The document discusses creating sustainable website processes. It advocates designing websites using modular content patterns to make content management easier for clients. The speaker describes identifying common content blocks during the design phase and mapping them. This informs how content is developed and structured in the CMS. It results in flexible, reusable content that is easy for clients to manage and scale over time, preventing issues like outdated content. A case study example shows how conceptualizing content in repeatable blocks transformed a complex marketing site into a sustainable one that could grow with the client's needs.
Higher Ed Web 2013 presentation - Field of Dreams, build it and they will comePromet Source
Grinnell College in Iowa had a website that wasn’t representing the school well, and an intranet system that had been hijacked by users to bypass the main site. When tasked with redesigning the site, Grinnell needed to differentiate itself from its peers, and bring users back. Grinnell boasts rigorous academics, an active campus, and fantastic facilities, but many schools can claim the same. One differentiator is that Grinnell celebrates the individual. Through its welcoming culture of self-governance and the ability to create your own curriculum, the college empowers students to carve their own way through the college experience. It is not the only school that allows a student to do this, though it is one of the few.
So we asked: how do we distinguish Grinnell's unique take on crafting an individual education from its peers? How do we show the activities and news happening on campus? How does Grinnell bring users back from the intranet? How do we make as many departments as possible happy with a full redesign? And lastly, how do we best use Drupal to make it all happen? We decided to demonstrate it with a website that allows users to customize their experience on the site. Learn how Grinnell College, Promet Source (the developers) and Rogue Element (the design firm) worked together to create a customizable website: how Rogue designed it, how Promet built it and how Grinnell planned to use it.
the third class of the spring 2017 untangling the web series
with a guest presentation by Chris Hawkins of Authentic business solutions https://authenticlab.ca/
These are the slides from my talk "Your WebPerf Sucks" at HK CodeConf 2015 (http://hongkong.codeconf.io) at Science Park in Hong Kong, October 24th.
Web Performance is an important aspect of building for the web and this talk highlights different aspects of what is important and what can be done to improve web performance and build faster sites. While mentioning different aspects of possible improvements, the main focus lies on optimising the critical rendering path to get pages on the screen faster and what tools can help to do so.
Digital project managers need both hard skills and soft skills. For some, the soft skills are a challenge or an afterthought. Think about it – Do you have the mechanics down pat? Do you focus on the project logistics first? So, at what point do you consider the people involved, and your relationship with each of them?
If you follow the Project Management Triangle, which focuses on constraints such as scope, schedule, and resources, then you may be forgetting an opportunity. The Triangle doesn't tell the whole story and is missing a key component; it's missing the opportunity to build and leverage relationships. Relationships are what make the DPM world go-round, whether you work in-house or at an agency.
IN THIS PRESENTATION, YOU’LL LEARN:
- Some differences between working at an agency and in-house
- Why to add relationships to your PM Triangle to achieve greater success, regardless of where you work
- What it takes to leverage relationships to allow the points of the Triangle to flex and adjust, depending on the situation
*Presented at the Digital PM Summit, October 2016. Copyrighted by Elizabeth Michalka.
Higher Ed Web 2013 presentation - Field of Dreams, build it and they will comePromet Source
Grinnell College in Iowa had a website that wasn’t representing the school well, and an intranet system that had been hijacked by users to bypass the main site. When tasked with redesigning the site, Grinnell needed to differentiate itself from its peers, and bring users back. Grinnell boasts rigorous academics, an active campus, and fantastic facilities, but many schools can claim the same. One differentiator is that Grinnell celebrates the individual. Through its welcoming culture of self-governance and the ability to create your own curriculum, the college empowers students to carve their own way through the college experience. It is not the only school that allows a student to do this, though it is one of the few.
So we asked: how do we distinguish Grinnell's unique take on crafting an individual education from its peers? How do we show the activities and news happening on campus? How does Grinnell bring users back from the intranet? How do we make as many departments as possible happy with a full redesign? And lastly, how do we best use Drupal to make it all happen? We decided to demonstrate it with a website that allows users to customize their experience on the site. Learn how Grinnell College, Promet Source (the developers) and Rogue Element (the design firm) worked together to create a customizable website: how Rogue designed it, how Promet built it and how Grinnell planned to use it.
the third class of the spring 2017 untangling the web series
with a guest presentation by Chris Hawkins of Authentic business solutions https://authenticlab.ca/
These are the slides from my talk "Your WebPerf Sucks" at HK CodeConf 2015 (http://hongkong.codeconf.io) at Science Park in Hong Kong, October 24th.
