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Clickability (discontinued) Reviews and Ratings

Rating: 7 out of 10
Score
7 out of 10

Community insights

TrustRadius Insights for Clickability (discontinued) are summaries of user sentiment data from TrustRadius reviews and, when necessary, third party data sources.

Pros

User-Friendly Interface: Many users have praised Clickability for its user-friendly platform that allows non-technical users to easily update information without the need for HTML markup or programming knowledge. This intuitive and easy-to-navigate interface makes it accessible to a wide range of users with varying technical skills.

Powerful Programming Capabilities: Several reviewers have highlighted Clickability's powerful programming language capabilities, which offer flexibility and customization options. This advanced programming functionality allows users to tailor their websites according to their specific needs and preferences, enhancing their overall website development experience.

Efficient Content Creation Workflows: Users appreciate Clickability's efficient content creation workflows that help them effectively manage website content. These streamlined processes and tools enable users to create and organize their content efficiently, improving productivity and workflow management on the platform.

Reviews

11 Reviews

Good content management system

Rating: 7 out of 10
Incentivized

Use Cases and Deployment Scope

Clickability was being used by the majority of the editorial department. Reporters, editors, and producers all used it. But outside of that, marketing, sales, advertising, finances, etc., were not using it. It addressed the need for a content management system and for the company to create, edit, and publish content.

Pros

  • Create articles.
  • Edit articles.

Cons

  • Analytics.
  • Moderate comments.

Likelihood to Recommend

Clickability is great for small to medium sized news organizations who are looking for a platform for content management. I suppose it could be useful to other businesses with a website, but it would need the dynamic content that a news organization for example would publish. I think it would be less appropriate for a larger organization as well.

Vetted Review
Clickability (discontinued)
7 years of experience

Clickability usage and hands-on experience

Rating: 7 out of 10
Incentivized

Use Cases and Deployment Scope

We use it to manage all of our websites, four brands and a corporate site. Editorial postings, ad placement. So multiple departments and people utilize Clickability. It helps us to manage and monitor our websites.

Pros

  • Organized to manage several levels of use.
  • Ad placement tools.
  • Editorial tools to post articles.

Cons

  • Choosing ad size/placement should be easier than it is. Now, I have to re-create the whole thing.
  • When you "save" anything a pop-up comes up that is redundant.
  • Ad list only shows a limited number. It's not until you click on one and cancel it out, then you can see all the listings. A bit tedious and redundant.

Likelihood to Recommend

I think Clickability does a good job of organizing all the elements in a webpage. You clearly can choose what and where you need to be, via tabs. Some functions are redundant and cumbersome. Like switching an ad placement. We have a, b, c positions and it should be easier to move them around. Currently, it is not. You have to re-create the entire ad, with a different position. Not efficient.

Easy to use CMS

Rating: 8 out of 10
Incentivized

Use Cases and Deployment Scope

Clickability is used as a CMS for different external websites across the company. There are very simple sites but also complex ones which have difficult processes. On one site we do quarterly results publishing.

Pros

  • Simple CMS, all our users cope very fast with the publishing process. Even non-tech-savy people!
  • Implementation of new sites very fast - great project teams!
  • Good design resources to support you in making sure the site has a nice layout and is user-friendly in regards of usability.

Cons

  • Some outages in the recent year
  • Support is not very fast and knowledgeable

Likelihood to Recommend

<p>For very cheap microsite solutions Clickability is too expensive.</p><p>It is a great application for any website that should be run longer and there are one time publishers that want to be able to do publishing themselves.</p>

Vetted Review
Clickability (discontinued)
6 years of experience

Best for building Websites quickly.

Rating: 8 out of 10
Incentivized

Use Cases and Deployment Scope

Clickability is used in the entire client organization I work for. It is mainly used for building a marketing website with a quick turn around time. Business users are be able to edit the content on the live site. It is also used to build websites with high volume content like press releases. Developers can just work on display logic and as Clickability is offered as SAAS, deployments don't need any reboots.

