Posts Tagged ‘goal’

Website Management

Wednesday, December 24th, 2008

A successful website manager should handle at least four basic details in the execution of a web project or ongoing site maintenance task.

Resources – This can consist of a number of different assets. The software you use, the computer you work from, and especially the people you work with.

Time – A goal, a set date to deliver by, so that your entire team is working knowing that time is of the essence.

Money – Getting a new project to profitability as soon as possible is key, and should never be forgotten. If you website is not profitable you won’t be managing it for long.

Scope – Arguably the most important of all three. Keeping a close eye on what the project starts as, and what it morphs into by the end can be the toughest of all three to properly manage.

Each of the aspects of proper website management, are completely related and dependent on each other. Good resources cost money, money well spent can save time, time is money, and scope encompasses each of those into a well thought out plan to reach an end goal, without needlessly changing the end goal.

If scope “creeps” it will cost you time, money, and can chip away at the morale of employees quickly. You might think that adding one additional task is nothing, but almost invariably it doesn’t end there.

Anyone who manages websites can tell you, “A website is never finished.” As it shouldn’t be. If a website was done, and you stopped innovating and making it better and better, someone will quickly come along and take that idea to the next level without you. That doesn’t mean however that you allow scope creep at any specific or particular time.

Its very important that you stick to your goals, unless you’ve clearly made a mistake in your original plan. Once the goal has been reached, that is when you take a second to step back reevaluate and see where it should go next. Bogging a project down by endlessly changing the goal posts can easily keep a goal from ever being reached.

If anything, its simply being advised to tread lightly when it comes to only saying “yes” to change and revision requests, so that you can keep an eye out for a chance to show your expertise with a suggestion that saves time and money by keeping your eyes on the goal. You’ll be a much happier website manager, and your client will thank you in the end.

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