Web Performance is an important aspect of building for the web and this talk highlights different aspects of what is important and what can be done to improve web performance and build faster sites. While mentioning different aspects of possible improvements, the main focus lies on optimising the critical rendering path to get pages on the screen faster and what tools can help to do so.
Digital project managers need both hard skills and soft skills. For some, the soft skills are a challenge or an afterthought. Think about it – Do you have the mechanics down pat? Do you focus on the project logistics first? So, at what point do you consider the people involved, and your relationship with each of them?
If you follow the Project Management Triangle, which focuses on constraints such as scope, schedule, and resources, then you may be forgetting an opportunity. The Triangle doesn't tell the whole story and is missing a key component; it's missing the opportunity to build and leverage relationships. Relationships are what make the DPM world go-round, whether you work in-house or at an agency.
IN THIS PRESENTATION, YOU’LL LEARN:
- Some differences between working at an agency and in-house
- Why to add relationships to your PM Triangle to achieve greater success, regardless of where you work
- What it takes to leverage relationships to allow the points of the Triangle to flex and adjust, depending on the situation
*Presented at the Digital PM Summit, October 2016. Copyrighted by Elizabeth Michalka.
Tackling Teams & SharePoint Site Sprawl: Why It Matters & What You Need To KnowRichard Harbridge
Without an effective governance strategy in place, Microsoft Teams and SharePoint Sites can quickly go from an organized and effective workspace to an out-of-control, sprawling digital wasteland. Sound familiar?
It’s very common for organizations to experience Microsoft Teams & SharePoint Sites sprawl. But, when it does happen, how can you tackle it?
Join Microsoft MVP & 2toLead CTO, Richard Harbridge, as he explores:
* Challenges organizations face with Microsoft Teams & SharePoint Sites sprawl.
* Solutions to tackle Microsoft Teams & SharePoint Sites sprawl.
* Best practices to get more from Microsoft Teams & SharePoint.
* Real-world guidance on out-of-the-box solutions and custom approaches.
* How Microsoft 365 can improve experiences, management and organizational outcomes.
Stuart Church, director of Pure Usability, teamed up with Pete Walker of the ILRT to run a workshop session at the Towards e-recruitment conference at the University of Warwick in January 2007. The session focussed on the need for a more user-centric approach to e-recruitment with Higher and Further Education.
Introducing Communication Sites for Communicators #spfestchi #CM101Kanwal Khipple
Are you an internal communicator who owns and manages the intranet? Are you looking to redesign your intranet but are not sure how Microsoft's Modern Communication sites fit into your project? Attend this session to learn about what features Communication Sites provide and how you can leverage them. This session will also be demo heavy to showcase key features that are available for 1st Release users in Office 365 tenants.
How to manage web projects without setting your hair on fireKathy Gill
It seems like everyone in the organization believes they know what makes a website "work" despite having no design training. Managers insist that "their" pages look or act in ways directly contrary to the rest of the website. Or the web.
What are the unique characteristics of the web that make managing design a challenge? How can we empower stakeholders while also creating a seamless user experience? And how would an iterative, collaborative design process facilitate a responsive web, one where sites work well on phones, tablets and desktops?
From Monoliths to Services: Paying Your Technical DebtTechWell
Ever since distributed software became popular, developers have been choosing whether to use monolithic architectures or service-oriented architectures. With the advancement of cloud infrastructure and the widespread implementation of agile methodologies, the latter approach has been getting much easier. David Litvak describes how a monolithic application—due to its ever increasing technical debt—can become too big to support. He explores how to gradually reduce the size by extracting its components into smaller services, so ultimately the application is decoupled and highly distributed. David describes the current situation of cloud services and software as a service providers, offering a list of these providers for many different uses. He shares an example of an e-commerce site implementation, starting with a full-blown traditional rails monolith and then moving toward a static site with automated rebuilds with CircleCI, Contentful as a decoupled CMS, Auth0 for authentication, and Snipcart as an e-Commerce as a Service provider. Join David as he shares how to create an architecture from interconnected services.
Presentation from the 2014 Product, Customer and User Experience Summit in Chicago on June 16, 2014. The presentation discusses the context for UX as strategy, provides an example of applying a UX approach to informing your business and experience strategy, measuring the impact of UX and what's needed to sustain and build upon the value of UX within an organization.
