Blogs

Intranet Tool Must Haves

The always valuable CMSWatch has a very interesting new article itemizing in detail the features that are "universally essential" to successful intranet and collaboration tools. As these folks study the content management market for a living, their thoughts are well worth noting.

The lingo is a bit distractingly business focused, but the principles are just as valid for an organization looking to deploy what they call an an "Enterprise Portal" - a sophisticated intranet and internal collaboration tool (things like Sharepoint, WebLogic Portal, SAP Enterprise Portal, Plone for internal collaboration, etc).

Their list of must-haves at a high level is:

Services
  • Generate short, meaningful, and permanent URLs
  • Replace select portal functionality with third-party services
  • Natively provide lightweight collaboration services
  • Easily support arbitrary content and data models
  • Navigation controlled by business users
  • Search all of different content types within the portal repository
  • Integrate with third-party Single Sign-On solutions

Technology
  • Application Server freedom
  • IDE of choice
  • Fast installation
  • Control configuration management and deployment
  • Easily expose application data
  • Better than linear scaling

Intangibles
  • Community rating of portlets (i..e. the small modular applications, like widgets, that are used in portals)
  • Widely available community support
They provide a lot more detail - read the whole article.

Resource Roundup 3/14

Continuing to dig out. But I'm now almost caught up - woohoo!

An Introduction to Effective Use of Video on the Web (ICT Hub Knowledgebase)
A great introduction to, well, effectively using video on the web - including production, distribution, accessibility, and more.

MyTheater, Seeking Friends (NYTimes)
An overview of how arts organizations are successfully using MySpace to reach out to young audiences.

Upgrading to MS's New Office Suite (Small Business Computing)
Have you upgraded to Vista? Now consider whether you want to update your office applications as well.

Capture a Screencast with a Mac (Digital Web Magazine)
A great roundup of tools to capture static screenshots and screencasts on a Mac, with a lot of details as to how and why to use them.

Using RSS - Four Screencasts
(K-12 Online)
Very well done instructional screencasts on what RSS is, and then step-by-step instruction on how to use Bloglines, Netvibes/ PageFlakes, and social bookmarking tools.

Choosing Among Different Types of Online Collaboration Tools (ONE/Northwest)
A friendly and useful guide to thinking through what collaboration tool would make sense for you, from email discussion lists to IM to screencasting to collaborative writing software. This has been a popular topic of late - also take a look at the detailed discussions of the pros and cons of blogs vs listserves on the Bamboo Project Blog, Designing for Civil Society, and DoWire.Org

Collaborative Writing Tools And Technology: A Mini-Guide (Kollabora)
Kollabora continues their great mini-guide series - this time covering collaborative writing platforms (like Google Docs and Zoho), with an overview of the topic and mini-reviews of twelve different online tools.

What I've learned about donor management
(gokubi blog)
Steve Andersen from ONE/Northwest shares some of the steps involved in donor management, as a map to help create software to support them

Three Web-Based Mind Mapping Tools Reviewed (Web Worker Daily)
A review of, well, three mind mapping tools

Tracking the DIY phenomenon Part 1: Widgets, badges, and gadgets (ZDNet)
An in-depth look at the world of widgets - tiny web applications that distributed users can install on their own sites - and why it might make sense to offer them to your own users. For a more nonprofit specific look, check out TechSoup's article
Charity Badges: Turn Your Supporters into Fundraisers

Chatter about Twitter
(Twitter)
There's been a lot of buzz in the community of late about Twitter, an easy text messaging service that's designed to allow group members to communicate "what are you doing now" messages via phone, IM or the web. Michael Gilber gives some detailed thoughts on what it's good for, Ian Wilker talks about the tribal aspects of the tool, Beth Kanter rounds up the comments and provides a screencast, while Andy Carvin muses that Twitter might be useful in disaster response circumstances.

7 Things You Should Know About Open Journaling (EduCause)
An overview of open journaling tools - software that allows you to manage publishing peer-reviewed journals online

E-mail Archiving For Small Firms
(SmallBusinessComputing)
A useful and practical guide to software that will help you archive your email

Resource Roundup 3/12

Some new, some a few weeks old now - just cleaning out the queue

The Great Web Office Experiment (London ICT Champion)
A detailed look at online document, spreadsheet, and presentation tools - why you'd want to use them, and then thumbnail reviews of ThinkFree and Zoho

Your Guide to Podcasts (PBS MediaShift)
A great introductory guide to podcasting - what they are, where they've come from, how to find podcasts, how to become a podcaster, and a long list of other resources.

