1 / 30

New Editorial and Publishing Technologies

New Editorial and Publishing Technologies. Carolyn Brown, CPE Publishing Consulting. Why should editors care?. Remember when you had to learn to use a fax machine? Edit on computer? The landscape for publishing is changing, and we need to learn and adapt

gurit
Download Presentation

New Editorial and Publishing Technologies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. New Editorial and Publishing Technologies Carolyn Brown, CPEPublishing Consulting

  2. Why should editors care? • Remember when you had to learn to use a fax machine? Edit on computer? • The landscape for publishing is changing, and we need to learn and adapt • You may be a publishing manager, and you want to go in the best direction for the publications you manage

  3. A changing landscape From documents to content From linear processes to collaboration and repeated loops From one use to reuse From print product to multi-platform delivery

  4. And a transition for content producers • Content producers — traditional publishers and many non-publishers now producing content — have had to adapt • Many have some elements of • traditional print-based systems • emerging content-based systems

  5. Traditional print-based systems • Word document • Circulated by email

  6. Traditional print-based systems • Revised and commented by others • Versions saved manually in folder on network

  7. Traditional print-based systems • Finalized document laid out manually in desktop publishing software • Images and tables from database data incorporated manually

  8. Traditional print-based systems • Proofread manually (on paper or PDF) • Further revisions made manually to page layout • Printed

  9. Traditional print-based systems • Cut-and-pasted manually into Web content management system (CMS) or coded manually in HTML • Further manual revisions in CMS or HTML • Published on Web site

  10. Emerging content-based systems • Collaborative Web- or server-based authoring and revision • Routing to collaborative users andtracking of versions

  11. Emerging content-based systems • Structured content — text, data, images • Structure invisible to users • Changes are made to a single, definitive, updated version • Data andimages updated dynamically

  12. Emerging content-based systems • Automated, rapid publication to all formats print layout PDF Content HTML e-book mobile

  13. Challenges for content producers • Content producers need to start or accelerate the transition for many reasons • Complex authoring and revision processes • Remote authors and editors • Speed up production • Avoid errors • Incorporate just-in-time data • More content to produce but no increase in budget

  14. Common requirements • Documents from many sources need to be put into a common structure

  15. Common requirements • Writers, reviewers and editors across the country and around the world working on the same content…

  16. Common requirements • Versions need to be tracked … • 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5

  17. Common requirements • And routed to users

  18. Common requirements Documents need to incorporate images…

  19. Common requirements • Or dynamic data from a database

  20. Common requirements • Final documents need to be published immediately • In print/PDF • Basic format

  21. Common requirements • In print/PDF • Graphic design (example supplied by The Conference Board of Canada, used with permission)

  22. Common requirements • On a Web site (via CMS or direct to HTML)

  23. Common requirements • In an e-book format

  24. Common requirements • In a mobile format

  25. Software These needs are being met through new types of software • Collaborative platforms • Content management systems (CMS) • Web site CMS • Drupal • Enterprise CMS • Hummingbird, Documentum, Alfresco, Open Text

  26. Software • Component CMS • Organizes documents and chunks of documents • Content is often structured in XML or a database • “Discovers” similar text in other documents and coordinates re-use from a single document

  27. Software • Production based on international standards for digital publishing • Another session on XML — this standard format can be used by many types of software and files are therefore software-independent PDF epub XML XSL XSL-FO

  28. Software • Many new products coming from the desktop publishing world, automating production in several formats ArbortextTypéfi • Writers and editors may work in traditional Word files or in XML-based word-processing software

  29. Outcomes • Speed — production reduced to minutes • Accuracy — no more manual corrections • Transparency — paper trail • On time — easier to meet deadlines • Automate manual tasks • Avoid staff costs or free up staff for higher-value work • Publish simultaneously in all formats • Reuse content • Ease future software migrations

  30. Editors’ brave new world • Editors will work within these new systems • May be editing in XML-based word-processing software • Or may be managing publications through collaborative, single-source workflows • May suggest modernization to management • Be the change!

More Related