Creation
Adding Content
Some of the key challenges facing an organization are enabling a
large number of contributors to add knowledge to the system, and to
do so quickly and simply. Some content management suites rely on
third party software for this purpose. While there are clear
advantages in certain cases from using popular office applications,
these do not give the user an accurate feel of how the content will
appear in context. Specialist HTML design tools on the other hand
are not mainly geared to content entry, and present a steeper
learning curve for the non-technical user.
Immediacy Editor provides an ideal solution, offering office
style content entry directly into a WYSIWYG editing screen. Users
familiar with normal Office applications will immediately feel at
home with the screen layout and tool bars offered. Images, tables,
rules, lists, links, bookmarks and other elements are all quickly
and intuitively inserted, and formatted. This content is created
directly as HTML. When the page is saved the content is validated
and converted to XML/XHTML. This allows it to be re-purposed for
another platform.
In addition to direct entry, Immediacy Editor provides flexible
import facilities. It is possible to paste directly from Word or
Excel and other document sources, into the program. During the
paste process intelligent re-formatting removes unwanted code and
converts the document to the correct departmental style. It is also
possible to import or drag and drop Office 2003 documents directly
into the editor. This allows the extremely rapid creation of fully
formatted web pages from standard office documents. Alternatively
these documents can be linked into the site.
To ensure a consistent look and feel across the site, Immediacy
Editor uses style sheets during editing. These are defined in
advance for a corporate or departmental style. Style sheets may be
created and edited in Immediacy Designer or in any other suitable
editing tool. The program supports multiple style sheets, and
different style sheets may be used for different parts of the site
or for different sites within an organisation. Given appropriate
user permissions, changing between one style sheet and another
requires no more than a simple selection from a list. Selecting a
different style sheet potentially changes the look and feel of that
page significantly. This can include the background, the choice of
fonts, type, sizes, colour and a whole host of pre-set features
that form part of style sheet capabilities.
Subject to permission settings, a user can also change the
template for a page. Changing the template allows for a much more
radical change of output, which together with XML based content
storage, enables re-purposing of content. A template contains
default content and visual design elements for a page or a section
of the site, and includes defined areas that the user can edit. If
templates are designed with common editable areas a page may be
switched from one template to another with no loss of content. The
page is completely re-assembled into the new template elements.
Adding Content Properties
In addition to creating and adding content, a vital part of
content management, and a feature that separates it from simple
page creation, is the ability to add Meta data and attributes.
These may be used to provide personalised information to a user, to
refine searches, for indexing, cataloguing and so on.
Immediacy Editor supports creation and
editing of a wide set of attributes. Certain attributes, including
version number, author and date last updated, are generated
automatically as the software is used. Other properties provided as
standard include, keywords, description, title, page live date,
page expiry date, end user access rights (i.e. page access
controlled by user log-on), show or hide the page in the menu, mark
a page as subscribe-able, mark a page change as newsworthy, add a
page to latest news, and add a page to site headlines. These
properties give great flexibility in page use and deployment.
The ability to modify content
properties is common to both editors and administrators. In many
cases editors are most likely to know the specific details of the
properties and attributes that are relevant to a particular piece
of content. At other times these values require an administrator's
input. Both content and property changes need to be approved by an
authorised approver before being made live.