It isn't all about the code?
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Entries in Case Studies (52)
Trade Shows, Tom Peters & Martinis
In the Blog alternate universe, we are wrapping up a Requirements/Content Inventory/High Level Components Document Package for this Content Management System Package. In the Real World, we are a few weeks ahead. We have convened a “blue ribbon” RFP Evaluation Committee, and I’m trying to develop a Vendor short list to work from
Structure-Function
We left the Analyst in front of the white board, drawing circles and arrows. She was engaged in the primal act – Creation. Out of the formless Requirements Void was emerging the Light of a Solution, an Architecture.
Magic Happens
We have been interviewing customers, users and management for about eight weeks now on the way to defining our Content Management System requirements. We have inventoried the content areas involved, and created Use Cases and Benefits Analyses from the interview contents. We have come to one of the most interesting parts of the project – where “Magic Happens”.
Content: Inventories of Content
This project, like many others, will be successful when a bunch of “stuff” that is now in an old place, will be accessible in a new place, and in a new way. In this case the “stuff” is medical content documents. The new way is accessible through improved cross-silo search capabilities. So, knowing facts about the “stuff” – how many, what format, where – is important to the success of the project.
Content: It’s All About the Interface
As you may recall, I’m the PM for a project to install a content management system for a medical publisher. We have worked hard at understanding and documenting the benefits of the system, but that’s not what people really want to talk about.