Cms Buyers Guide

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© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 1
Table of Contents
Executive Summary ............................................................................................................................................................... 2
About this Guide ................................................................................................................................................................. 3
How to Use the Guide ....................................................................................................................................................... 3
Part One: What to Look For ................................................................................................................................................. 4
Engagement ........................................................................................................................................................................ 4
Usability ................................................................................................................................................................................ 5
Platform Extensibility ....................................................................................................................................................... 5
Integration with Key Business Systems...................................................................................................................... 5
Costs and Pricing Models ................................................................................................................................................ 6
Support for Comprehensive Mobile Strategies ......................................................................................................... 6
Consider Different Mobile Strategies and Pick the One That's Best for Your Business ................................ 7
Part Two: Choosing the Right CMS for Your Business ................................................................................................ 8
Business Goals and Strategies ....................................................................................................................................... 9
The Business Case ......................................................................................................................................................... 9
Ask Your Users .................................................................................................................................................................... 9
Know Your Data ................................................................................................................................................................10
Organization and Governance ......................................................................................................................................11
Requirements ...................................................................................................................................................................11
Resources...........................................................................................................................................................................11
The Selection Process.....................................................................................................................................................11
Evaluating Vendors/Agencies ......................................................................................................................................12
Evaluating the Technology ............................................................................................................................................12
Avoid Big Bang ..................................................................................................................................................................12
Future Proofing Your CMS .............................................................................................................................................13
Conclusion: The Buying Process in Steps..................................................................................................................13
About J. Boye .........................................................................................................................................................................14
Conferences .......................................................................................................................................................................14
Groups .................................................................................................................................................................................14
Research .............................................................................................................................................................................14
Consulting ..........................................................................................................................................................................14
Appendix A .............................................................................................................................................................................15
Part One ..............................................................................................................................................................................15
Engagement ..................................................................................................................................................................15
Usability ..........................................................................................................................................................................15
Platform Extensibility .................................................................................................................................................15
Integration with Key Business Systems ...............................................................................................................15
Costs and Pricing Models ..........................................................................................................................................15
Part Two .............................................................................................................................................................................16
Business Goals and Strategies ................................................................................................................................16
Ask Your Users .............................................................................................................................................................16
Know Your Data ...........................................................................................................................................................16
Organization and Governance ..................................................................................................................................16


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 2
Executive Summary
How do you go about selecting a CMS in a business environment that is increasingly signified by its mobility and
connectivity?

Customers and employees expect to be able to engage with you on whatever device they have within reach and at
any moment. They also expect that the experience will be great—even when at work.

The information you have scaled for desktop computers needs to be made available for channels and devices that
are still on the drawing table.

The data that you collect from users, whether they are customers or employees, needs to be turned into
customized and personalized solutions, because customer expectations are more demanding than ever.

The business systems you are using need to be integrated into your CMS in order for you to create the great and
useful experiences that users are expecting.

To meet the expectations of the connected and engaged user, enterprise businesses have to ask themselves, what
do our users need, what task(s) are they trying to solve, when and where and how can we help them? The type of
device is less important because the users expect that they can use the device they choose to use in the given
situation. If I am comfortable buying my trip around the world using my smart phone, then I expect to be able to
just do it.

How do you decide which CMS fits your business needs? What kind of technology do you need to look for? And is it
possible to predict what will work and what won't in a year?

In order to buy a CMS that supports the growth of yours business we suggest that you:
• Create a cross-divisional team with people who know your business, users and systems
• Make a business case built on your goals and strategies
• Get to know your users and their behavior
• Thinking about how you’ll reap the benefits of your investment by considering governance before you buy







© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 3
About This Guide
This Buyers Guide focuses on how you can prepare and ensure that you purchase the best CMS for your enterprise.
It is not an evaluation of specific products. The intention is to give you guidance to make the right analyses and ask
the right questions both from your own organization, your users, vendors and possible implementation partners.

The advice given in the guide is based on knowledge gathered from J. Boye members, interviews with people in the
industry and technical experts.

How to Use the Guide
The purpose of this guide is to provide you with key insights that you can use when planning to invest in a new
CMS. It touches upon the current trends, a general insights part and finally guides you through how to manage the
buying process. The guide is divided into two parts:

Part One is a high-level description of what to look for in a CMS in the current market.