It includes all basics you need to know about web designing and if you did like the content being presented in the slides you can join our club to learn more interesting things about web designing.
Presentation by John Yesko at the 2011 Information Architecture Summit (IA Summit) entitled: "The User Experience Brief: The What and Why Before the How."
We IAs spend a lot of time discussing the “core” documents in information architecture—wireframes, site maps, prototypes. But we often jump into these very tactical, design-oriented deliverables too hastily.
The user experience brief takes on a more strategic role. Early in the project, it’s our vehicle to summarize what we know so far, particularly requirements and research results. More importantly though, it lays the foundation for the UX design approach, with the goals of gathering consensus and identifying sticking points early on. The user experience brief illuminates the organizing principles—user experience fundamentals to be followed and referenced throughout the project.
We’ll talk about the value of this early-project document, its role in shaping the user experience approach, how its composed, and its limitations. We’ll look at a number of great visual examples too. Introduced the right way and at the right time, the UX brief can be an invaluable stake in the ground with clients and internal stakeholders.
12 Rules for Building Your Product Management PlaybookJeremy Horn
Slides Ian Moulton recently used in his discussion w/ mentees of The Product Mentor.
The Product Mentor is a program designed to pair Product Mentors and Mentees from around the World, across all industries, from start-up to enterprise, guided by the fundamental goals…Better Decisions. Better Products. Better Product People.
Throughout the program, each mentor leads a conversation in an area of their expertise that is live streamed and available to both mentee and the broader product community.
http://TheProductMentor.com
Do you have an economic development website? Is it an effective marketing tool? How do you know if your website is dying? In 'Is Your Economic Development Website Dying,' we cover the following topics: best of the best in community branding online, tips for outstanding online content, functional website navigation and usability, how to use social media effectively, best practices in website analytics.
Future of Designing Collaboration Experiences in Office 365 #spshnlKanwal Khipple
Imagine a future where silo'd departments and legacy processes don’t stand in our way. Today’s collaboration needs go from complex collaboration portals to simple innovation hubs and most importantly need to work for our devices. Designing portals to enable a new kind of collaboration and communication is an absolute necessity today.
For the past couple years, I’ve had the opportunity to study how successful teams collaborate and have helped to transform the way teams work and collaborate together. In this session, I'll share what I’ve learned about making effective cross-discipline collaboration possible, and leave you with actionable approaches you can use to unite your team's communication and collaboration needs.
IN THIS SESSION YOU’LL HEAR:
• Why cross-discipline collaboration is essential to future-ready digital design, and how you can play a key role in creating the cross-departmental teams to enable innovation
• Real-life industry examples of what it takes to make effective collaboration possible
• Practical techniques you can use to bridge silos, increase productivity, and deliver better outcomes for your teams
Ground Control 2017 Talk.
It’s launch day! You and your team have worked hard to achieve this — the moment when you release your client’s website into the wild, ready to go off and live on its own. But wait! Is the client’s team equipped to handle the growing needs of their new website? Who will be making needed updates? Are other team members involved in content maintenance decisions? And will your client be able to deal with the design and development needs of the site as the site’s purpose grows?
Tackling Teams & SharePoint Site Sprawl: Why It Matters & What You Need To KnowRichard Harbridge
Without an effective governance strategy in place, Microsoft Teams and SharePoint Sites can quickly go from an organized and effective workspace to an out-of-control, sprawling digital wasteland. Sound familiar?
It’s very common for organizations to experience Microsoft Teams & SharePoint Sites sprawl. But, when it does happen, how can you tackle it?
Join Microsoft MVP & 2toLead CTO, Richard Harbridge, as he explores:
* Challenges organizations face with Microsoft Teams & SharePoint Sites sprawl.
* Solutions to tackle Microsoft Teams & SharePoint Sites sprawl.
* Best practices to get more from Microsoft Teams & SharePoint.
* Real-world guidance on out-of-the-box solutions and custom approaches.
* How Microsoft 365 can improve experiences, management and organizational outcomes.
Stuart Church, director of Pure Usability, teamed up with Pete Walker of the ILRT to run a workshop session at the Towards e-recruitment conference at the University of Warwick in January 2007. The session focussed on the need for a more user-centric approach to e-recruitment with Higher and Further Education.
Introducing Communication Sites for Communicators #spfestchi #CM101Kanwal Khipple
Are you an internal communicator who owns and manages the intranet? Are you looking to redesign your intranet but are not sure how Microsoft's Modern Communication sites fit into your project? Attend this session to learn about what features Communication Sites provide and how you can leverage them. This session will also be demo heavy to showcase key features that are available for 1st Release users in Office 365 tenants.