Pros

  • Content Creation Workflows
  • Website Creation
  • Ease of Development
  • Online Marketing

Cons

  • Version Control
  • Release Planning when huge number of templates need to be pushed to production
  • Velocity Scripting used to create website templates could be improved

Likelihood to Recommend

Clickability is not suited when when users log in into a website and lot of the website functionality is tied to user login. It is well suited for read only content sites. At what frequency is the content on the site updated? How much control is needed by the business user to edit the site? If a business needs more control, I prefer Clickability.

Down Click Clickability

Rating: 3 out of 10

Use Cases and Deployment Scope

Right now it is used for all websites for Vance publishing. Clickability allows multiple users to add pages easily who do not have any HTML or programing experience. It also allows for the flexibility to design templates which can easily display information from other sources. On of the best things about Clickability is we needed a page to manage our webinars and show different titles and content based on dates. Clickability allowed us to program to display "Upcoming Webinar" vs "Watch Now" dependent on the date. It also is easier for the editor who is responsible for the webinar to change information or add information as needed without knowing any programing or markup.

Pros

  • Clickability is good at allowing information to be updated quickly by people that don't understand HTML markup or programing.
  • Clickability has a powerful programing language.
  • Clickbility allows you to return to previous versions. This is very important when testing and if you make mistakes.

Cons

  • It doesn't allow testing to people who do not have passwords. You must create an account to test in staging. I would like to be able to show someone a website in staging without them needing to log in.
  • I would like the process for static websites to be more streamlined. I don't like creating a template then create content for a website that won't be changed by updated content.
  • You have a useful resource pdf. Which I use all the time. I would also like to see more useful tools to help the learning curve for Clickability. Video's, webcasts, or white pages to help with the steep learning curve that Clickability has.
  • Add easy access to social sites for sharing and posting.

Likelihood to Recommend

Having used other programs that are similar. I find Clickability has some of the most flexibility and power with its programing code. The problem is the curve to learn the new code is very steep. There are other systems not as powerful as Clickability but have a much smaller learning curve. Some of my issues may be due to the fact I am tasked with fixing some of the issues with the previous person. The organization of content, templates can be difficult to find where the problem is.

Great CMS that needs a great community

Rating: 8 out of 10

Use Cases and Deployment Scope

We used Clickability for our Marketing website. It allowed us to host all of our outward facing webpages as well as marketing materials and product documentation. It was mainly used by the marketing department, but other departments posted content on the site. This ranged from engineering with product information to HR with job postings. Once the templates and content types were developed, it was easy for employees to post content without needing coding skills.

Pros

  • The customization from page to page is the best I've seen in a CMS. Each page could have its own template and content rendering if necessary
  • The UI is fairly straight forward and easy to use. It can also be customized by user role.
  • The Velocity template creation is easily done through the console. No need to FTP files to a server.
  • The version control of each content item or template is handled through the CMS. No terminal needed.

Cons

  • The ability to run server side code is not there.
  • A GUI of template creation could be used for the non-coder users.
  • Some parameters of content types are hard to find as they can be stored in various areas

Likelihood to Recommend

As a true content management system it is great for site and content creation. It does need some help when it comes to adding functionality for using modern code systems that require server side scripting. For a marketing or public company site, it is an ideal CMS. For a SAAS type site, there could be many road blocks.

Vetted Review
Clickability (discontinued)
1 year of experience

Clickability Publishes Success

Rating: 7 out of 10

Use Cases and Deployment Scope

In the previous company I worked for, a commerical newspaper and online news company, Clickability was used by reporters, editors, web designers, web developers, and IT professionals. Clickability addresses how articles are saved, edited and published, as well as how websites are designed and saved via templates.

Pros

  • Adding custom content fields while adding a new article or blog page.
  • Managing user and user groups.
  • Developing and saving web design templates.

Cons

  • Adding Facebook/Social Media commenting.
  • Sharing articles and blog entries to Social Media sites.
  • Video/media clips/podcasting publishing.

Likelihood to Recommend

Clickability is a great product to create and manage news articles and blog entries, create and manage newsletters and user recipients. The product is very scalable in terms of adding more than one website/publication to publish online and adding more users/editors. The product suite is only useful for big newspaper and media organizations.

