Nstein Technologies, Inc., a Canada-based provider of online publishing solutions for newspapers, magazines and online content providers, has announced that The Chronicle of Higher Education has chosen Nstein Technologies Web Content Management (WCM) and Text Mining Engine (TME) to upgrade its entire editorial and web operations for its two publications.
Founded in 1966, The Chronicle of Higher Education provides news, information, and job listings for college and university faculty members and administrators. Its sister publication, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, founded in 1988, covers news of fund raising, donors, and charitable causes.
Always on the forefront of technology, The Chronicle first appeared on the Internet as a Gopher service in 1993, and then on the Web two years later, making it one of the very first papers to do either. The Chronicle of Philanthropy went online in 1997. The sites are operated by a home-grown system that has been in use since 1995. It now handles more than 1.5 million monthly visitors and provides the primary job board for higher education. Additionally, both sites offer daily, monthly, and annual subscriptions to premium content.
The Chronicle had been seeking a new system that incorporates modern content-management techniques, eases the process of publishing on the Web, and expands the newspapers' Internet offerings, both for readers and for advertisers. Further, it was eager to adopt Nstein's TME to automate tagging and associate relevant content with relevant job listings and other advertising. With Nstein's WCM 4, editors will have a streamlined back end that will allow them to create, modify and manage content from this system - and push content to any digital channel - including print, Web, e-mail newsletters, or mobile.
Nstein Technologies is the online provider of choice for many of the world's leading media companies, including Condé Nast, Reed Business Information, Transcontinental Media and ImpreMedia.