<?xml version="1.0"?>
<rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Free Ezine Content And Articles Submission Service</title><link>http://www.ezinearticles.biz</link><description>Search hundreds of free ezine articles from reputed authors</description><language>en-us</language><copyright>copyright 2004 ezinearticles.biz</copyright><docs>http://www.ezinearticles.biz/rss</docs><managingEditor>info@hostdude.net</managingEditor><webMaster>webmaster@ezinead.net</webMaster><item><title>Web 2.0  Are you Isolated?</title><category>Website Design</category><description>&lt;p&gt;There is considerable variation in understanding what the phrase Web 2.0 really &amp;nbsp;means. Tim OReilly of OReilly Media refers to Web 2.0 as a new business&amp;nbsp;revolution caused by moving to the Internet as a platform and an attempt to&amp;nbsp;understand the rules of success on the new platform.  In general it is widely&amp;nbsp;believed that Web 2.0 refers to second generation of Web based communities, social&amp;nbsp;networking sites, wikis, blogs, RSS feeds, collaborative categorization of content&amp;nbsp;and folksonomies. This is further emphasized by the evolving concept of full&amp;nbsp;interactivity between users and providers. A user on a Web 2.0 platform can upload&amp;nbsp;content in addition to downloading it from the existing Websites.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Web 2.0 could stands for any or all of the following&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;	Breaking the barriers isolating content and functionality on current &amp;nbsp;Websites.&amp;nbsp;	Changing the manner in which Web content is generated and distributed based &amp;nbsp;on open communication, decentralizing content creation and use through social &amp;nbsp;networking phenomena&amp;nbsp;	Superior categorization and organization of content through collaborative &amp;nbsp;action&amp;nbsp;	Separating functionality and Web technology &amp;nbsp;With all the hype surrounding Web 2.0, it is not surprising at all to see &amp;nbsp;organizations of all sizes scrambling to ensure an interactive customer experience &amp;nbsp;by deploying an array of technologies and concepts such as Wikis, blogs, RSS feeds &amp;nbsp;and podcasts. The basic objective of a Web 2.0 Website is to engage effectively with &amp;nbsp;users  making it imperative to measure the success of their online initiatives by &amp;nbsp;tracking and analyzing different sources of user content such as feedback, comments, &amp;nbsp;votes, subscriptions, leads and even the number of downloads.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;What makes Web 2.0 tick?&amp;nbsp;A whole new set of technologies have come together in creating this new business&amp;nbsp;platform. These technologies range from a host of server side software components,&amp;nbsp;content syndication tools, messaging protocols, extension to browsers and client&amp;nbsp;side applications. Broadly these could include:&amp;nbsp;	Rich Internet application usually Ajax-based&amp;nbsp;	CSS, Valid HTML and use of micro-formats&amp;nbsp;	Syndication and aggregation of data with RSS&amp;nbsp;	Meaningful and relevant URLs&amp;nbsp;	Liberal use of folksonomies (tags,  tagclouds, freely chosen keywords)&amp;nbsp;	Using wiki software on the  Website&amp;nbsp;	Weblog publishing, mashups&amp;nbsp;	Technologies like SOAP, Web services etc.&amp;nbsp;	User-friendly Website content-management systems (WCMS). &amp;nbsp;	Optimized search engine capability for frequently-used keywords&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Adapting to Web 2.0 &amp;nbsp;While these technologies have given organizations a significant opportunity to build&amp;nbsp;close relationships with their customers, they have also presented new challenges.&amp;nbsp;Web 2.0 sites demand a higher level of interaction where content can be served in&amp;nbsp;multiple formats, and create, edit or retire content as they desire. The shift is&amp;nbsp;essentially from a static form of serving Web pages one way to one of breaking down &amp;nbsp;silos where the focus is more on participation, collaboration and interaction. &amp;nbsp;What does this paradigm shift mean for your Website? For one, when you consider that &amp;nbsp;managing and updating content on a Website is a challenge task in itself, the &amp;nbsp;additional requirements of usability, design and information architecture are enough &amp;nbsp;to push things over the edge. Add to this the complexity of multiple file formats, &amp;nbsp;delivery methods and user generated content.