What is the best CMS?
Good CMS Systems
Posted on 03 December 2009
A client who can update, manage and control their own website with the minimum of fuss is a happy client. Organizations that can manage its own content without having to have a designer on staff is a happier organization.
Fortunately these are things we can offer our clients in the form of CMS, or Content Management Systems. They are the latest in web design and offer an unparalleled freedom in the construction, design and upkeep of a website.
Developing an SEO friendly CM system adds extra benefit for the client as they then need to spend less on external SEO services. While we can create a CMS that adds SEO to its repertoire, it will never be its primary goal therefore you will probably need some help with SEO, just not as much as you might have done.
The RT Design Group are The Naples SEO company and can help with either solution. We can design and implement an SEO friendly CMS and/or help with the SEO of your existing site.
An SEO friendly CMS should be able to generate its own sitemap in XML when requested or automatically. Google likes sitemaps as they make its job of crawling your site that little bit easier. There are plug-ins you can add to certain CMS that do this kind of thing for you, but it is much better to have the capability built-in.
It should also be able to configure its own URLs to consider optimization while still allowing for easy navigation. Adding keywords to a URL is an effective way of optimizing a site, but they also have to be navigable by users. Having a coherent structure on a page or post title configured so it works for optimization as well as navigation is a tricky thing to accomplish, but possible given the right skills.
The site must have a logical structure. If a robot or user is to navigate effectively there should be a logical order in the way the information is presented. A confusing layout or poor navigation will not only confuse users, but the search engines too. A site must be able to be crawled regularly if you’re going to rank in SERPs.
As well as a logical structure, the site also needs to be flexible. A good SEO friendly CMS must also consider those who maintain and update it. It should be straightforward for a user to add content, keywords and tags. All of them will have an impact on the SEO viability of the site, and therefore the position in the results.
All of these elements go to make a good SEO friendly CM system. Consulting a professional team about a website can open these kinds of possibilities for your business. Call The RT Design Group now for a free no obligation quotation.
taken from Naples Website Design
The significant changes comparing 2010 to 2009 are the addition of a line between Yahoo! and Adobe (the Lime Line–Web Analytics) as well as a link between Reccomend to Adobe (Orange Line–Search & Information Access). There has been an extension to the Brown line with Fabasoft, Docuware, and Objective. Vignette has been added to Open Text on the main line. Vyre has been added on the Purple and Blue lines (between Open Text and Day). Cisco has been removed from the Red line and Jboss is now JBoss/Exo (moved to a new spot on the Green line between MS and Oracle).
Of more interest to Plone are changes in the lower left quadrant. Exo has been added on the Green Line (Enterprise Portal) and OpenCMS has been added on the Blue Line (Web Content Management). Plone is still a triple threat CMS–Enterprise Portal, Web Content Management, and Social Software & Collaboration systems.
Last week, CMS held an Open Forum call conducted by CMS staff to discuss upcoming changes to Medicare reimbursements and much of the call was devoted to discussing outliers and claim processing for 2010. Over 800 providers participated on the call, and a significant number of questions were presented by providers from Florida.
Here are the highlights from the call:
• Representatives from CMS were non-committal in defining what exactly constitutes 2010 outlier reimbursement, but deferred to an upcoming Change Request (CR) letter that should clarify this point. Some of CMS’s recent publications and comments lead us to believe that they make take a different approach to the processing of 2009 Outlier Claims that come due in 2010. This new approach is different than what had been explained during previous HCAF meetings and events. We will continue to provide you the latest information as we receive it from CMS, but right now full clarification of the policy changes addressing outliers is still fluid and subject to written confirmation in the CR letter.
• Reconciliation for outliers will occur on a quarterly basis in 2010.
• There will be no “lump sum” reporting of reimbursements. Reason code 45 will be posted to each claim processed when payment is made to allow the home health provider to apply the payment to the appropriate patient account.
• The CR document should be published by CMS very soon, and will be included in a CMS Home Health Transmittal. As soon as it is released, we will pass the information on to you.
• The next CMS Open Forum call is scheduled for January 20th, 2010.
Bobby Lolley, Executive Director of the Home Care Association of Florida will discuss the above changes in greater detail at the District Meetings in the coming weeks. If you haven’t already registered for the District meeting in your area, please visit the HCAF website today at www.homecarefla.org to register. This is a great opportunity to get your questions answered on a variety of topics that will affect your business – don’t miss it!

Kommentar schreiben