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Website product management: Back and front end

Website Product Management: Keeping focused during change
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Product management is crucial for the success of a website. For the purposes of this brief article, let's say web product (as opposed to project or program) management is considering your web presence as a whole to ensure a high quality and consistent experience for the users. That said there are two aspects to product management for the web: product managing the CMS implementation (the backend) and managing the website itself (the front-end as viewed by a site visitor). These two are highly related, but and the main reason to bring up these two angles is to make sure you cover each. 

Responsibility
Front end (visitor experience)
Back end (CMS implementation)
Overall consistency Yes, of the site itself Yes, of the implementation
Overall quality Yes, of the site itself Yes, of the implementation
Functionality Quality from end user perspective, including not bloating the site Quality from the technical perspective
Content Overall content strategy, including training content contributors Technology supports strategy and enforces standards as possible
Information Architecture To ensure consistent implementation on site Technology implemented to naturally enable official information architecture
Future-proofing Watching trends to weave in new functionality Implementing in a way that reasonably allows future functionality
Metrics Website metrics Publishing and performance metrics
Users Primarily website users Mostly CMS users, although website user needs always take precedence

Both are needed for a successful large website, and need to be balanced. What happens if one of these is weak? Weak management of the website front-end:

  •  Bloated and unfocused site
  •  Inconsistent site (if no enforcement and training)
  •  Unhappy external users

Weak management of the backend: 

  •  Implementation effort higher than ideal
  •  Unstable implementation, and difficult to maintain or add functionality to
  •  Inconsistent site (if tool not aligned with standards)
  •  Unhappy internal users

Obviously, both are interrelated. For example, in an unfocused website product management environment, the implementation could become unstable just because unreasonable and incoherent requests are demanded and delivered. That said, consider both sides of product management for your website.

 

Website Product Management: Keeping focused during change

Last updated 31 August 2015 (first published 23 June 2010)