Nonprofit and Flickr Resource List
(Beth's Blog)
Flickr goddess Beth Kanter gives us a detailed list of articles and resources for why and how nonprofits should work with Flickr, as a teaser to the Flickr affinity group at NTC

Online Video Industry Index (Read/Write Web)
The list of online video sites to rule them all, including links and short descriptions of dozens of sites to help those working with online videos - sharing, editing, streaming, searching and more.

The Basics of Email Marketing for Nonprofits (Convio)
A solid overview of the basics of email marketing, from building a list to creating effective emails to keeping them out of spam filters, with only a limited amount of marketing-ese for Convio, an integrated online software package.

Google Releases Apps Premium Edition (Google)
Google introduces Google Apps Premium Edition, a suite that provides e-mail, instant messaging, calendar, word processing and spreadsheets integrated into a dashboard interface, for $50 per worker per year. See commentary and information from NTEN and USA Today.

New Laws for Organizations that Accept Online Payments (TechSoup)
A terrific overview of the new legal requirements for organizations that are handling their own payment processing to protect their payment data.

Users Who Know Too Much - And the CIOs Who Fear Them (CIO Magazine)
Are your staffers using technologies that you haven't approved? CIO Magazine says they probably are, thus creating "shadow IT" A great article about the challenge of deciding what technologies to allow in house.

Comparing in-site search engines

A long time ago, I took a fairly rigorous look at in-site search engines (the kind that you can integrate into a website to search just that site). I compared a bunch of tools, and came up with a fairly clear front runner: Spiderline. (For a blast from the past, check out my search engine article from 2004)

Spiderline costs a bit of money (it starts at about $8/month), but it offers seamless integration into your site, and a lot of control. I've implemented for a bunch of clients with nary an issue. I never found Google's old site search compelling - it was just impossible to make it look like a Google search glommed onto your website, and look and feel was typically important to clients.

But Google has a new offering now: Google Co-op custom search, which allows some new options. I had the opportunity to compare Google to Spiderline both for a consulting client, and for the Idealware site itself. A comparison chart is below. They're both good options, with some interesting tradeoffs.

Note that I haven't done a broad survey of the search tools market in years, and there may be other great, or better, search tools that I don't know about.


Google Custom Search Engine Spiderline

http://google.com/coop/cse/ http://www.spiderline.com
PriceFree.Based on number of site pages and number of crawls per month. For instance, 5 crawls a month for a site with less than 500 pages is $10/month.
How often does it index your site?About monthly, maybe more for high volume sites. Not controllable.Up to daily; more frequent indexes cost more.
What pages are indexed?The pages that Google indexes in the main search engine, for whatever reason Google decides to do that. Real risk that it might not include key pages, especially for low volume sites. Have to do hacks to your site to allow Google to index pages under password protectionWhatever you want, including most pages under password protection, depending on your protection method
Look and feelMostly customizable to match to your site. Uses iframes, which concerns me that implementations might have odditiesComplete control over every aspect of look
Search result qualityGoogle quality. Notably better than Spiderline for sites I looked at.Reasonable, but less good at putting the best links on top. And seemed to include a lot of results that weren't relevant.
Info for search results listingNice display of page results with very little required of website metadata (it works some Google magic to pull the page title out of the body copy if there's no metadata). Less control over what is shown. Needs strong page title and metadata for every page to be optimal. But if you have good metadata, you have complete control over the results, and can display the metadata title and description on the results
Customer supportCommunity forums onlyPhone or email, real, actually helpful humans
Effort to format, integrate into siteHalf day to a dayHalf day to a day


It comes down to, in my mind, a tradeoff between price and search results quality vs. control over what's indexed and how often it's indexed

So what was the answer? My client decided on Google. They get a fair amount of traffic, are well represented in the main Google search engine, and don't have a lot of critical updates, so it was a great choice for them. And as they have a lot of pages on their site, the price for Spiderline was non-negligible.

We choose Spiderline for the Idealware site. I miss the Google quality of search results, but for us it was a deal killer to have to wait a week or more for Google to index our new articles. If you search for a phrase that you can see right there on the homepage (in a new article blurb), and get no results, the search just seems broken. And as the Idealware site isn't very big, the monthly price for Spiderline is only $10/month - no big deal for a good search on the site.