Vetted Review
Clickability (discontinued)
1 year of experience

Great CMS

Rating: 10 out of 10

Use Cases and Deployment Scope

Clickability is the CMS that we use for 15 of our local broadcast sites. Employees that have access to it are developers, designers, sales, producers, reporters, etc. Not all employees have access to the Clickability system, and most don't have full permissions. It's a great tool for creating our sites' pages, publishing stories, delivering quality news and weather reports for our users.

Pros

  • Clickablity allows for easy story publishing. This is crucial with breaking news and keeping viewers up-to-date.
  • It has a good back end for specific development of additional features. We work with a team of developers that create items for live video promotions, weather closing ticker bars, etc.
  • The templates that you can create help with quick page layout reproductions to help with usability and site continuity.

Cons

  • The initial concept of how the pages work with sections can be tricky. Once you get into the system and start creating layouts and pages, it's becomes easier. You have to have some training and a good period for learning.
  • There could be more drag and drop features.
  • Some menus are small and take a while to change the placement (i.e. updating navigation).

Likelihood to Recommend

It's great for having a placement list for stories on a page. Once you target the content, it's a simple drag-and-drop to reorder them. You know exactly which pages the story is on, because of where you target it. We also found we needed a more robust story template. Our developers were able to add more features to initial layout which provided a better user experience.

Vetted Review
Clickability (discontinued)
4 years of experience

A CMS that can help you move fast

Rating: 7 out of 10

Use Cases and Deployment Scope

Clickability is being used across the editorial team of the company. It's used by multiple divisions within the company. It addresses our need as a business to create and produce web content so that we can present a high quality website to our readers. It's a great tool for us as a content management system.

Pros

  • The ease of search for items by ID makes finding something quick and easy.
  • The system moves very fast, which enables us to respond to breaking news and get content up on the site quickly.
  • Making copies or opening read-only versions of stories are great so that one person can read while another person produces.

Cons

  • Targeting is heavy and clunky. It's a big process to get the right targets on stories and have a full team carry that out.
  • Multiple URLs create confusion for search engines and for readers.
  • A lack of history for images is limiting, and it would be great to have that history.

Likelihood to Recommend

There are definitely specific scenarios. For example, Clickability is good in a breaking news scenario. So one key question to ask is how fast the program is. Speed is very important in my field, and it's important to be able to move through the CMS quickly. Also, how reliable is it? If it's a program that crashes often, that can be a problem. Fortunately, Clickability doesn't crash very often.

Vetted Review
Clickability (discontinued)
4 years of experience

Clickability Review from a Prominent News Corporation

Rating: 10 out of 10

Use Cases and Deployment Scope

We use Clickability as a CMS to host the content for our websites, and deliver our web pages to our customers in Southeastern Wisconsin. We began by hosting our flagship site, <a rel="nofollow">www.jsonline.com</a> but as a corporate initiave, eventually migrated all of the websites of our popular news corporation. In all, we have close to 200 websites that are all independently content-managed by the various newsrooms in the company.

Pros

  • Clickability's API allows us to integrate our newsroom print publishing system with our websites, as well as feeds from other sources.
  • Clickability has a robust content delivery and redundancy architecture which delivers "always-on" content delivery.
  • Clickability's template language allows us the freedom to innovate as we integrate with other systems.
  • Clickability gives us the ability to distinguish device type and deliver different solutions to different devices aka responsive web design.

Cons

  • The UI presentation was developed before tabbed-browsing became available/popular, thus you can run into serious trouble if you are not careful.
  • The security implementation, while allowing extreme granularity (good), has become extremely difficult to manage over time (bad).
  • We have written our own web-based front-end UIs in order to compensate for the somewhat awkward content entry experience that the UI provides.

Likelihood to Recommend

Why give it a 10? I shudder at the thought of using anything else to manage and deliver websites reliably to our nationwide audiences. With our very minimal staff of software engineers (with great personalities) we have been able to innovate and satisfy our internal newsroom demands, which are high to the extreme. Our team is very agile and has adapted well to the changing times in the past 4 years that I have been senior software engineer, and team lead. The 10 is for flexibility, extensibility, reliability, and the freedom we experience as developers.