Part Two is an actual guide to choosing the right platform for your business, including a step-by-step plan that you
use for you own project.

Throughout the guide we have raised questions for you to consider before buying a CMS. These have all been listed
in a “cheat sheet” in appendix A.





© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 4
Part One: What to Look For
Enterprise mobility offers new perspectives for doing business. Being mobile has become a business imperative
and mobile acts as a catalyst for digital transformation in organizations of all shapes and forms. In this section we
will take a closer look at key parameters to take into consideration when choosing a CMS that will support your
business in this digital transformation. We’ll look at:

• Engagement
• Platform extensibility
• Usability
• Integration with key business systems
• Cost and pricing models
• Support for comprehensive mobile strategies

Engagement
The ever-present smart phone offers enterprises ample opportunity to be in touch with both customers and
employees. Customized messages, geo-localization and targeting and personalization make it possible to provide
users with the time-and-place offers most relevant to them. In B2B mobility you can increase field workers'
efficiency by providing them with tools that allow them to tap in to business-critical systems while on the go.

In order to reap the potential benefits of engagement, you need a CMS that allows you to engage with your users
and that your users want to engage with. Whether we are talking responsive web, mobile sites, web, hybrid or
native app the true test is: Can the user solve their problem in their current context?

Your users do not want to go home to their desktop and compare your product to another online. They want to be
able to get real life information in the aisle of the store on the device of their choice.

The connected customer or user expects to be able to engage on his or her own terms. Enterprises need to
understand how to use multiple channels and platforms as catalysts for connecting and managing their customer
experiences in order to provide users seamless experiences of their brand.

This means that your CMS needs to support and to be part of your overall customer experience management and
help ensure a consistent experience throughout all touch points. It also means that the data you collect about your
users in the CMS should be in a form, so it can be used both to enhance the mobile experience and distributed to
other parts of your organization for as context for optimizing the customer experience with every touch point.

When selecting your CMS in the context of engagement and customer experience management, you need to look
at:

• What does my customer journey look like?
• How can the CMS support engagement through multiple channels?
• Where can I gain the most value from having mobile touch points?
• How will the CMS I am considering be an asset in my overall customer experience
management?


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 5
Usability
CMS like any other technology needs to be easy to use not just for your customers, but also for the people working
with the back-end. When considering a new platform you need to consider the people who will be working with it
on a day-to-day basis in order to provide the users with updated content and data.

People working with enterprise systems are the same people who enjoy the great experience on their personal
devices. They expect the same level of usability from their work environment that they get from their personal
devices. Your CMS does not have to entertain the back-end users, but it has to enable them to get their job done
effectively and independently and give them the context that helps them make the right decisions.

As Customer Experience Management becomes essential, the systems we use to manage the experiences tend to
become more complex, increasing the need for user administration, workflows and easy-to-use dashboards and
templates.

Most people working with updating content have many systems to use every day. If these systems are not easy to
use, people simply tend to avoid them as much as possible. This is why a successful platform needs to provide
experiences that don’t just lead to happy front-end users but happy back-end users, too. Things to look for are:



Platform Extensibility
Business requirements change constantly and you want a CMS that allows you to incorporate new services and
functionalities without having to change the system you are using. By opting for extensibility you make it easier to
upgrade the entire platform, add new applications and enhance old ones. Basically that makes your platform more
adaptable to change and less expensive to maintain. When looking at platform extensibility you need to ask:



Integration with Key Business Systems
The days of black box systems might not be completely over but your new CMS needs to be easy to integrate with
by design. Creating engaging and personalized experiences requires access to data and to other channels—
integration with CRM, email campaign management tools, marketing automation solutions, analytics and social
media campaigns are a must for every contemporary website.
• How user-friendly is the dashboard?
• How seamless is the back-end user experience?
• Can you set up user administration that fits your organization?
• What kind of workflows can you set up?
• How easily can the content be reused in multiple channels?
• How often will I need to update and integrate with new applications?
• How often will I need to update functionalities?
• Which of my business systems do I need to integrate in order to provide my users
with the data they need?
• Will I have the support of in-house developers or will I need to buy help?


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 6
You want to look at:



Costs and Pricing Models
The uncertainty of how the winds of technological development will blow, not only next year, but within the next
few months, can make it difficult to figure out what your CMS should cost in terms of both purchase,
implementation and development and maintenance. This is why it is important that you look at the expense of
developing compared to the business value you expect to get out of it.

