - No formal policies
- Content owners decide
- Not saving versions
- Decision making is widely distributed
19- Section 4 Archiving
- Preparedness
- 10 of 15 are totally unprepared or unprepared to
archive website content - 7 are totally unprepared or unprepared to
retrieve and reconstruct archived website content
20- Section 5 Collaboration
- Collaboration on policy setting
- 11 of 15 experienced no or very little
collaboration between webmasters and
archivists/records managers
21- Section 5 Collaboration
- Collaboration with other campus units regarding
guidelines for archiving or setting expiration
dates - 8 of 15 said no (but 5 of 15 said yes)
22- Sections 4-5 Archiving Collaboration
- Hindrances?
- No direction/communication about policy
- Lack of interest
- No perceived need
- Resource issues
23- Content Management Systems
- Who Makes the Rules?
- No one makes the rules
- and
- Everyone makes the rules
24- Project website
- Content Management Systems
- Who Makes the Rules?
- http//www.duke.edu/web/CMSproject
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