Inside
WILFRID LAURIER UNIVERSITY
Waterloo | Brantford | Kitchener | Toronto
Photo: Sandra Muir
JUNE 2014
An updated sign is installed on the Aird Building on Laurier’s Waterloo campus. Landmark signage on the Waterloo campus was replaced recently to reflect the university’s visual identity.
New website content top priority for summer Departments to determine what information should move to the new home By Mallory O’Brien Laurier’s website is moving and it’s time to start packing. As part of the creation of a new university website, Laurier’s core web-project team will spend the next few months helping faculties and administrative departments create an inventory of pages within their sections of the current website, evaluate the content, and plan and write new content. This will ensure that only relevant and accurate information will be moved to the new website this fall. After all, there’s nothing worse than moving to a new house and having it cluttered up with boxes that will never be opened! To that end, the core web-project team encourages the university community to think about what to bring to the new home, and what to leave behind. To make the auditing process simpler, departments can begin deleting old content now — it will help reduce the number of pages that need to be reviewed later. The web team is excited to help departments review their content and is meeting with people
responsible for their unit’s web pages. If your department would like to discuss the web project and have not yet met with the web team, contact Web Manager Heidi Maissan at hmaissan@wlu.ca, or Senior ICT Project Lead Jadranko Jerkovic at jjerkovic@wlu.ca. On the technical side of the website redevelopment, the web-project team continues to work with the web steering committee and key web contacts throughout the university to
revised and approved by the web steering committee. Meanwhile, web strategy and design firm mStoner is busy creating the new website’s design templates using the design concept that was approved by the web steering committee in May. “The concept design achieves three goals: it is consistent with Laurier’s brand guidelines; it is ‘responsive’, meaning it adapts to mobile technology; and it targets prospective students,” said Maissan.
.. think about what to bring to the new home and what to leave behind. define the new website’s information architecture (also known as “site navigation”). User testing with prospective students (undergraduate, graduate, domestic and international) and internal staff has been conducted. Based on the results, page prototypes and the information architecture were
“Recruitment and Admissions staff who are part of the steering committee are extremely supportive of the design and feel that it will appeal to prospective undergraduate and graduate students in the 17-30 age demographic.” Laurier’s new website will use Hannon Hill’s Cascade Server as
the content management system (CMS). It will be rolled out in stages beginning in fall 2014. The first pages created for Phase 1 will be high-level areas for external audiences. Pages for internal audiences (current students, faculty and staff) will remain on the current site until they undergo the same review process in a subsequent phase, during which an intranet will be developed. Once the CMS is developed and tested, the core web-project team will begin training users to ensure they are comfortable using the system and at ease with web best practices. Departments that are part of Phase 1 will be trained first, but everyone will be fully supported as the website rolls out. A governance plan, which will be reviewed and approved by the web steering committee, will further support users by outlining clear guidelines that are intended to maintain the integrity and spirit of the new site. Images of the new website design will be posted online. To view them, and for more information on the website redevelopment process, visit www.wlu.ca/webreview.
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Strategy Phase (WinterSpring 2014): Planning the site’s navigation, marketing and communications strategy, and governance structure. Creative Phase (WinterSummer 2014): Designing web page concepts and prototypes, creating a suite of web page templates, auditing the current website’s content and developing new content. Implementation Phase (Summer-Fall 2014): Building and implementing the design of the new CMS using Cascade Server, creating and uploading content, and usability testing. The implementation phase will occur in stages to accommodate the immense amount of data that will need to be created and added to the new CMS.
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Laurier welcomes thousands of students, family and friends to campus for spring convocation.
Meet Shannon Wilson, Service Laurier Advisor, outdoor enthusiast and cake creator.
Sara Matthews teaches Global Studies class as part of Inside-Out program.