Blogs, wikis find a home in the enterprise

08.02.2006
Blogs and wikis have moved past the flashy tech bling phase and are now settling in as core elements of the enterprise collaboration infrastructure. Two enterprise content management vendors are helping drive this evolution, bolstering their platforms with security and auditing functions designed to preserve the sparkle of blogs and wikis while making the content safe for the enterprise.

Stellent next week plans to introduce new features in its Universal Content Management application that lets companies build blog and wiki sites on top of the Stellent Multi-Site Management platform, a Web content management framework. The company's UCM app gains a wiki linking feature, which uses double brackets to automatically create new wiki pages, and templates and workflows for wikis and blogs.

The informal knowledge and project management dividends that blogs and wikis are delivering to corporations are being tempered by the significant security threat posed by consumer and open source tools, according to Andy MacMillan, product manager at Stellent. Most existing tools lack corporate requirements for directory integration, content-level security, and audit capabilities, he said.

"Corporate users want to use [blogs and wikis] but there are concerns about security, management, and compliance. Building it on top of mature web and enterprise content management, those concerns go away. You're just building another type of web site," he said.

Stellent's blog and wiki functions include LDAP and Active Directory integration, single-sign on, permission-based user views, a workflow engine, records management and auditing, content reuse, and tagging via a metadata engine.

UCM also is gaining expanded RSS support, which will let users subscribe via an RSS feed to intranet, extranet, and Internet content managed by Stellent UCM.