Archive for the ‘How to’ Category

Website mapping can help organise review tasksTo keep your website content at top quality level, you have to review it periodically. But different kind of content have different review requirement. Here are a few criteria to help you score your content according to their optimal review frequency. Out of that score you will be able to map your website to help your organise review tasks.

1 – Hotness: how often do you have to update the content?

Several times a week: 5 points
Once a week: 4 points
Once a month: 3 points
Once every two-three months: 2 points
Less: 1 point

2 – Business criticality: is the topic related to the organisation core business?

Yes, totally: 5 points
Yes, somehow: 3 points
Not really: 1 point

3 – Popularity: what percentage of the visits does it attract?

80% or more: 5 points
60-79%: 4 points
50-59%: 3 points
20-49%: 2 points
0-19%: 1 point

4 – Content owner credit: can the person or team in charge of updating the content be trusted (received proper training, keeps content up to date, is expert of the field, etc.)?

Yes: 1 point
Not really: 3 points
No: 5 points

5 – Technical reliability: is the portion of content part of a trusted technical plateform allowing for instance content management or automated check-ups (error pages, broken links…)?

Yes: 1 point
No: 3 points

The score can then be applied section by section throughout the website map using one color per score level. This way you get a visual overview of the critical zones on which review efforts should focus. Or this can be used on a specific section you found time consuming, to find out which part you should really spend time on. You could also try to compare hottest colours with sections you actually spend the most time on, to see of they match.

Opem laptop on the floor.

Here you are, with your brand new website, freshly delivered by your web agency. What do you do now to make sure it does not turn Rainforest like within two weeks?

Know the website objectives

A website is a tool, not an objective. It can help you to do a lot of things like selling, getting new customers, improve loyalty of existing ones, revamp your brand image, etc. If you want a chance to succeed, you’d better know what you’re looking for. Objectives may have been defined by your management, or you may have to find out yourself. If the latter is correct, start with a short list of priorities. You will have time later to expand it, once the primary goal is reached.

Identify content owners

Website Managers are not supposed to be accountable for all their website content, particularly if it deals with specialised topics or legal issues. Anyway if the site is large you won’t be able to mind it all on your own. That’s why you need to clearly identify a content owner for each page of the website. I mean it: write down the list of sections, making sure it covers all the website pages, and match each one with a unique name, the one of the person who is responsible for updating or providing you with content. Of course, the Web Administrator can own some sections, especially the ones directly related to the site such as “Help” or “Contact”.

Meet the team

Times are gone when Webmasters were managing websites from top to toe on their own. They’re now conductors rather than handymen (though a well equipped tool box still comes in handy). You have to make sure you know who does what and you’d better have a nice and trusty relationship with them. This opportunity to get to work with a wide range of professionals is one of the nice aspects of Website Management.

Plan

Managing a website involves a lot of checking quality, as well as pages updates, promotion and reporting. To be as effective and painless as possible, these operations can be planned pro-actively. Pages that are most likely to change often and relate to website core business should be checked first. Tools to audit the quality of a website should also be run at least once a month. And users feedback should be sought once in a while.

The above four steps are only good sense applied to website management. But it is important to remember that the job needs to be done as professionally as any other one.