When looking at purchasing a CMS, you need to focus on the cost of integration with other systems, extensibility
and how well will this platform will adapt to changing business requirements. You want to have a clear idea of the
pricing model:



Other things to consider are whether you:



CMS is not just a project and should not be funded as such. Enterprises must realize that their CMS is business
critical and as such it should figure on the maintenance budget along with other business critical systems and
products. Both in terms of how do we keep developing and in terms of how do we maintain and support.

Support for Comprehensive Mobile Strategies
As stated above, mobile is more or less imperative. Purchasing a new CMS without considering your mobile
strategy won’t do. There are several ways to “go mobile”, but before deciding on one or another solution, you want
to take a step back and consider your customer journey and touch points.

• Which systems' key systems do I need to integrate with?
• Is the CMS you are looking at designed to integrate out of the box?
• Is it possible to integrate user data with analytics from other platforms?
• Will I have the support of in-house developers for integration or will I need to buy help?
• What is the total cost of ownership: License, maintenance, developing, hosting etc.?
• Can the license scale with additional servers without adding extra cost?
• What is the cost of upgrades and if applicable new modules?
• What will it cost you to maintain and support your mobile endeavors?
• What kind of licensing model will fit your organization?
• Should buy a standard system that comes with a set of modules that you can add on
as you get ready for more channels or functionalities.
• Have many special requirements for integration of other systems. If so, would it make
sense to purchase a system with a more custom made set-up?


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 7
Getting your entire enterprise geared for mobile is probably going to be too big of a bite to chew at once. Take it
step by step and start with implementing the mobile touch points where you gain the most. When looking at a new
enterprise CMS you want to look at how it can support customer experience management also seen from the point
of mobile.

The table below provides you with an overview of pros and cons.

Consider Different Mobile Strategies and Pick the One That’s Best for Your Business

Solution Pro Con Device
Mobile website
Reach, High quality content
and multiple devices
Easy to develop
Duplicate content
Multiple URLS (SEO)
More maintenance of content
Mobile devices
Responsive web Adaptive and flexible, same
experience and content on all
devices
SEO friendly
Co-exist with other mobile
strategies
No offline experiences
Lots of testing across devices
Integration with native apps
Works on all devices
Web App Reach Interaction and
transaction
Commitment from users: Need
to download and keep, expensive
to develop, test and manage. OS
updates
Mobile devices

Hybrid App
Blend of reach and
engagement. Uses the best
of both web and app
development
Commitment from users: Need
to download and keep, expensive
to develop, test and manage, OS
updates
Mobile devices
Native App Supreme interactive
experiences, option of being
offline
Integration with other
applications. Transaction and
push.
Commitment from users: Need
to download and keep, expensive
to develop, test and manage. OS
updates. Risk of costly black box
development.
Mobile devices

Any of the options can work or be right. It is a matter of understanding the business landscape you are in, knowing
your users, their context and, most importantly, their goals. If customers go to your desktop site on a mobile
device and have a bad experience, it can rub off on their overall feelings towards your business. For this reason,
you might want to start out with a mobile site or begin to move your desktop site over to responsive design. It is
not about how you are mobile, but about being mobile in a manner that suits you and your business.



© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 8
When buying a new CMS, remember to consider how it’ll fit with your mobile strategy and when working with
mobile it is a good idea to work in smaller iterations, understand the business opportunities and implications and
adjust as you learn.

Part Two: Choosing the Right CMS for Your Business
In the following we’ll outline how to go about choosing the right platform for your enterprise. Choosing a system
can end up being a battle between IT’s technical demands and the more or less well described ideas for
functionality from Marketing and Business units.

IT will probably be keen on finding a platform that works with the rest of the machine park. Business and
Marketing on the other hand might be looking at what the competition is doing and wonder if they can copycat
with success. In order to succeed you need a unified approach that aligns your efforts to choose a platform with
your business goals and strategies. This is also why you need to pick a team that consists of people from business,
marketing and IT. Choosing a CMS is complex because it involves many skills and processes. Below is a graphical
overview of the most important elements.


Model B: The buying process unfolded


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 9
Business Goals and Strategies
Before embarking on buying a CMS, you want to get a clear idea of why you want to invest in a new platform and
how it will support the direction you want to move your business in.

