I've modified the 'big' diagram from the first post on this topic to show a circular content flow - now called editorial flow.
Please find it here: Download the_system_ii.pdf.
The diagram is still more conceptual than technical. Of course at some point this thinking needs to be specialized for the particular publishing vertical, product needs, and company needs.
A few thoughts:
1. Shows content editing flowing in a circle. Enter at any point and proceed downstream. That is, start developing a print article or publication and complete it, then proceed to develop it into a web article or publication. Or visa versa.
2. Prior to entering a print or web editorial workflow there is a content adding, packaging, editing phase, where it is assumed that a web interface will allow review of content sources and collection into the initial manuscript for the subsequent print or web editorial workflow. This might, for example, allow enhancement of an article - with a new sidebar, for example, as it proceeds downstream.
3. Implies content reuse if the circle keeps flowing. The circle can also stop at any point if needs are met. Some publishers might stop at having a print and web output (in any order), some might stop with either a print or web output, some might keep the cycle going indefinitely, building a large content repository over time (e.g. educational publishers). The diagram also implies content maintained as XML rather than being imported and exported from editorial/workflow tools.
4. It has a central repository built of two fundamental parts - XML and binary content (images, etc.). Work done in page layout tools/editorial tools/workflow tools is transitory (though might be archived). The purpose of the repository would be to accurately manage 'content' of published products and to also provide a starting point for initial manuscript creation for the next stage in the cycle.
5. Upon completion of the web or print cycle, a number of XML enabled exports are possible along with the main article/publication produced. This is a requirement of some publishers, and certainly there for the taking, if content is accurately managed as XML.
Well, readers, what do you think? Does it match your thinking? Should we keep going with this?
YES!!! This is exactly what's been rumbling around in my head trying to get out... keep going with it.
Posted by: Michael Turro | July 03, 2007 at 11:13 AM