How to manage web projects without setting your hair on fireKathy Gill
It seems like everyone in the organization believes they know what makes a website "work" despite having no design training. Managers insist that "their" pages look or act in ways directly contrary to the rest of the website. Or the web.
What are the unique characteristics of the web that make managing design a challenge? How can we empower stakeholders while also creating a seamless user experience? And how would an iterative, collaborative design process facilitate a responsive web, one where sites work well on phones, tablets and desktops?
From Monoliths to Services: Paying Your Technical DebtTechWell
Ever since distributed software became popular, developers have been choosing whether to use monolithic architectures or service-oriented architectures. With the advancement of cloud infrastructure and the widespread implementation of agile methodologies, the latter approach has been getting much easier. David Litvak describes how a monolithic application—due to its ever increasing technical debt—can become too big to support. He explores how to gradually reduce the size by extracting its components into smaller services, so ultimately the application is decoupled and highly distributed. David describes the current situation of cloud services and software as a service providers, offering a list of these providers for many different uses. He shares an example of an e-commerce site implementation, starting with a full-blown traditional rails monolith and then moving toward a static site with automated rebuilds with CircleCI, Contentful as a decoupled CMS, Auth0 for authentication, and Snipcart as an e-Commerce as a Service provider. Join David as he shares how to create an architecture from interconnected services.
Presentation from the 2014 Product, Customer and User Experience Summit in Chicago on June 16, 2014. The presentation discusses the context for UX as strategy, provides an example of applying a UX approach to informing your business and experience strategy, measuring the impact of UX and what's needed to sustain and build upon the value of UX within an organization.
It includes all basics you need to know about web designing and if you did like the content being presented in the slides you can join our club to learn more interesting things about web designing.
Presentation by John Yesko at the 2011 Information Architecture Summit (IA Summit) entitled: "The User Experience Brief: The What and Why Before the How."
We IAs spend a lot of time discussing the “core” documents in information architecture—wireframes, site maps, prototypes. But we often jump into these very tactical, design-oriented deliverables too hastily.
The user experience brief takes on a more strategic role. Early in the project, it’s our vehicle to summarize what we know so far, particularly requirements and research results. More importantly though, it lays the foundation for the UX design approach, with the goals of gathering consensus and identifying sticking points early on. The user experience brief illuminates the organizing principles—user experience fundamentals to be followed and referenced throughout the project.
We’ll talk about the value of this early-project document, its role in shaping the user experience approach, how its composed, and its limitations. We’ll look at a number of great visual examples too. Introduced the right way and at the right time, the UX brief can be an invaluable stake in the ground with clients and internal stakeholders.
12 Rules for Building Your Product Management PlaybookJeremy Horn
Slides Ian Moulton recently used in his discussion w/ mentees of The Product Mentor.
The Product Mentor is a program designed to pair Product Mentors and Mentees from around the World, across all industries, from start-up to enterprise, guided by the fundamental goals…Better Decisions. Better Products. Better Product People.
Throughout the program, each mentor leads a conversation in an area of their expertise that is live streamed and available to both mentee and the broader product community.
http://TheProductMentor.com
Do you have an economic development website? Is it an effective marketing tool? How do you know if your website is dying? In 'Is Your Economic Development Website Dying,' we cover the following topics: best of the best in community branding online, tips for outstanding online content, functional website navigation and usability, how to use social media effectively, best practices in website analytics.
Future of Designing Collaboration Experiences in Office 365 #spshnlKanwal Khipple
Imagine a future where silo'd departments and legacy processes don’t stand in our way. Today’s collaboration needs go from complex collaboration portals to simple innovation hubs and most importantly need to work for our devices. Designing portals to enable a new kind of collaboration and communication is an absolute necessity today.
For the past couple years, I’ve had the opportunity to study how successful teams collaborate and have helped to transform the way teams work and collaborate together. In this session, I'll share what I’ve learned about making effective cross-discipline collaboration possible, and leave you with actionable approaches you can use to unite your team's communication and collaboration needs.
IN THIS SESSION YOU’LL HEAR:
• Why cross-discipline collaboration is essential to future-ready digital design, and how you can play a key role in creating the cross-departmental teams to enable innovation
• Real-life industry examples of what it takes to make effective collaboration possible
• Practical techniques you can use to bridge silos, increase productivity, and deliver better outcomes for your teams
Ground Control 2017 Talk.
