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The State of the Web

The State of the Web. WebDays 2002 Dale Foster, Chair of Web Implementation Committee. The History. Campus Wide Information Services (CWIS) Representation from C&C, Library, University Relations Largely volunteer Created a high-quality website that received a number of awards.

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The State of the Web

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  1. The State of the Web WebDays 2002 Dale Foster, Chair of Web Implementation Committee

  2. The History • Campus Wide Information Services (CWIS) • Representation from C&C, Library, University Relations • Largely volunteer • Created a high-quality website that received a number of awards

  3. The time had come . . . • Senior Executive Advisory Committee on Information Technology (SEACIT) said . . . The web should be an institutional priority • The Web will be inseparable from the business activities of the university • The Web will pervade all aspects of what we do

  4. Commitment to the Vision • SEACIT recommended a collaborative administrative structure • New resources (in UR and C&C) • Executive responsibility vested in VP(Academic) • Model (and resources) under continual review

  5. The Committee Structure Web Policy Group Chair: VP(Academic) Registrar, University Librarian, Director C&C, Director Continuing Education, Dean Student Affairs & Services, Director Alumni Affairs Set general policy directions for the MUN web WIC: Web Implementation Committee Chair: Dale Foster Representatives from C&C, Student Affairs & Services, University Relations, Student Recruitment & Promotion, University Relations, Library, Continuing Education Task assignment, overview of implementation, current vision, R&D, standards & templates, data harmonization issues

  6. Timeline • Dr. Simpson convenes Web Policy group in April 2001 • May 2001, WIC membership confirmed – meetings held biweekly • Web Manager (Paul Whittle) hired for UR in Nov. 2001 • Position in C&C is in “the works”

  7. Priorities Set – SEACIT & Policy Group • Use of the Web as a institutional recruitment & marketing tool • Policies for • Visual identity • Standards for quality and content on institutional web pages • Improving internal communication and collaboration

  8. And, we talked to the community. . . • Focus Groups with • Distance and Part-time Students • (teachers) • On-campus Students • Faculty • Staff • Alumni

  9. And they told us . . . • Strengths of existing site • Easy to use • Comprehensive, detailed • Quick to load • Weaknesses • Homepage layout confusing • Information not updated regularly • Accessing some information is frustrating • Too much information on homepage

  10. We got to work . . . • Inventoried our website • It reflected the administrative structure rather than user needs • Dead links • Outdated information

  11. Our solution . . . • Create an INTERIMhomepage • Focus on homepage & second-level institutional pages • Create a “learning environment” for web development • Integrate new people & resources • Solicit feedback to interim design • Incorporate lessons learned into • Identification of issues  • New development strategy  • New website

  12. Changes we made • Created an interim homepage • Weeded out dead links • Reorganized material • Second level pages created (e.g. Current students) • Struggled with descriptors, especially on the homepage • Provided dynamic content (pictures) • And so, the original homepage . . .

  13. Became . . . .

  14. AGHHHHH !!!!!!! We asked for it . . . AND WE GOT IT!

  15. Lessons Learned • Branding is Critical • Content “Rules” • Content required for functionality • The Steak before the Sizzle • aka Form Follows Function • Require “Development” Processes

  16. Branding is Critical • Website will reflect the “Memorial Experience” as distilled in the University’s marketing plan • University Relations is developing a marketing plan • Will affect web as recruitment tool • Will influence visual identity guidelines • & specific requirements for the web • And we will integrate its development into our web strategy • Form Follows Function

  17. Content “Rules” The Web will build lifelong community amongst stakeholders • Stakeholders provide content (“institutional” content; comments & stories; help) • They interact on the web • Ask questions and get answers • Interact with peers • Content will be personalized and customizable • Recognize the potential to establish a lifelong relationship

  18. Content “Rules” • The web will support the educational & scholarly objectives of MUN • The web will support the professional development and lifelong learning of staff, faculty, alumni, and the wider university community

  19. The Steak: Form Follows Function (1) The Web can increase collaboration and coordination across and within campus units and improve communication • Size matters: The little processes • Intranets • Sharing documents, procedures • Improve processes • Faculty / staff profiles • Calendaring software

  20. The Steak: Form Follows Function (2) • Bring all appropriate services to the web • Create a “Consider the Web” mindset • Identify current and envisioned services • Identify stakeholders and champions • Allow seamless and efficient access • Provide a high-quality experience with measurable objectives and benefits • Streamline processes, bring services to our users instead of users to our services

  21. Development Processes Required • The web will become part of the institutional culture, vision and thinking • The web will be resourced in a manner that will make it effective and central to the university mindset • Access to resources will be equitable

  22. The Issues Arising • Where’s the beef? • Identifying the functionality • Delivering the Full Meal Deal • Delivering the functionality • Providing excellent service • Adding depth to the functionality

  23. Where’s the Beef? Identifying Function • Need to identify & involve stakeholders • Need to identify key needs, processes, and the “envisioned” processes of stakeholders • A user-centric site will require collaboration between units • Umbrellas for administratively diverse but logically integrated “things” • Collaboration will not stand in the way of timely development

  24. Delivering the functionality • Provide Technical Resources • Provide Hardware & Space Resources • Provide adequate, professional IT support • For development, databases and infrastructure • Create mechanisms for budgetary allocations to provide equitable access to resources • Address the Central Unit Paradox

  25. Delivering the functionality • Establish an e-business standard and infrastructure for Memorial (e.g. centralized control for transaction fulfillment) • Security • Authentication • Provide alternatives for user

  26. Providing Excellent Service • Provide a seamless experience to visitors/users • Improved searching and meta-tagging required for effective seamless entries • Profiling, authentication & single sign-on • Allow personalization and customization

  27. Adding Depth with Content • Content Providers are Everywhere • Assuming ownership of content • Identifying people to do the work • Providing structure and rewards (job descriptions, feedback & evaluation, rewards) for creator “stakeholders” • Providing superior training • Dynamic content creation requires monitoring, not censorship • Providing Content Management Software • Protecting Intellectual Property while fostering collaboration & community

  28. Next steps • Applying the Lessons Learned • Soon: Launching of the Interim Page • Development of a new web presence • With functionality • A consistent message • And user centric • Define processes in development • “The Portal Project”

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