views:

521

answers:

11

I noticed a lack of Content Management tags all up in the pool.
So here is a quick and dirty survey to get things started.

1) What UCM solution is your company using?
2) How big is your company?
3) Are you happy with the implementation?


ME:
1) The company I work for uses Oracle ECM (formerly Stellent UCM).
2) We have somewhere over 10,000 employees across Australia, New Zealand and Indonesia.
3) It works! Having worked with the system for a while now. I can see where the initial implementation went wrong. Its 3 years later and it is Rewrite Time! (Three year itch?)

A: 

1) My company currently uses Word Press or no CMS at all. We are however working on a CMS that will work exactly as we want it to.

2) It's me and my friend so 2 of us

3) We're still starting up and finding clients so haven't had a chance to use it.

Teifion
+1  A: 

Our external business orientated site is running joomla which once you get passed the learning procces of how it constructs sites, is very good for a multi-user environement.

Company = 25+ people

DAC
+1  A: 

1) CMS: Oracle's BEA Aqualogic
2) Size: 10,000+
3) Experience: As an end user with full community and content admin privileges, I find the tool to be outdated and stifling in terms of knowledge sharing and trying to get the benefits that exist in social networks. Perhaps this is due to the implementation, and not an inherent weakness in the product. Not sure of the future direction of the product either, since Oracle recently acquired it.

happyappa
SO really wanted an official Answer.. the winner is Gary!More of a survey than a question, but what SO wants, SO gets!
Tyronomo
A: 

We use Plone open source for the internal site...

+1  A: 

We use a DotNetNuke intranet site. I think we need to upgrade or redesign cause I like Joomla much more.

nyxtom
+1  A: 

1) We are moving from Microsoft Content Managemet Server 2002 to Sitecore 6.0 though we have internal PHP Wikis and Dot Net Nuke sites that have user content as well.

2) 1,000-2,000 people with about 3500 pages of Web content to migrate.

3) I'm content with it so far. There is still a lot of work to do in the migration and it will probably take a couple of years to move everything over, which includes legacy ASP and ASP.Net 1.1 and 2.0 sites that haven't been worked on in a few years as well. It would take a lot of things going easily for me to be happy with an implementation of this size.

JB King
A: 

In my daily work, I use Tridion, and some of my colleagues use Hippo. At home I use Plone.

Dominic Cronin
+1  A: 

Drupal. I've used it for small and medium sized projects.

acrosman
+1  A: 

1) We're using a CMS that was custom written in vbscript and sucks horribly. We're going to start using MODx for our external stuff, but we're not sure what's going to happen with our internal stuff.

2) A university with about 30,000 students (about 10,000 of which have ties to my department).

3) MODx looks cool, but haven't had much of a chance to use it. As stated previously, our other CMS sucks.

Jason Baker
A: 

Institution-wide we see a variety of systems.

A few Plone sites. I'm a Plone fan.

The centre within which I work is somewhat multi-institutional (a good history of collaborative work) (one of two research centres situated within the same building) and the Plone sites that I'm setting up are fitting very nicely with diverse user/group requirements.

Graham Perrin
A: 
Mischa Kroon