It’s launch day! You and your team have worked hard to achieve this — the moment when you release your client’s website into the wild, ready to go off and live on its own. But wait! Is the client’s team equipped to handle the growing needs of their new website? Who will be making needed updates? Are other team members involved in content maintenance decisions? And will your client be able to deal with the design and development needs of the site as the site’s purpose grows?
In this talk I cover the reasons why you may want to use a remote team, the skillsets to consider when hiring a remote team, and tools, issues, pros and cons, and communication in managing remote teams.
Presented at the Sharatoga Tech Talks: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gs4GS4uHEIY
As a student you don't often get a lot of information on "nontraditional" options available after graduation. This talk will cover the highs, lows, and resources that will help with
- Freelancing
- Remote work
- Agency structures (specifically, the non graphic design positions)
- In-house work
Do You Really Need a Blog (and other important questions)Natalie Semczuk
Do you really need a blog? What about a website? Or a photo gallery or contact forms? This session will give you, the user, the tools and questions you need to ask yourself in order to build an effective and manageable website. Whether you want a website for your business, a blog about your dog, or a place to showcase your jewelry designs, this session will help you develop a content strategy that fits your needs and create a successful WordPress site.
The Search for the Holy Grail: Creating Tools and Processes For Your TeamNatalie Semczuk
The struggle to create and implement new project management processes or tools is a difficult one across all types of teams - agency, in-house, remote, or in office.
How do you know which questions to bring to the table when evaluating these tools and resources? Where do you even begin? The good news is the same questions can be applied across all work environments. The bad news is, not all resources are created equally. This talk will arm attendees with an understand of how new systems can be implemented with their own projects or clients, and how these changes can be accomplished with as little pain as possible.
Mind the Gap: Navigating the Space Between College and CareerNatalie Semczuk
Navigating the space between college and career.
Presented at the Upstate NY AIGA Portfolio Building Workshop on 1/28/2014 at The Foundry for Art, Design + Culture in Cohoes, NY.
Artificial intelligence (AI) offers new opportunities to radically reinvent the way we do business. This study explores how CEOs and top decision makers around the world are responding to the transformative potential of AI.
The Team Member and Guest Experience - Lead and Take Care of your restaurant team. They are the people closest to and delivering Hospitality to your paying Guests!
Make the call, and we can assist you.
408-784-7371
Foodservice Consulting + Design
Oprah Winfrey: A Leader in Media, Philanthropy, and Empowerment | CIO Women M...CIOWomenMagazine
This person is none other than Oprah Winfrey, a highly influential figure whose impact extends beyond television. This article will delve into the remarkable life and lasting legacy of Oprah. Her story serves as a reminder of the importance of perseverance, compassion, and firm determination.
Modern Database Management 12th Global Edition by Hoffer solution manual.docxssuserf63bd7
https://qidiantiku.com/solution-manual-for-modern-database-management-12th-global-edition-by-hoffer.shtml
name:Solution manual for Modern Database Management 12th Global Edition by Hoffer
Edition:12th Global Edition
author:by Hoffer
ISBN:ISBN 10: 0133544613 / ISBN 13: 9780133544619
type:solution manual
format:word/zip
All chapter include
Focusing on what leading database practitioners say are the most important aspects to database development, Modern Database Management presents sound pedagogy, and topics that are critical for the practical success of database professionals. The 12th Edition further facilitates learning with illustrations that clarify important concepts and new media resources that make some of the more challenging material more engaging. Also included are general updates and expanded material in the areas undergoing rapid change due to improved managerial practices, database design tools and methodologies, and database technology.
4. SUSTAINABLE
WEBSITE
PROCESSES
• Considers the content manager
• Makes scaling the site easier
• Helps your team provide support
• Provides a better foundation for post-
launch site maintenance, growth and usage
8. WEBSITES
EVOLVE
Website changes and maintenance are
inevitable. Why not make it as easy,
consistent, and valuable as you can
for both yourself and your clients?
19. SUZANNE
CHAPMAN
csffct.co/uslib
“…Organizations with large websites have a
growing problem with…“content debt.” And
like with “deferred maintenance” of
buildings (the practice of postponing repairs
to save costs), allowing too much…content
debt will result in costing you much more in
the long run.”
20. SUZANNE
CHAPMAN
csffct.co/uslib
“…Organizations with large websites have a
growing problem with…“content debt.” And
like with “deferred maintenance” of
buildings (the practice of postponing repairs
to save costs), allowing too much…content
debt will result in costing you much more in
the long run.”
