The Web Project Guide is an ongoing book project dropped into your mailbox two chapters a month to help make sense of the web design and implementation process.
@deane_barker @MrVilhauer@TonyByrne@realstorygroup This episode pairs well with our episode from February with @cathymcknight on selecting a CMS. Between the two episodes, we’ve covered both sides of the equation — the technology, and the people who implement it.
Check it out!
https://t.co/zmEHOX8A0r
It’s time for a new episode of The Web Project Guide! This month, @deane_barker and @MrVilhauer talk with @TonyByrne from @realstorygroup about selecting an implementation vendor. What questions should you ask? What’s the process look like?
https://t.co/gGX4RVEeKv
It’s time for a new episode of The Web Project Guide! This month, @deanebarker and @mrvilhauer talk with Elias Lundmark — hosting champion — from @optimizely. What do you need to know as a non-tech person when it comes to choosing a hosting solution?
https://t.co/bNlVMH4Y7U
A new episode of The Web Project Guide Podcast is here!
@MrVilhauer and @deane_barker chat with @cathymcknight about content management system selection, the idea of "unknown unknowns," and how selection analysts keep vendors honest.
IT'S A GOOD ONE! https://t.co/zmEHOX82aT
This begins a few months worth of talk about content management systems — first, requirements; then the tools themselves, then the people who implement them.
Until then, go ahead and check out this month - and then, subscribe.
https://t.co/PfK2KccaVH
It’s time for a new episode of The Web Project Guide! This month, @deanebarker and @mrvilhauer talk with @joekepley about how to translate design and content into something a CMS can understand.
https://t.co/PfK2KccILf
More than that, it’s a discussion around the need for clear and actionable goals. Requirements aren’t just a checkbox — they’re the manifestation of your project goals, and every requirement you make has a history and a genesis.
We say it every month: we are excited for you to listen. This month, even more so! Like. Subscribe. Ring that bell. See you in your podcast feed.
https://t.co/GLxVWpBOi3
A new episode of The Web Project Guide podcast — in which @mrvilhauer and @deanebarker speak with @gregddunlap about integrations, Drupal, and the power of Google Docs — just dropped. You could listen, like, and subscribe.
https://t.co/GLxVWpCm7B
But we’re not here to talk about details and harp on about frustrations. We’re here to celebrate great decision-making. @gregddunlap talks about how many integrations could be left alone, how Drupal handles integrations, and a bit about Google Docs.
https://t.co/GLxVWpBOi3
We say it every month: we are excited for you to listen. This month, even more so! Like. Subscribe. Ring that bell. See you in your podcast feed.
https://t.co/g6j6uq9BB3
We’re spoiled, here at The Web Project Guide, because we never have to worry about design. Because we never have to worry about a designer. We’ve got one — it’s @sam_otis.
And this month, it’s part of the podcast — our design episode features the master illustrator himself: @sam_otis. @deane_barker and @MrVilhauer chat with Sam about his path from Flash, how to provide feedback, and how to move from print to web.
https://t.co/g6j6uq9BB3
We are excited for you to listen. And, you should do just that! @escmum is charming and wonderful and an absolute blast. Like. Subscribe. Ring that bell. See you in your podcast feed.
https://t.co/BjJrRgyeHh
Here's something that is very good: our JUST-DROPPED episode of The Web Project Guide Podcast with @escmum, in which @deane_barker and @MrVilhauer chat about content design, accessibility, and turning big organizations toward big change.
https://t.co/BjJrRgQnVp
The biggest key to this kind of work? It's knowing that content work is hard. It takes more than knowledge about grammar: it takes a lot of intense conversations, defined strategy, and a willingness to push back.
And tea. A lot of tea.