Comments on: Church Web Design Part 7: Avoiding the Great Content Delay https://www.ourchurch.com/blog/church-web-design-part-7-avoiding-the-great-content-delay/ A look at how trends in communication technology impact individuals and organizations. Wed, 31 Oct 2007 18:22:56 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 By: » Church Web Design Part 11: Rushing Towards the Launch Deadline https://www.ourchurch.com/blog/church-web-design-part-7-avoiding-the-great-content-delay/#comment-82437 Wed, 31 Oct 2007 18:22:56 +0000 https://www.ourchurch.com/blog/2007/09/27/church-web-design-part-7-avoiding-the-great-content-delay/#comment-82437 […] Completing the Content As explained in Part 7, OurChurch.Com’s philosophy is to install and configure the content management system and then to train and empower each client to add and manage their own content.  The typical custom design contract includes OCC placing only a small amount of content on each client’s site, so the client can see what is possible.  That helps to keep down the cost of web development projects.  And with the client fully capable of adding content, doing it themselves gives the client the opportunity to format pages and tweak the text. […]

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By: » Church Web Design Part 8: Hands-On Training a Critical Key to Success https://www.ourchurch.com/blog/church-web-design-part-7-avoiding-the-great-content-delay/#comment-75918 Thu, 04 Oct 2007 16:30:58 +0000 https://www.ourchurch.com/blog/2007/09/27/church-web-design-part-7-avoiding-the-great-content-delay/#comment-75918 […] In part 7 of this series about the redesign of my church’s website, we left off with Mike (OCC’s website developer on this project) having added a limited amount of content to the new website.  The next step in the development process is training the client (me) on how to use the content management system (CMS) and all the components installed.  This is one of the most important aspects of getting a new website, yet it’s usually overlooked.  Do you know why? […]

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