| By Xenia von Wedel | Article Rating: |
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| July 8, 2009 02:15 PM EDT | Reads: |
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Jahia North America, the leader in open source web content integration software, today announced that Virgin America has selected and implemented Jahia to power its intranet, giving hundreds of users online access to personalized and dynamically generated content and documents. The intranet puts an end to never-ending searches and provides a simple, secure, low-cost way to quickly obtain information. Working with its own IT team, Virgin America employed Jahia templates to create a customized user experience that focused on ease-of-use, while implementing Virgin America’s corporate look and feel. By leveraging Jahia tools, development time was reduced to around four weeks.
Virgin America is a new, California-based airline that is on a mission to make flying good again—with brand new planes, attractive fares, topnotch service, and a host of fun, innovative amenities that are reinventing domestic air travel. The Virgin America experience, unlike anything else in the domestic skies, includes mood-lit cabins, custom-designed leather seats, power outlets and in-flight Internet (the onboard Wi-Fi provider is also using Jahia to serve Internet pages in-flight and on the ground). A video touch-screen and remote control on every seatback offers guests 25 films, live TV, video games, seat-to-seat chat, and on-demand food ordering.
“We wanted a one-stop shop where our teammates can easily view and download company information, manuals and policies. At the same time, we wanted to empower our content managers with the ability to quickly update content without requiring extensive web training. Jahia provided all of this and more,” explained Richard Lee, intranet manager, Virgin America. “Prior to implementation, we looked at several of the major content management vendors, but chose Jahia because it offered similar levels of functionality and quality, but at a tenth of the cost due to their open source pricing model.”
“Once we had agreed upon the scope, the implementation was incredibly fast and we have been able to pilot the project with dozens of users,” Richard Lee continued. “We are delighted with the flexibility Jahia provides and plan to leverage more Jahia features to further enhance the user experience.” Virgin America’s Jahia-based intranet includes shared access to documents, controlled and personalized access to organized content and flexible organization of content through powerful classification, personalized address books and a calendar of scheduled events. Message boards allow employees to share ideas.
“The implementation of our open source Web Content Integration software at Virgin America is further evidence that Jahia is able to provide highly functional, scalable and interoperable software at a fraction of the cost of traditional vendors,” commented Emmanuel Garcin, Vice President and General Manager, Jahia North America. “Given the current recession, open source software offers organizations an alternate path to technological innovation that doesn’t compromise their strategic IT.”
A white paper on “How Jahia Lowers Maximizes Value and Total Cost of Ownership” is available online. The report uses public, independently verifiable data and illustrates how Jahia offers significant cost savings over legacy vendors and homegrown solutions.
Published July 8, 2009 Reads 200
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About Xenia von Wedel
Xenia von Wedel, Tech blogger~editor / PR Director/San Francisco. Xenia joined Terpin Communications in February, 2000. She has supervised a variety of technology accounts for the Firm, including many open source leaders, such as KDE, SuSE Linux and Xandros. Her high-profile placements include a major national feature story on the Associated Press, plus full-length feature stories in USA Today, Wall Street Journal, the San Francisco Chronicle and San Jose Mercury News. Internationally, she has placed substantial feature stories in the Economist, Financial Times, International Herald Tribune, South China Morning Post, Die Zeit and others. She is fluent in German and French, and conversational in Spanish.
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