&amp;nbsp;Other significant challenges lurking round the corner are: &amp;nbsp;	Creation of unstructured and ad-hoc content can soon become unmanageable /li&gt;&amp;nbsp;Managing and moderating information posted by user community and readers &amp;nbsp;Presenting content in different forms such as podcast, blogs or Wikis.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The second generation Web is a big shift in both technology but also in customers &amp;nbsp;expectation. The users look for a rich user interface, seamless participation,&amp;nbsp;community based services, content categorization and trust  all built on a&amp;nbsp;decentralized infrastructure. At its core a Web content management system (CMS)&amp;nbsp;must provide the ability to edit contents through a user-friendly and&amp;nbsp;technology-neutral interface. Also consider that when a community actively&amp;nbsp;participates in adding and editing content on your Websites, security will quickly&amp;nbsp;become a prime concern. User-friendly interfaces along with a robust content&amp;nbsp;monitoring system, and security are basic requirements of any WCM in a Web 2.0&amp;nbsp;environment.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The Web 2.0 users demand an interface that is functionally rich, easy to use, and &amp;nbsp;helps in publishing content quickly. You do not want your users that are well tuned &amp;nbsp;to using sites such as Flickr or Blogger, getting frustrated about the complexities &amp;nbsp;of interacting and posting content to your companys blog.  Further, different forms &amp;nbsp;of metadata such as rating or tagging by voters introduce new layers of &amp;nbsp;intricacy in managing content. Additional challenges in content management arise due &amp;nbsp;to multiple types of digital devices. Organizations, which stick to manual process &amp;nbsp;for updating of content, or deploy a CMS that tightly binds content to the &amp;nbsp;structure, are only reinforcing the silos that are fast becoming obsolete.  &amp;nbsp;Syndicating content in standard Web feeds such as RSS or Atom is not a trivial task. &amp;nbsp;Often non-technical subject matter experts struggle to update or publish news feeds &amp;nbsp;themselves. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;How can a Website CMS help?&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Website content management systems help businesses maintain &amp;nbsp;consistency across different digital assets on their Website so that branding and &amp;nbsp;design are controlled to the level desired (style sheets, templates, etc.), &amp;nbsp;regardless of who is responsible for the actual content.  As a result, visitors have &amp;nbsp;a consistent and professional experience on a Website managed through a content &amp;nbsp;management system.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;A CMS geared for Web 2.0 allows publishing of multiple forms of content all fed from &amp;nbsp;a single source. It enables creation and dissemination of content to a wide range of &amp;nbsp;audience in multiple mediums a breeze. Some examples are: &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Blogs: Most blogs posted by companies lack workflow or approvals &amp;nbsp;process for content that is published or comments that are posted. These &amp;nbsp;organizations can use a CMS to exercise greater control over their corporate blogs &amp;nbsp;by employing workflow, approvals and archiving both postings and comments. A content &amp;nbsp;management system can play an important role in an organizations Web 2.0 strategy, &amp;nbsp;as it ensures that content passes through appropriate quality gates before being &amp;nbsp;published.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;RSS feeds: A CMS can be setup for automatically publishing content as RSS feeds. &amp;nbsp;Whats more, visitors to a companys site can personalize their RSS feeds by &amp;nbsp;defining a keyword or phrase. When new content related to the keyword or phrase &amp;nbsp;appears on the Website, personalized content is automatically pushed to the &amp;nbsp;recipient.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Podcasts: A versatile CMS can facilitate publishing of digital &amp;nbsp;assets such as audio and video files, and simplify the process by which a customer &amp;nbsp;publishes the XML associated with the Podcast RSS feed. As a result, users can &amp;nbsp;easily subscribe to the podcast. Most importantly, all versions are maintained &amp;nbsp;enabling subscribers to have a complete archive of all podcasts that were issued.