Next step is to start developing a digital strategy that can serve as your guideline for where you want to go in the
long run.

Keep in mind that digital development can be complex and it can be tricky to prove its value. Building a business
case, or perhaps more, will help you work out where it you can gain the most value. For some that’ll mean that a
responsive website is the first place to start and for others developing a native app will be the most sensible thing
to do.

The point is not that one thing is better to do than the other. The point is that you need to look at your business
and how you can get the most out of digital engagement with your users.

The Business Case
Building a business case for which CMS to choose is first and perhaps foremost about looking at the problem(s)
you want to solve—or help your users solve. Good user experience is often about being able to solve your problem
when it arises whether you are on a bus, on a plane or at the hairdressers.

So ask yourself:



Finally, it is worth considering whether you are doing something “old” in a new way or you are doing something
new in a new way. Or said differently are you looking to optimize well know processes or are you innovating and
creating new ones?

The business case should clarify your strategic platform and enable you to make a decision on how to go ahead.

Ask Your Users
Knowing your users, their context and their needs and problems is paramount when trying to decide what kind of
solution you need. It is your users' top tasks combined with your business strategies and goals that should help
guide you. Whether you are working in a B2B or B2C doesn’t really matter. We all know that people only use
systems or solutions that suit a need, desire, solve a problem or help them with a task that they need to do.

Often we tend to ask for demographic details when researching, which is also fine and necessary, but if you are
focusing on mobile, knowing your users' context and what they need when they are on the fly will help you
determine what kind of platform you need to develop.

• What need(s) will your platform serve?
• Is the proportion of users large enough compared with the cost of development
and maintenance?
• Can you start small and scale later?
• Did somebody already develop something, which you can build on?


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 10
If your are in a B2B setting and your sales people need to access your business intelligence and your CRM system
as well a live update on their sales information, you might want to build a native app that supports that.

You could also be in a B2B setting where all you really need is to be able to log on to a manual or the latest news
from HQ. In that case you might just want a responsive website that your users can log on to or a hybrid app.

So when asking your users and researching their context, that should help point towards what kind of platform you
need to build.

The following can serve as a shortlist of questions to use when researching your users:



By the end of the day you need to know: How your solution will make it convenient for your users to successfully
engage on the device and/or channel of their choice, whenever they want, .

Know Your Data
A very important aspect of creating the experiences your users expect, is access to data and data-analysis—both
the data you collect about users and use to enhance their experience and the data that you want them to engage
with. Before choosing a platform, you need to know how you can integrate with the systems your organization
uses for collecting, storing and displaying data.

If, for instance, you are counting on accessing and using your internal people directory you need to know whether
that is at all possible and if the data in it is always current and up to date. Or if you want to build a solution that is
personalized and which builds upon data about the user for several different systems, you need to figure out how
each of the systems work and if you can get your hands on them.

Questions you might want to answer are:




It goes without saying that you need to know something about the legality of using the data you plan on using. You
need to ask yourself two questions: Am I allowed to use this data? And am I allowed to use it the way I intend?

• In what context(s) might they meet and use your solution?
• How will your solution make their life easier?
• What makes them want to engage?
• What problem will you solve for them?
• What need(s) will you satisfy?
• What kind of data will I collect and display?
• What is the condition of the data I want to use?
• How will I be able to access and display the data?
• How will I integrate with the data I want to use?
• How will using the data I intend to use influence the speed of my solution?


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 11
Organization and Governance
Before selecting a platform and starting your development project, you want to take some time considering:



Basically you need to have a project organization in place that allows you to make the necessary decisions during
development and implementation. You will also need a governance set-up that ensures success after
implementation.

Requirements
There are different ways to go about describing requirements. One way to do it to keep focus on your goals and
user needs is by identifying your most important use cases both seen from the perspective of your end users and
of the people who will be updating data and content or developing in the system.

Describing your requirements in use cases and stories rather than technical functionalities and specifications might
meet internal resistance, but by doing it this way you’ll be less at risk of losing sight of business goals and user
needs and will also not risk spending so long defining what you want that your solution is obsolete once it reaches
its market.

Resources
When getting your budget together you obviously want a sum to develop for but just as importantly, you need to
look at what you will have for maintenance, development and support after implementation. You also want to look
at the internal resources. If you cannot get manpower to maintain and support the solutions that you are
proposing, you might want to revisit your plans.

