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Home > Temple U Solves Content Management Challenge
Case Study
Temple U Solves Content Management Challenge
7/11/2007
By Linda L Briggs
With roughly half a million pages of content on more than 500 well used Web sites, Temple University faced a huge challenge in getting content management under control.
Temple, located near downtown Philadelphia, has some 34,000 students across 17 campuses around the world. Using a Web publishing product from Adobe called Contribute, thousands of users--literally anyone at the university with the right permissions--now can participate in posting and updating website content themselves. The decentralized system is saving the university significantly by allowing university departments, rather than the IT department, to create, edit, publish, and control their own Web content.
"It really has changed our whole organization. It takes the pressure off [the computer services] group," according to Sheri Stahler, associate vice president of computer services at Temple. "Instead of doing a lot of maintenance,... we can focus on new design."
Contribute was originally launched in 2002 by Macromedia, since acquired by Adobe, as an easy to use Web publishing tool for users of its Dreamweaver Web development toolset, now an Adobe product. Contribute now offers Web publishing features including the ability to update both websites and blogs with little or no technical expertise. Dreamweaver templates can be created to ensure consistency across multiple related sites, something that Temple has done.
Users at Temple are thrilled with the system, Stahler said, because control has shifted from IT to individual departments, which can now create their own approval systems for content and decide themselves when and what to post. "They don't need to hire a Webmaster. Instead, they just need a content manager."
Centralized ControlContribute allows the computer services department to create standards of control such as global designs, logos, headers and footers, while allowing departments creativity within the those templates, according to Karl Horvath, assistant director for computer services at Temple.
The university's savings are too large and diverse to even enumerate, Stahler said. "Schools [within the university] that thought they were so unique that they had to go to an outside vendor are now realizing ... [that they] have so much control over their content with Contribute."
As an example, she cited Temple's medical school, one of the IT department's first customers to move to Contribute. The medical school had spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on an outside vendor who designed its Web site. "It was very hard to modify; it was hard to update," Stahler said, and the site's usability was poor. The medical school content, now in Contribute, is managed by the medical school itself, resulting in huge savings.
"This approach was easy [and] didn't require a lot of training for the end user.... I just can't say enough about it," Stahler said. And the overall cost of Contribute, she said, was a fraction of what she had originally planned on spending on content management.
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