A new refresh project...really?
by Peter Mosinskis, Director of IT Strategy in new, planning, project 0
Some of our readers may know that the University home page underwent its last major refresh in 2005.
What you may not know is that the University home has undergone at least 8 significant (and incremental) refresh cycles since the August 2005 launch. Don't believe me? You can use the Wayback Machine on archive.org to take a look at a visual and architectual history of our web site.
Overall, continuous and incremental improvement strategies have worked well to keep the University web site running smoothly while balancing demand for our limited human and financial resources. So why is this a good time to do another major overhaul? Here are a few thoughts:
- Web as a strategic communication tool: we know from our 2009 web research that over 80% of current and prospective students we polled stated that the University web site is their primary means of finding out information about the University. If nothing else, we expect those expectations to increase over the next 3-5 years, so we must take action to manage this anticipated demand.
- Social media. Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube: we are all using it, and the University as an institution is using it as well. However, our web site and communication strategies generally aren't taking advantage of the power of social media to generate open discourse.
- Mobile: mobile web usage is exploding, and will only continue to expand. If our University's web presence isn't mobile-friendly, we risk alienating large groups of audiences.
- Infrastructure: over the last 2 years the University completed 2 major Web infrastructure projects: migration to our new web content management system (EchoCI) and deployment of new web server infrastructure to support it. We now have a solid hardware platform on which to build the next iteration of the University's web site. Along with these tools, we can leverage our years of expertise in web standards-based development to ensure our new site is both highly usable and accessible.
- Convergence: the time is right to tackle these issues. Our University's leadership recognizes the importance of these issues and is willing to commit the necessary resources to address them. This gives the University an opportunity to not only make our Web presence look and work better, but also to develop strategies that will improve our ability to communicate more effectively over the next 3-5 years.
To respond to these factors, the Division of Technology & Communication has begun planning work for an overhaul of the University web site, including the home page, top-level pages, and sub-sites; campus-wide planning activities for that project are expected to begin in early 2012.
In our next post, I'll begin to outline the steps we plan to take to accomplish our objectives, the resources we'll need, and how we will engage the University community throughout the project.