21. SUZANNE
CHAPMAN
csffct.co/uslib
“…Organizations with large websites have a
growing problem with…“content debt.” And
like with “deferred maintenance” of
buildings (the practice of postponing repairs
to save costs), allowing too much…content
debt will result in costing you much more in
the long run.”
22. MELODY
KRAMER
csffct.co/18fcdb
“Buildup of content debt may not be as
apparent as technical debt, because it’s
unlikely to initially cause software to break.
Still, it could easily result in confusion…a
greater need for customer support, slower
progress, the need for more meetings, more
external and internal complaints, and wasted
time getting people on-boarded…”
23. MELODY
KRAMER
csffct.co/18fcdb
“Buildup of content debt may not be as
apparent as technical debt, because it’s
unlikely to initially cause software to break.
Still, it could easily result in confusion…a
greater need for customer support, slower
progress, the need for more meetings, more
external and internal complaints, and wasted
time getting people on-boarded…”
24. MELODY
KRAMER
csffct.co/18fcdb
“Buildup of content debt may not be as
apparent as technical debt, because it’s
unlikely to initially cause software to break.
Still, it could easily result in confusion…a
greater need for customer support, slower
progress, the need for more meetings, more
external and internal complaints, and wasted
time getting people on-boarded…”
35. CONTENT
DEBT CAN
TAKE THE
FORM OF:
Outdated content
Difficult to find content
Bloated upload directories
Broken links
Content styling & display errors
61. CREATE A POOL OF
QUESTIONS YOU
MIGHT ASK YOUR
CLIENT ABOUT
CONTENT
MANAGEMENT
Activity
62. CREATE A POOL OF
QUESTIONS YOU
MIGHT ASK YOUR
CLIENT ABOUT
CONTENT
MANAGEMENT
Activity
Hint:
Use “the 5 whys” to dig
into the root of your
questions.
63. DISCUSS:
What questions did everyone come
up with?
What sort of questions did you end
up needing to break down?
Did these lead to further questions?
What is a common unclear area that
might be resolved with questions?
64. SORT YOUR
QUESTIONS INTO A
CHRONOLOGICAL
CHART: WHERE IN THE
CONTENT PROCESS DO
THESE QUESTIONS FIT?
Activity
65. SORT YOUR
QUESTIONS INTO A
CHRONOLOGICAL
CHART: WHERE IN THE
CONTENT PROCESS DO
THESE QUESTIONS FIT?
Activity
1. Needs discovered
2. Creation
3. Approval
4. Publication
66. DISCUSS:
Where you able to see these distinct
stages of content creation in your
questions?
Did you identify gaps in your
questions?
67. WE CAN USE THESE
TECHNIQUES TO
CREATE A CONTENT
WORKFLOW &
RESPONSIBILITIES
MAP
70. OVERALL
GOALS:
• Educate ourselves and our clients about
their content management workflow
• Get clients thinking about their own
process
• Manage expectations from the start
• Provide value prior to final launched
product
108. BY IDENTIFYING
THOSE CONTENT
PATTERNS IN
THE DESIGN, WE:
Define content with existing design
and front-end patterns
Flag content that does not fit well
within patterns
109. BY IDENTIFYING
THOSE CONTENT
PATTERNS IN
THE DESIGN, WE:
Define content with existing design
and front-end patterns
Flag content that does not fit well
within patterns
Identify content that will be used and
updated similarly
110. BY IDENTIFYING
THOSE CONTENT
PATTERNS IN
THE DESIGN, WE:
Define content with existing design
and front-end patterns
Flag content that does not fit well
within patterns
Identify content that will be used and
updated similarly
Create specs for content field and entry
types
111. BY IDENTIFYING
THOSE CONTENT
PATTERNS IN
THE DESIGN, WE:
Define content with existing design
and front-end patterns
Flag content that does not fit well
within patterns
Identify content that will be used and
updated similarly
Create specs for content field and entry
types
123. SITE
CONSIDERATIONS
AND DISCOVERIES:
• Uses Craft CMS
• Has strong, clear company branding
guidelines
• Creates many one-off marketing
landing pages
• Uses CTA, product marketing, and
resource messaging repeatedly
throughout the site
• Has a content-heavy site, but with
new content offerings and a growing
marketing plan
• Relies on a small team & tight
deadlines to administer the site