Posted by Scott Clark @ 12:33 am
12 Things to Remember When Building A Franchise Portal
Filed under: Franchises, Web Site Advice
Feb
5
2007
5
2007
If you’re tasked with building a portal for a franchise, where franchisees will share ideas and information through online collaboration tools, here are five tips to make your deployment smooth and effective.� It doesn’t matter which platform you’re using, or if you’re building it from scratch, a franchise portal can be one of the most useful additions to the enterprise - saving time, money, and confusion in a common branded environment, even though the owners are� separated by miles.
- Keep in mind the widely variant level of computer literacy amongst franchise owners.� Franchisees are not always computer savvy, and often the assumptions made about user abilities will get you into trouble.� � Simplicity is critical in portal design, but not to the point that the system loses its usefulness.� Be careful not to task the portal deployment team with computer training of novice users - that’s a different task.
- Plan on lots of questions - and provide video training using a screen recording tool.� Adobe Captivate or Camtasia are terrific tools that allow rapid screen recording with narration of commonly-requested functions.� � These recordings are published in Flash, meaning they are visible on 98% or so of all computers on the Internet.� Make sure you use a high quality microphone for narration, and that you not get stuck in “perfection-land.”� Videos like this can be reviewed many times as needed - saving endless phone calls and emails about the same question.
- Portals are fluid - your first design will not be the last one.� The user community will tell you what’s wrong with the portal.� You will want to listen closely to their feedback and ideas for making the portal better.� This is not a marketing website, and the point of the portal is to remove friction from the enterprise.� Every idea should be considered - but the good of the many should govern the design itself.� � Give credit to users who come up with ideas that are used in designs - this encourages others to participate.
- Build a team of enthusiasts to run the portal.� You’re going to need moderators for various interactive components such as discussion boards and blogs.� Responses to inquiries on these components needs to be rather quick, or the portal will lose its credibility.� Often the ones who stand to gain most from the portal’s existence (the ones who’s life is being made easier) are the ones best suited to operate a portion of it.� Make sure the team gets lots of credit - they’re work and savings of time is being multiplied across the entire franchise.
- Make sure that adoption of the portal is consistent, and rewarded.� If some are using unofficial calendars or forums for their work, reel them in.� The portal’s success will be based on its adoption - and this means some compromise.� If functions are not suitable to the user community, consider improving them.�
- Offer live content through the portal.� Often, a filtered and cleaned set of news feeds are a great way to add value.� By having this information in one place the franchisees will feel they’re saving time and staying informed.� � � Blog feeds from internal or external bloggers are also powerful.
- Provide rapid support from the corporate franchise entity through the portal.� Make it clear that any other support mechanism is less efficent and probably slower.� Demonstrate the efficiency of the portal to deliver requests and get them solved better than days of phone tag.
- Make it easy for the portal to be the franchisee’s desktop.� Adding a clock, a weather badge, or other desktop-like items can encourage use of the portal as the home page for the franchisee.� Links to third party vendors and other commonly used services are also important.
- Stick to the brand identity of the corporation.� Make the entire portal consistent with the brand - and update it to reflect any brand changes.� Set an example to the franchisees on brand consistency.� A portal is an excellent place to post your brand manual and a library of marketing materials.
- Use the portal to give a personal touch.� Put a face on the information.� Avatars and face icons are a great way to keep things personalized in what can otherwise be a rather distant relationship - especially in a larger franchise.
- Keep the news feed completely up-to-date.� Make sure that the first place the franchisees hear about any news is on the portal.� Not the local news or via email.� The portal should be the first place any franchise news or changes in policies should be posted.� If the portal can generate RSS feeds then it’s fine for people to use those feeds in their favored feed reader.
- Manage all franchise-wide date-driven information through the portal.� � Make sure the franchisees can see the activity happening franchise-wide. Give the franchisees an ability to post events and show the buzz of what’s going on.� It builds energy and helps motivate the organization.� No memos, faxes, or emails about events.� Let the portal send out any notifications that might be needed.
del.icio.us Digg it ma.gnolia Netscape reddit StumbleUpon Yahoo MyWeb
>