The Selection Process
Once you have the above in place, the buying or selection of a CMS shouldn’t necessarily be very difficult or time
consuming.

To do:
• Write down your priorities, goals and overall requirements, preferably in the form of use stories in a short
RFP
• Make a short list of preferred vendors and invite them to answer your RFP
• Invite 3-4 of the selected vendors to a presentation
• Select the vendor that you think will best suit your requirements

• Who will project manage while you are developing? If you are the PM, what won’t
you be doing while you are working on this project?
• Who “owns” the CMS and will thus take responsibility for making decisions during
development and after launch?
• Who owns the content and who will be responsible for creating and maintaining
content?
• If your platform requires customer/user support who will provide the manpower
for that?


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 12
Evaluating Vendors/Agencies
Evaluating a vendor or an agency can be compared to a job interview. You’ll be cooperating quite closely and
possible also for an extended period of time. So you want to make sure that they are capable of serving your needs
and that they are able to help you make the right choices.

Obviously you want to look at their references and their solidity. This can be done in the very early stages of your
selection. But choosing a vender is also about chemistry, which is why a personal meeting is preferable. One-way
to do this is to invite a few vendors to answer your RFP and have them present their solution personally. For you to
evaluate the vendor properly it is a good idea to insist upon meeting the team, you will be working with rather than
the sales people.

Evaluating the Technology
As with deciding what to develop, evaluating the technology that you might want to use is also about looking at
your organization and testing out how it might work in your particular set-up. You do this by involving the people in
your organization who will be working with that technology on a daily basis. They will often be the ones who can
help determine if it’ll work in your setting.

Will you be developing, supporting and hosting in house? If so does your IT department have people who work with
the technology that your are considering?

If you plan on leaving it up to your vendor or agency to develop, support and host, are they solid? Do they have the
necessary manpower and expertise?

Of course you also want to look at the maturity of the technology you are considering. Are there still a lot of bugs
and kinks to work out? Look at existing solutions. Do they work as intended? Ask your vendor to provide cases and
references that are akin to the platform you want to develop.



Avoid Big Bang
While you might have all the right ideas and strategies for how you want to make the most out of your new CMS
and the necessary resources to start developing the all-in-one solution, avoiding the big bang is recommended.

If you develop step by step you’ll be able to release in bits and your entire project won't fall apart if some
functionality is proving tricky or integration goes wrong.


One thing that you can do when choosing new technology for your enterprise, that might
help you sleep better at night, is to hire a technical consultant who can help guide you in
the selection process.
If you are working on becoming more mobile, you probably want to start with getting your
website to be mobile friendly and perhaps you even want to limit yourself to the most
popular (read valuable) landing pages. After this, you can start looking at apps and again
look at whether it makes sense to develop your own or to go for one of the standards out
there.


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 13
No matter what you choose, working in a more or less agile manner and sticking to your business cases makes
sense in an environment where you don’t know for sure what is going to be on the market next year.

Future Proofing Your CMS
If you have worked with digital for a while you’ll know that there really isn’t such a thing as future proofing a
platform completely, but you can make it more or less difficult to continuously improve. Some of the things (in
random order) that you need to think about are:

• Is the CMS flexible enough for changes in business requirements?
• Enterprise user management: Does the system provide easy user management?
• Content management: Does the system allow pushing content to multiple channels?
• Mobility: Does your CMS support and enable mobile development?
• Extendibility: Does the platform allow for deploying new functions and services without messing with the
original code base?
• Standards: By using standards instead of stand alone specially developed solutions you avoid a situation
where you can only get further if you develop something new again
• Testing: Select a CMS and set-up that allows you to test when you develop something new
• Code management: Make sure that you can manage and get to your code—even if you switch agencies
• Integration: Make sure that you choose a platform that allows as seamless integration with the most
common business systems as possible

Conclusion: The Buying Process in Steps
Selecting and buying a CMS for you enterprise can seem like a complex task because it requires a long list of skills
and processes (see model B page 8).

To help you plan your process we will conclude with a step-by-step guide to give you a graphical overview of the
entire buying process.


