Presentation from our webinar on Preparing for a Website Redesign. For the recording and other resources, visit http://www.techsoupcanada.ca/learning_centre/webinars/2011/08/03/website_redesign.
2. REMINDERS For the best webinar experience, close all other applications. You can hear us, but we can’t hear you Type questions in the Questions Log Turn up your volume Presentation slides will be available on Slideshare
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4. We help nonprofits use technology to achieve their full potential . We do this by lowering the barriers to technology through access to tools, knowledge, training and talent. TECHSOUP CANADA Register your organization today, to be eligible to request over 300 products from 25 donor partners! www.TechSoupCanada.ca/getting_started
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7. “ Have nothing in your design that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.” - William Morris
Set expectations. Based on questions, a few people already have a website in a CMS and a few people already have a redesign underway, a few using FrontPage – a bunch of the people can make some edits (via CMS or FrontPage/SharePoint/Contribute) but have to call techie for bigger things A bunch of Eds registered!! -try to make it clear when we are entering a different section so people who it applies to can tune back in
Demo of TechSoup Canada site
If you don’t know who you are, you won’t be able to communicate it with anyone else. A website is a way of telling people about your organization, so make sure you have a clear message. What is the key thing your organization does? If you aren’t grounded in your mission, your website will end up like a mish mash with no clear communication.
You might think that this is the process but it’s missing a few steps How do you know what you need? You might build something that doesn’t help meet your goals (except you don’t even have any goals) – a lot of time and $$ for nothing What happens after the launch? Your site just sits there and goes out of date/becomes irrelevant.
Start without “identify needs” and then make it appear – remind people that this is an important part of the process, without it who knows what you will end up with and then you will have spent all that $$ and time for nothing -Chad’s example comparing 2 sets of requirements – if you know what you want you will get it, if you don’t know what you want then who knows what you will end up with. You need to be the expert on what you want!
Don’t skip this step!
Who will visit your site: http://www.gatewaytothearts.org/ (clear where to go depending on who you are) What do they want to do: woodgreen.org (clear actions to take) This should drive the rest of your site design – what content you put on your site, what you put on the home page, etc. Note: put contact info at bottom of page – why make people visit a separate page? Find 3 sites you love & what you love about them Look at sites of orgs doing similar work Dream big at this point, don’t let tech slow you down
Look on Google Analytics at how many people are coming from a mobile
Or volunteer skills Analytics – info about site visits (everything from Google Analytics), mobile visits, amount donated through site
Budget you give consultant should be 60% of your actual budget – leaves a contingency for stuff coming up
You will need help from outside the organization for all but the smallest projects. At minimum you need someone with the designer & geek skillsets. Also consider a copy writer – don’t underestimate how much work this is. -don’t just ask what they charge - this is how you end up with a useless website that will cost you more in the long run. -think of it like hiring staff – you don’t just pick the person who will take your low salary, you pick someone who has the right skills, cares about your mission and is a good fit with the team -ask for recommendations from colleagues – find out what the person/org was really like to work with. Also ask to see previous work. -avoid custom CMSs that will tie you to one company. You are probably ok with anything based on open source -problem with a volunteer or random connection is that they won’t be around for the long haul (note about maintenance later). Save yourself time and energy in the long term by investing in a partnership with a consultant/org you can trust -you may likely want to pick a consultant who has experience with the platform you want (coming up later) **this is really important – not worth it to rush this step!!!
-example of working on Apption’s website -company thought contractors should be managing project, setting up meetings, making sure project kept moving -contractor managed project internally but expected company to drive project over all -as a result nothing happened for a long time, a lot of miscommunication, arguments over budget, requirements changed -project didn’t get moving until I was asked to project manage from company side; after that everything got finished up and we launched about a month later
Especially if this is your first time working on a website project, realize that you don’t really know how long it will take. There’s more work involved than you think! Be realistic in your expectations.
Can paint but not add an extension Often pay a montly fee
Takes some work but if you have the skills there’s a lot you can do with it
This is what Drupal looks like when you first install it – needs a bunch of work before it is ready to go!
Survivor man! A lot of work because you are starting from scratch
Too fancy and custom for a rental Possible with a fixer-upper if you are handy or have good contractors Huge amount of work to build yourself Open source is a good choice for nonprofits in many ways, but you need to understand that it’s not free Want to pick a system that can grow with you (remember: what are your needs in 1 or 2 years?)
Explain the idea of modules (plugins for WordPress)
More complex Can do things like log in, ecommerce TechSoup Canada site is built with Drupal Often your choice of consultant will depend on what system you want (different consultants are often specialized in different systems)
Just a geek: http://www.thecasa.ca/ Pretty but not useful: next page Want a feel that is right for your org - http://www.safeplace.org/ Test out a paper print out with friends, volunteers, clients & other staff. Can they navigate around the website? Can they figure out how to do certain tasks? Also ask them what they would be looking for on your site.
Just a geek: http://www.thecasa.ca/ Pretty but not useful: next page Want a feel that is right for your org - http://www.safeplace.org/ Test out a paper print out with friends, volunteers, clients & other staff. Can they navigate around the website? Can they figure out how to do certain tasks? Also ask them what they would be looking for on your site.
Adding Google Analytics is very simple (inserting 5 lines of HTML), your developer can probably do it tomorrow -do this ASAP with your current site and make sure it is there from day 1 with a new site -Worker’s Action Centre example – big spikes when they were on the front page of the paper, little spikes when they send out a newsletter -show our Google Analytics for TSC site? ->how to find out how many people are coming from a mobile?
-spend a few hours with your developer learning about your site -best way to learn is by doing and then let your developer help you if needed -insist on getting good training! -make sure at least 2 permanent staff are training, including the people who will be updating the site -ask the developer to provide a training manual for you to refer to once they are gone -the more you can do yourself, the less you need to call your developer – you have more control over your own site
Good to be able to reach your developer if you have questions or small things you need them to change
-if you’ve designed your website to have regularly updated content, you need to actually update it! -content doesn’t magically appear – need to make a plan -you also need to plan for content updates! the best approach is to build it into your regular processes e.g. whenever you send out a newsletter, archive it on the site