Content Rules, Inc.

A reuse map is a blueprint for planned content reuse. Planned content reuse means that you identify ahead of time exactly which pieces of content will be reused in a specific output.
Efforts without tools do not work. Efforts are just that. Best intentions. And while we all have the best intentions, we also have full-time jobs. This is why we have tools. To make things efficient and consistent.
A question came up recently in a conversation about structured authoring and a migration into a component content management system: “If we’re not going to reuse this content, and it is always entirely unique, do we still need to chunk it into components?”
I recently came across a great commentary in the August 2021 issue of “Pharma Technology Focus.” The article is titled, “MDR set to transform how MedTech firms approach content management,” written by Barbara Peraltor, Director of Life Science Solutions at Amplexor.
There is a great deal of talk these days about using knowledge graphs to help manage large amounts of data. In this blog post, I’d like to introduce you to knowledge graphs.
In a quest to find out just how ubiquitous the term “digital transformation” has become in our daily lives, I decided to search the New York Times for instances. Turns out that there are more than 2,300 results in the Times for the term. That’s a lot of instances for
According to the American Society for Indexing, one of the first instances of a large table of contents was created by Pliny the Elder (AD 23/24 – 79). Pliny the Elder was a Roman author who wrote a set of books called, “The Natural History in 37 Books.” It is
An “output type” is the assembly of content that you deliver to customers. In the olden days, output types included books, pamphlets, and scrolls. Today, we have all kinds of print and digital output types to share with our customers — solution briefs, product web pages, equipment manuals, user help,
To deliver personalized content experiences at scale, you need to chunk your content into small, nimble, reusable components. These components are then mixed and matched at the point of delivery to create something unique for a particular customer.
Content personalization has become the aspiration of modern communications. Companies large and small are on a quest to deliver the content a customer needs – and only that content — at the current part of the customer’s journey. Nothing more and nothing less.