A while back I wrote about my first weekend with Drupal, which after exploring other content management systems and a little bit of soul searching, I decided to use for the International Transplant Nurses Society site.
While I had already built the site according to a Dreamweaver/Contribute model with custom PHP/MySQL functionality for certain features, a new set of requirements entered the picture that called for features that either I would have to learn to develop, consuming much time and energy, or that I would have to hire another developer to produce.
But what if???????I thought???????there??????s a CMS out there that could support my strict adherence to web standards while offering the flexibility and scalability I required. After looking into Joomla and Mambo, Drupal seemed the most appropriate for my project for its community focus.
Fast forward two months??????
After probably a bout of being over cautious, I relaunched the site, now powered by Drupal. It??????s pretty much the same site as before. In fact, I haven??????t told my client yet that about the switch???????kind of a test to see if they notice. So far, nope.
The toughest part about going to the CMS is developing within web forms instead of Dreamweaver. It??????s not because I use Dreamweaver as a crutch (I??????ve been hand-coding since 1996), but it??????s hard to give up the site management tools and CSS support.
I realize it??????s a trade off, and I??????m looking forward to tapping into Drupal??????s many modules that will help me deliver a much more integrated and professional site than previously planned.
But at the moment, it still feels a bit awkward. Though overall, I??????m very happy with Drupal. And I imagine as I go forward I??????ll get more used to it.
Comments
One response to “Drupal CMS Switchover”
The only giveaway that the ITNS site switched to Drupal would be that it’s still using the Drupal favicon ;)
And the post on partially hydrogenated oils is food for thought. (Unfortunately, I love Panera’s bagels.)