introduction to fatwire 6.3

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© RUSH University Medical Center Introduction to FatWire 6.3 Ken Quandt, MSLIS Web Managing Editor Marketing and Communications

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Introduction to FatWire 6.3 for Rush U Web page managers.

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Page 1: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Introduction to FatWire 6.3

Ken Quandt, MSLISWeb Managing Editor

Marketing and Communications

Page 2: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site’s Goals

• Question: What are your Web site’s goals?

Page 3: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site’s Goals

• Question: What are your Web site’s goals?– Make the sale.

Page 4: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site’s Goals

• Question: What are your Web site’s goals?– Make the sale.– Deliver the service.

Page 5: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site’s Goals

• Question: What are your Web site’s goals?– Make the sale.– Deliver the service.– Build the brand.

Page 6: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site

• Your site should be customer-centric.

Page 7: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site

• Your site should be customer-centric.

• Your site must be useful.

Page 8: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site

• Your site should be customer-centric.

• Your site must be useful.

• Focus on most important audience first.

Page 9: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site

• Your site should be customer-centric.

• Your site must be useful.

• Focus on most important audience first.

• Two types of Web sites:– Task-dominant site– Audience-dominant site

Page 10: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site

• Your site should be customer-centric.

• Your site must be useful.

• Focus on most important audience first.

• Two types of Web sites:– Task-dominant site– Audience-dominant site

• Your site should either make a task easier or help achieve a goal.

Page 11: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site

• Content should support those tasks or it should not go up.

– Web content guru, Gerry McGovern

Chicago, Illinois, 2007

Page 12: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Your Web Site

• What it is NOT:– The next great American novel.– A dissertation.– A research report.– A university catalog (that’s already been

created by the Registrar’s Office).– A place to share photos from the

department picnic five years ago.

Page 13: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Writing for the Web

• In 2009:– Average visit to Rush U Web site lasted

under eight (8) minutes– Average number of pages viewed per visit

was about four (4)– Among Top 20 Platforms:

• iPhone (#7)• Google Android (#13)• Blackberry (#17)• Windows Mobile (#20)

Page 14: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Writing for the Web

• Competition for Your Web Site Content:– Music– Text messages– Twitter– Facebook– YouTube– Kindle– Phone calls– Television

Page 15: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Writing for the Web

• Trains

• Tickets

• Toilets

Page 16: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Writing for the Web

• Trains

• Tickets

• Toilets

•Be concise. Get to the point.

Page 17: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Writing for the Web at Rush

• Style Guide: The Associated Press Stylebook

• Rush In-House Style Manual

Page 18: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

FatWire Basics

• FatWire 6.3 – www.rushu.rush.edu– Login page:

• edit.rushu.rush.edu– Use same username and password as that you use

for your Rush PC

– Accessible off campus with SecurID• Metaframe

or

• Remote access to your Rush PC

Page 19: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Learning Objectives

• At the end of this session you should be able to:– Log into FatWire.– Explain what an “asset” is in FatWire.– Locate the “Rush Assets” and “Rush Pages” tabs.– Understand the difference between the “Rush Assets” tab and the

“Rush Pages” tab.– Expand and collapse “nodes” on a “tree.”– Distinguish between “Level” pages and content blocks.– Edit an existing content block and save changes.– Add or remove a content block from a “Level” page.– Add or remove a document from a “Level” page.– Add or remove a link from a “Level” page.– Remember the specifications for images.– Understand what a workflow group is and what roles are included in

workflow.– Locate FatWire resources on the Rush U Web site.

Page 20: Introduction to FatWire 6.3

© RUSH University Medical Center

Questions?

Ken Quandt

E-mail: [email protected]

Phone: 2-6846