Model C


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 14
About J. Boye
A vendor-neutral analyst firm founded in 2003, which focuses on several aspects of digital, including CMS,
enterprise portals, digital workplace, strategy & governance and web project management. The company today
has 19 employees based in Belgium, Denmark, Germany, UK and the US. With a mission to help mature a young
market our main activities are:

Conferences
Expand your network and gain inspiration from international experts. The J. Boye Conferences are held each year in
Philadelphia, US and Aarhus, Denmark and attracts more than 300 participants for three days filled with
knowledge sharing. The conferences also serve as an annual meeting for the members of our groups.

Groups
Receive feedback to your specific challenges from people in the same position as yourself in a one of our groups.
The 50+ groups are strictly confidential, consisting only of practitioners, who themselves decide whether
discussions take place at a strategic, tactical or operational level. Among the 500+ members are large, global and
complex organisations from around Europe and North America.

Research
We have done analyst work since 2006 with an initial focus on specific vendors in market segments such as Web
CMS, Enterprise Portals, Enterprise Social Software and SharePoint. These evaluations provide you with an
overview of how specific systems match your needs and enable you to make competent decisions on strategy and
investment. Later we also started releasing best practice research, e.g. buyers guides and papers on strategy or
trends. All our research is based on hundreds of interviews with users and implementation partners.


Consulting
On a selective basis, J. Boye consults with organisations in all phases of digital projects: Strategy & governance;
business objectives, choice of system and implementation partner; and guiding through implementations.

Some of our recent references include: Actavis, Al Arabiya (MBC), Alfa Laval, Alma Media, Boehringer Ingelheim,
Brother International, Cambridge University Hospital, Capital Region of Denmark, EUMETSAT, European
Commission, GEA, International Federation of Red Cross, Lund University, Nordea, Nycomed, Red Bull, Open
University, Suez, University College London, United Nations, Widex and World Health Organization.



© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 15
Appendix A: Questions to Answer When Buying a CMS
Part One
Engagement

Usability

Platform Extensibility

Integration with Key Business Systems

Costs and Pricing Models

• What does my customer journey look like?
• How can the CMS support engagement through multiple channels?
• Where can I gain the most value from having mobile touch points?
• How will the CMS I am considering be an asset in my overall customer experience management?
• How user-friendly is the dashboard?
• How seamless is the back-end user experience?
• Can you set up user administration that fits your organization?
• What kind of workflows can you set up?
• How easily can the content be reused in multiple channels?
• How often will I need to update and integrate with new applications?
• How often will I need to update functionalities?
• Which of my business systems do I need to integrate with in order to provide my users with the
data they need?
• Will I have the support of in-house developers or will I need to buy help?
• Which systems' key systems do I need to integrate with?
• Is the CMS you are looking at designed to integrate out of the box?
• Is it possible to integrate user data with analytics from other platforms?
• Will I have the support of in-house developers for integration or will I need to buy help?
• What is the total cost of ownership (license, maintenance, developing, hosting etc.)?
• Can the license scale with additional servers without adding extra cost?
• What is the cost of upgrades and if applicable new modules?
• What will it cost you to maintain and support your mobile endeavors?
• What kind of licensing model will fit your organization?
• Should you buy a standard system that comes with a set of modules that you can add on, as you
get ready for more channels or functionalities?
• Or if you have many special requirements for integration of other systems, would it make sense
to purchase a system with a more custom made set-up?


© Copyright 2014, J. Boye. All rights reserved. 16
Part Two
Business Goals and Strategies

Ask Your Users

Know Your Data

Organization and Governance


• What need(s) will your platform serve?
• Is the proportion of users large enough compared with the cost of development and
maintenance?
• Can you start small and scale later?
• Did somebody already develop something upon which you can build?
• In what context(s) might they meet and use your solution?
• How will your solution make their life easier?
• What makes them want to engage?
• What problem will you solve for them?
• What need(s) will you satisfy?
• What kind of data will I collect and display?
• What is the condition of the data I want to use?
• How will I be able to access and display the data?
• How will I integrate with the data I want to use?
• How will using the data I intend to use influence the speed of my solution?
• Who will project manage while you are developing? If you are the PM, what won’t you be doing
while you are working on this project?
• Who “owns” the CMS and will thus take responsibility for making decisions during development
and after launch?
• Who owns the content and who will be responsible for creating and maintaining content?
• If your platform requires customer/user support who will provide the manpower for that?

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