2. Aims Ask the question: Which CMS is best for me? Understand the main concepts See a range of CMS options Gain an understanding of what to look for in your business...
3. Agenda Overview of terms Understanding requirements Common tools/vendors/products User scenarios/Support models 5 mini-sessions Panel of experts
4. Terms Content Content Management Systems (CMS) Web Content Management (WCM) Document Management Records Management Digital Asset Management Systems (DAMS) Enterprise Content Management (ECM)
5. Terms: Content Text Images, Video, Audio Tasks Forum, blog, wiki posts Forms Documents Records Polls, Surveys, Competitions, Ads, ...
6. Requirements Structured Data Centralised publishing Auditing / Version control Workflow & Business Process Management Taxonomy & Search Collaboration Plus a million others...
9. Pricing Freemium (there’s less of them now...) Hosted On site development Product Services Finance packaging
10. Vendors & Products Vendors (there’s a few...) Open source vs Closed Source Entry / Mid / Enterprise level Following image credits: James Robertson – Step Two – slideshare
24. WordPress Open source Self hosted & WordPress hosted Large community > 4000 plugins/themes/widgets Entry level Primitive content management tools
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34. WordPress For Inexpensive 1-click install on many hosting companies Simple to customise Thousands of plugins Against Rudimentry content management Basic functionality Fiddly to program/style
36. DotNetNuke Open source .NET based More than half a million installations Now offering a Professional version Monetized 3rd party add-ons strategy Biggest UI feature: move modules around
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40. DNN Demo Create a DNN demo portal http://demo.dotnetnuke.com/tabid/36/ctl/Signup/Default.aspx
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42. DotNetNuke For Solid, mature .NET option Huge install base + thousands of add-ons Constantly improving Professional support model Against Styling can be tricky Admin can be frustrating Data migration can be difficult