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Lakshmi M. Grama Senior Digital Strategist National Cancer Institute, NIH Digital Services Innovation Center, GSA. Structured content and open content models. future-ready content?. Future-Ready Content Is. Adaptable & Reusable. After the Housing Bust, Revisiting Home Ownership.
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Lakshmi M. Grama Senior Digital Strategist National Cancer Institute, NIH Digital Services Innovation Center, GSA. Structured content and open content models
Future-Ready Content Is Adaptable & Reusable
Future-Ready Content Is Structured & Modular
From epicurious…… Recipe Types • Recipe • Title • Byline • Publication Attribution • Yield • Active Time • Total Time • Teaser • Image • Preparation • Main Ingredients • Servings • Cooking/Prep Time • Nutritional Information Related Wines Related Recipes Related Diets Related Menus Reviews
Whole Foods’ Recipe Content Model • Recipe • Title • Servings • Teaser • Image • Ingredients • Method • Nutritional Information Related Recipes Special Diets Featured Recipes Reviews
Future-Ready Content Is Findable
Structure + Metadata Increases Findability Google result with rich snippets for video Google result without rich snippets for video
One of the four main pillars of the Digital Government Strategy is to develop : • “an information-centric approach” • “moves us from managing ‘documents’ to managing discrete pieces of open data and content which can be tagged, shared, secured, mashed up and presented in the way that is most useful for the consumer of that information.” Digital government strategy
Content models are representations of content structure They are platform agnostic Critical for content management and content presentation Enables easier syndication and mashups with content Can shape future-ready content Content Models
Standards for content authoring • DITA • DocBook • Standards for web publishing • Microdata • RDFa/RDFaLite Standards for content models
RDFa and RDFa Lite • Official standard from W3C standards for content models
Microdata Standards for content models
So we are not reinventing the wheel every time So we can adopt, adapt, and extend for our needs So others can take our content and reuse, mashup more efficiently Why shared & Open content models?
Structured and Open Content Models Working Group • Sponsored by the Digital Services Innovation Center • Identified key thought leaders in this area to participate • Open to others interested in this area Cross-Agency Working Group
Working group members • Bill Brantley, OPM • Gong Chen, FDA • Allison Gould, US Courts • Matt Harmon, FEMA • Bill Hazard, Census • Jill James, Education • Mary Maher, USDA • Dan Munz, CFPB • Russell O’Neill, GSA • Robert Rand, SEC • Fred Smith, CDC • Wayne Whitten, SSA • Lakshmi Grama, NIH
Review existing content models and schemas - • Develop new or adapt existing content models for 1-2 commonly-used content types in government web content • Socialize the content models with the larger government web community What the Working Group is doing
Articlulated the value of shared and open content models for “future ready” information dissemination Identified content types that are common across federal government content Began development of a preliminary model for Events First Working Group Meeting - September
Complete version 1.0 of Event model • Identify and develop another content model • Article, FAQ, or something else • Socialize the models so people can begin using them • Plan for the future development and nurturing of the models What we Still need to do
Gwynne Kostin Director, Digital Services Innovation Center • Jacob Parcell Manager, Mobile Programs, Digital Services Innovation Center Thanks to our sponsors
Questions/suggestions Lakshmi Grama lgrama@mail.nih.gov