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Social Networking: Static content is out  and user generated &amp;nbsp;content is in. Inbound content plays a significant role in gauging responses of user &amp;nbsp;community. It is unavoidable for organizations to employ a mechanism to pull data &amp;nbsp;and its categorization posted by users. The CMS enables users to directly post data &amp;nbsp;with folksonomy, tag clouds, ratings and comments. Analysis of this content provides &amp;nbsp;organizations useful metrics to measure the success of their online initiatives. &amp;nbsp;The beauty of a Website CMS is that it gives a wide range of flexibility without &amp;nbsp;losing control. For instance, completely configurable workflows enable organizations &amp;nbsp;to assign tasks to any person, and escalate in case defined thresholds are crossed. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;For example, e-mail alerts can be sent to content owners of specific sections on a &amp;nbsp;Website, when these sections dont get updated after a specific time period. Imagine &amp;nbsp;doing this manually in a dynamic environment.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;How will this affect my Budget?&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;A full Website CMS based on SaaS delivers all functionality to manage a Web 2.0 &amp;nbsp;enables properties without making a dent in your budget. By accessing software as &amp;nbsp;a service, you are spared the high initial cost of buying a license. Moreover, as &amp;nbsp;the software is hosted, there is no additional hardware to buy and no software to &amp;nbsp;configure and install. You pay a fixed monthly or quarterly subscription fee and &amp;nbsp;leave the task of managing, maintaining and up gradation to the service provider. &amp;nbsp;Organizations also save as they do not have to engage a developer to tweaks the HTML &amp;nbsp;code or template, or a Webmaster to take care of hosting. By using a SaaS model, &amp;nbsp;organizations can also cut down on their risk, and choose different functionalities &amp;nbsp;as they grow or unplug if they want. Further, as billing is on a monthly or &amp;nbsp;quarterly basis, the cost is spread across the lifetime of a products usage and the &amp;nbsp;risk of product implementation and adoption are absorbed by the vendor and not the &amp;nbsp;customer.  &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The benefits continue even when you compare the SaaS model to other CMS models like &amp;nbsp;home grown solutions, and open source applications. Both the latter solutions need &amp;nbsp;considerable additional resources to handle support and maintenance. This is because&amp;nbsp;the hard part of a CMS starts only after the system goes live. It needs a dedicated &amp;nbsp;team for managing hardware, software and the network. In addition you will need an &amp;nbsp;expert who is always available 24/7 to modify a template, change a workflow, or &amp;nbsp;trouble-shoot an end-user problem. Every time you need to change a layout, make a &amp;nbsp;small change to your template or add a new section, you need a developer guiding &amp;nbsp;you. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Not surprising, it is estimated that close to 91% of all support requests for a CMS &amp;nbsp;are unrelated to software, but still require dedicated software personnel to solve &amp;nbsp;content related issues. The contracted support handles only 9% of your needs.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Web 2.0 Success = Content + Interaction&amp;nbsp;Content is the key to the success in achieving your business goals in a Web 2.0&amp;nbsp;world. Content and interactivity will drive people to your site, and will instill &amp;nbsp;valuable opinion about your company in your customers or prospects. However, unless &amp;nbsp;the diverse parts of information landscape do not connect and talk to each other, &amp;nbsp;the ROI on online initiatives will remain unclear. With a Website CMS, you can &amp;nbsp;easily synchronize these disparate content components and catalyze the equation by &amp;nbsp;effectively engaging your customers or prospects.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;</description><resource>This article is contributed by Rob Rose - Vice President of Crownpeak. Content is the key to the success in achieving your business goals in a Web 2.0 world. With a [Website content management system (CMS)] (link: &lt;a href="http://www.crownpeak.com/"&gt;http://www.crownpeak.com/&lt;/a&gt;),you can easily synchronize content components and catalyze the quation by effectively engaging your customers or prospects.</resource><author>Bob Rose</author><pubDate>1201458600</pubDate><subTitle></subTitle></item></channel></rss>
