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Stanford Web Camp

All Things Web - By community, for community

Stanford WebCamp is a three-day event for community and by community to discuss the ins and outs of building websites and research tools.

Event Details:

Thursday, May 15, 2025

Location

Virtual

Why Attend?

There are many reasons to attend Stanford WebCamp, but in particular, we try to tailor our camp to both an on- and off-campus community. We will have specific tracks and sessions geared to Stanford community members. We will also have a lot of sessions for beginners as well as advanced sessions. In addition, we will be sharing some specific case studies about what Stanford is doing.

So, to summarize, here are some reasons to attend:

  1. To learn more about web design and development
  2. To learn about web tools for research and academia
  3. It's free!

And here are some people who should consider attending:

  • Stanford staff/faculty/students who need to learn "web"
  • Stanford community (developers, themers, site builders, site admins)
  • Those working in the web (or wanting to): project managers, designers, content writers

Schedule

Friday, May 16, 2025

  • -

    Stanford Sites Beyond the Basic Page

    Stanford Sites is a free, self-service tool for building and managing websites for university work. Learn about structured content like news, events, people, and publications and the many ways to display content on a page. Learn more about Stanford Sites.

    Cynthia Mijares

    Project Manager, Web Producer

  • -

    Creating order out of chaos: What it takes to successfully build and launch branded websites for large, decentralized organizations

    At Stanford Engineering, we have not just one school website but ten department sites and a collection of affiliated faculty, lab, institute, and program sites that serve as digital front doors to the school. After executing multiple web transitions over the past several years (and not making any mortal enemies along the way) we have a number of lessons we'd like to share with you, so that your next large web update or migration project results in sites that are effective at delivering your key messages, engaging to look at, and leave your team's relationships intact.

    Sara Bielecki

    Sara Worrell-Berg

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