Forum Moderators: phranque
Right now I'm working on an update checklist that would walk me through x number of items that need to be completed before the pages is uploaded to the live site.
The question I have is: does anyone else use something like this? Any suggestions on what to include on the checklist? Any examples?
I would like this to be as detailed as possible so the more the better. I'll be more than willing to share my final checklist with everyone one.
TIA,
Conor
My goal here is to create a comprehensive checklist that can be used by anyone in the business. The more responses from people the more complete the list will be.
Any and all suggestions for this are welcome.
Thanks,
Conor
There has been a tendency that people want to leave this fixed way of website development and just concentrate on content. This is why content management systems and blogs become increasingly popular. In essence these are programs/scripts that release the publisher from the problems involved in maintaining proper internal links, dates, updates, archiving etc. You just add your content and the software will put it on the right place in the right context in the site. It will even handle comments from others, trackbacks to other relevant sites etc, if you have setup your system to do this.
IMHO you could better put your effort in studying the possible uses of content management systems, than trying to write down a number of fixed rules for update management. A CMS will take a lot of work out of your hands, so you can concentrate on what site development really goes about: "Content".
Secondly, I can see your point with people going with a CMS solution to not have to worry about anything but content. However, it seems to me that no matter what you are using to run your site, you are going to need to make changes to both the content and the structure at some point.
I think having a good written checklist, even with a CMS, is a good idea. Depending on the system you use, I believe you will have some certain design standards that need to be checked/enforced after each update. Things like article length, external links, proper image size, font size/weight, etc… Obviously, making changes to the structure/layout is a procedure in its own right.
Unfortunately in my case, a CMS is not a high priority due to budget/time constraints. It looks like I’ll have to work with what I have and refine it as I go along. Again, I appreciate you taking the time to respond.