4 posts tagged “cms”
Thanks to Holly Ross and the entire Nten staff for last week's annual Nonprofit Technology Conference, held in New Orleans. With so many worthwhile sessions taking place during the three days, the hardest part was choosing which sections to attend. I was also fortunate to receive what was clearly the most valuable prize at the Sponsor Fair, a $1000 donation to any nonprofit of my choice, generously contributed by Jay Frank of Nice Touch Communications and Telecom for Charity.
Kudos also to Beth Kanter who organized the Day of Service to assist local nonprofits in New Orleans on the first day of the conference. Working with Nancy Schwartz, (who writes Getting Attention to help nonprofits with marketing tips), I gave a quick ephilanthropy tutorial to Casa New Orleans.
I also participated in two conference sessions:
Tug of War or Pulling Together? Building Teamwork for Better Online Campaigns, David Hollender, Jed Cohen and I reviewed strategies for how an organization can work collaboratively instead of in silos. Sharing information regularly can help, as well as a current intranet site and 'lunch and learn' where departments are invited to learn about each other's projects. While it is helpful to build relationships with those in other departments before you are assigned to work on a project with them, it's also important to make sure that your own department's goals are met.
The Joy of CMS: Implementing Sustainable Content Management Systems (The Painless Way to Keep Your Web Site Current): I moderated a panel of three CMS experts: Andrew Cohen, Nathan Gasser and Jeff Herron. Instead of focusing on available products (of which there are many), we discussed how the idea of content management can be successfully deployed. Having a current web site is easier when the responsibilities are shared throughout the organization, and when management accepts this as part of everyone's job. We also discussed work flow - how web pages are reviewed and released, and how to insure that web content is consistent with other communication vehicles.
I also want to commend Laura Quinn and Dahna Goldstein who moderated two sessions on data integration which I attended. Since most of us have data in many locations, it is always challenging to share information between multiple products. Memorable takeaways: when evaluating products, data integration must be on the list of requirements, and it may be best to consider vendors who have been 'open' from the start rather than those who have changed mostly due to market demands Let's keep this discussion going on Nten's Data Standards & Integration affinity group!
It was also wonderful to return to New Orleans, which clearly is still recovering from the effects of Hurricane Katrina. My wife and I were serenaded one night by a couple who lost their home and were struggling to make ends meet.
While I still expect to post most of my content in my blog, I've added additional sections which will include further details on my background, past presentations I've given, upcoming events of interest to the nonprofit community and feedback I've received from co-workers and clients over the years. As an experiment, I've also setup the site initially using the free 'Site Builder' provided by my hosting company, but I will eventually switch over to either the Joomla or Drupal CMS platforms, two of the strongest content management options available today - and they're both open source.
Visit my new Nonprofit Bridge web site. Hope to see you at next week's Nonprofit Technology Conference in New Orleans, LA.
If you're planning to attend, please consider participating in the two sessions I'll be participating in:
- The Joy of CMS: Implementing Sustainable Content Management Systems (The Painless Way to Keep Your Web Site Current). I will ask three experts in building web sites how nonprofit organizations can build a culture which supports up to date online content.
- Tug of War or Pulling Together? Building Teamwork for Better Online Campaigns. We will discuss how departments can work together within a nonprofit organization to develop and implement online strategies.
Nten's Annual Nonprofit Technology Conference, expected to attract over 1,000 nonprofit staff members, consultants and vendors from across the United States, will take place in New Orleans, LA from Wed, Mar. 19 - Fri, Mar. 21. It is always a wonderful event., Hope to see you there.
In addition, here is a useful resource on creating online donation pages and forms
Sat, Oct. 13 I attended the NYC Joomla Day run by PICnet and sponsored by Google. Joomla is currently the most popular open source CMS (Drupal and Plone are also widely used).
As a relatively new Joomla user (I'm using it to build nonprofitbridge.com), I found the 'Joomla 101' session helpful. Louis Landry, a core Joomla developer, also reviewed the history of the development of upcoming 1.5 version and why it has taken a while to be released (it will be fully internationalized).
As I've mentioned elsewhere, I am a big believer in data integration, and that applications should be able to share data with each other. (I'm not alone in this effort - see the Integration Proclamation.) Ryan Cozimek of PICnet led an afternoon session to explain why integration of CMS & CRM products is important. Some benefits include allowing constituents to manage their profile on the web, providing a way to search data in inventory systems, making available help tickets to users and allowing for ACLs - access control lists, as a way to customize web site content. PICnet is currently developing tools to integrate Joomla with SalesForce and Democracy in Action. Recently announced integration initiatives by the big nonprofit vendors are Kintera Connect and Convio Open.
If your organization doesn't have an current web site because it takes too much time to update content, using a content management system will help. With an active community and developer base, Joomla looks like the strongest option in the open source CMS market.