[support] Is Drupal Appropriate for Our Site?

Gustavo Orrillo gustavo.orrillo at gmail.com
Fri Sep 24 23:57:07 UTC 2010


Hi Rich,

try http://www.buzzr.com/
it will fit your needs
Cheers,

Gustavo

2010/9/24 Rich Shepard <rshepard at appl-ecosys.com>

>   This may seem trivial, but all I read about Drupal, including the
> introduction in the ORA book that arrived today stresses the application of
> the Drupal framework/CMS for community-content based Web sites (or
> e-commerce sites). My very small consulting company doesn't fall in either
> category.
>
>   Most of the pages on our site are static; I'll add new newsletters or
> white papers to the documents.shtml page, but that's about it. I would like
> to add polls, a form-based e-mail capability for those who prefer to ask
> for
> information that way rather than via regular e-mail, and -- perhaps -- the
> ability to comment on issues raised in newsletters and white papers. This
> is
> why I ask whether Drupal is really the appropriate tool for me to learn and
> apply.
>
>   I don't know that any professional services consulting company's Web site
> actually generates clients. I know that a poor site can drive away
> potential
> clients, but in the 17 years I've run my business no one has hired us
> because they found our Web site somehow and decided they needed our
> services. Of course, if I can actually generate new business via a spiffy,
> Durpal-based site, I'll be very pleased to have that result.
>
>   You can see the current site at http://www.appl-ecosys.com/. I'm
> completely open to suggestions to make it more of an attactant, and whether
> Drupal is appropriate for this type of site.
>
> Rich
> --
> [ Drupal support list | http://lists.drupal.org/ ]
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://lists.drupal.org/pipermail/support/attachments/20100924/67e7aae1/attachment.html 


More information about the support mailing list