2006 Idealware Fnancial Summary

I’ve just been finishing up our financial summaries for 2006 (fun!), and thought I’d post a summary here for those that are interested. Download the 2006 summary as a PDF>

I’m thrilled to report that although we operated at a loss in both 2005 and 2006, it’s looking very likely that we’ll be able to pay off our debt and cover our expenses within the next couple of months. This is particularly exciting to me (not to mention my husband) as all of Idealware’s debt is payable to me personally!

The Joy of Basic Overviews!

Three new basic overviews came out recently - one on social bookmarking tools like Del.icio.us, a step-by-step tutorial on using RSS readers, and a look at the issue of image blocking in email browsers. It feels like there's been more focus on these basic overviews lately - a great trend! Keep them coming!

In the meantime, check these out...

An Introduction to Tagging (Beth's Blog and NTEN)
A terrific introduction to social bookmarking in general and De.licio.us in particular - and a great example of the power of screencasting.

Why Nonprofit Managers Must Use RSS ... And How to Start (DemocracyinAction)
Another fabulous tutorial - this one looking at why you would use an RSS reader to aggregate blogs, news, and searches, with step-by-step instructions as to how to go about it

Image Blocking in Email Clients: Current Conditions and Best Practices (Campaign Monitor)
A useful summary of the latest word about email browsers blocking images, and how you can take this into account when sending emails. It includes a chart summarizing common email browsers' support for images

Two New Articles: Online Payment Processing and Data Integration

Okay, I've been a bad blogger. I admit it. I've been spending way too much time moving into our new house (more on that soon), but in the meantime, we've put up two new articles that I'm really proud of....

A Few Good Online Payment Multitaskers breaks down the world of payment processing options for those who want to accept not just donations, or not just event or item or membership payments, but several of those things. It walks through some of the same tools we looked at in our Donation Report, but also goes into much more details about "roll-your-own" options involving integrating your own payment gateway.

And we have An Introduction to Integrating Constituent Data: Three Basic Approaches. This is a walkthrough of the first decision you need to make when looking to integrate data - do you want to integrate by hand via manual imports and exports? Or buy an integrated package? Or use an automated connector to programmatically integrate? There's a number of tradeoffs between these options, and we lay them out to help you decide.

And I promise, I'm now back on the blogging bandwagon, and am in fact thinking through some interesting new directions for this blog. Stay tuned!

New articles: Evaluating Vendors, and Selecting CMSs

With all this acquisition excitement, I neglected to post our new articles. But it's not for the lack of interesting new stuff!

We have a great new article by Steve Heye, of the YMCA, and Steve Lancman, who works with JCC, about evaluating vendor intangibles: Vendors as Allies: How to Evaluate Viability, Service, and Commitment. It's not the sexiest of topics, but a really important one for organizations that are looking at big investments in vendor managed enterprise software. Steve and Steve take on the topic in a approachable and tactical way.

And we take a close look at selecting content management systems - always one of your favorite topics - in James Robertson's 10 Mistakes When Selecting a CMS

Convio Acquires GetActive, Blackbaud Acquires Target

Some major software company acquisitions this week: Blackbaud (the major nonprofit software company organization that makes Raisers Edge) acquired Target (a donor database/CRM software company that generally targets larger organizations than Raisers Edge). Read the press release.

This was big news, until Convio announced yesterday that it plans to acquire GetActive. As these two software companies are two of the “big three” online integrated packages, this is a major shift in that marketplace. Convio says it plans to integrate GetActive’s advocacy and content management functionality into their own platform, and migrate both sets of clients to the new platform. GetActive’s management will take key roles in the Convio organization.

The listserves are hopping with this news. In general, GetActive clients are interested in adding some of the Convio functionality to their toolset, but are nervous about migrating to a different platform and learning a different tool. There’s also concern about the consolidation in general – that having fewer big players in the space will cause a decrease in competitive pressures and an increase in price.

Read the Convio/ GetActive press release

Click Here for Change

Check out the new, detailed eAdvocacy guide from PolicyLink - Click Here for Change: Your Guide to the E-Advocacy Revolution

It's meaty, and I'm still working my way through it, but it seems like a fabulous, practical guide to how advocacy organizations can use internet tools to promote real social change - concentrating on the basics like websites and email. It's chock full of useful case studies.
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