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Status

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titlenot visible to public
Status
titledraft
revising hanna’s draft - in progress

Type

Explanation

Reader

Current and prospective Clients

Reader goal

Prospective clients: Figure out if JUNO’s content options cover their use case/needs.

Current clients: Know what kind of content they can put on their site so that they can make decisions about their run of show. (For implementation task 1.10 Run of show walk through meeting)

Learning goal: Know that there are distinct, defined content types that function differently. JUNO has more than just live sessions, but it also has specific constraints on content.

Contributors

Hanna

JUNO version

V1.14

Reviewers (check the box when you’re done!)

  •  

Review deadline

Notes for reviewers

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titleNotes

  • These are EX… Identify info that should be deleted here and linked out. Leave it in if there’s no link yet.

  • Get JUNO exhibitor screenshot. Style all acreenshotsscreenshots

  • What’s a “Poster” in the context of the Deep Dive Template? Why is it called out as it’s own row under Sponsors/Exhibitors? If a client says, “what’s a poster,” how should that question be answered in this doc?

Notes from basecamp convo:

There was a conversation in basecamp about “on demand sessions” and “on demand content” and “on demand articles”

(check this for accuracy)

They are all the same thing. On-demand content can be an article, image, or video.

It can be posted before an event(content that’s meant to be read or watched as you like during the event).

Or it can be posted after the event-- As in a LIVE session that gets TRANSFERED to a recorded video so people can watch it on demand.

So when the client used the phrase “on demand session,” they meant the latter.


Your content in JUNO falls into one of the following content types:

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Exhibitor

Also known as Partner.

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Include Page
Exhibitor suite elements diagram
Exhibitor suite elements diagram

Each exhibitor gets has their own page on the site. At JUNO, we call these exhibitor engagement suites. These suites can be set up by the exhibitors themselves, with the help of our written tutorials and live training sessions.

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You have fifty questions that you want attendees to answer. First, you create a track with an introduction to the course. Then you create Lesson 1 and add the first ten questions. You create more lessons until all fifty questions are accounted for. Finally, you add all of the lessons to the track so that they’re published together as a single course.

Blurb

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A blurb is a statement or graphic that can live on any navigation page. Uses of blurbs include information text or a static, unclickable image.

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NOTE TO SELF:

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If you have unique content that doesn’t fall under one of the above content types or modules, we use a blurb to add custom code. The size of a blurb is a flexible, but it can only be added to navigation pages. (That means it can’t be added to session, library, exhibitor, speaker, or course pages.)

Common uses for blurbs are:

  • Static, unclickable image (often used as a page header)

  • Autoplay video (often used as a page header on the home page)

  • FAQ page

  • Text links that lead to an achor point on the same page

  • Website footer (complex or simple)

[SCREENSHOTS OF EACH ONE]