All sait.ca contributors must submit their edited and new pages through a workflow for approval prior to them being published to the live site.

This is to ensure all content is given a final review for correct spelling, grammar, writing style, and formatting, and to avoid duplicated or contradictory information across the site.

The review is conducted by site administrators in Marketing.

Submitting your page for review and approval

Once you’re happy with the updates you’ve made to your page, follow the process below to send it for approval and publish.

While you won’t be prompted to submit blocks for approval through workflow when making edits, you must submit the page(s) they’re used on for review, approval and publication.

Approval frequency

Workflow approvals are conducted Monday through Friday (excluding statutory holidays) between 8 am and 4 pm. A member of the Digital Strategy team in Marketing will be monitoring for draft submissions. 

Draft review and approvals will happen two to three times a day. These typically occur early in the morning, around lunchtime, and late in the afternoon.

Depending on other priority work the team may be attending to, please allow a +/- 30 minutes from these timeframes to hear whether your page has been approved for publication or requires further changes.

If you need a page published within a specific time frame, please be aware of the publishing schedule.

Full site publishes

A full site publish can impact speed within the CMS and slow down contributor work. For this reason, the full site publishes are performed twice during a 24-hour period:

4 am

6 pm

Contact Digital Experience and Strategy

Get help with content updates, creating new pages and sections, reporting, UX best practices and more.

Oki, Âba wathtech, Danit'ada, Tawnshi, Hello.

SAIT is located on the traditional territories of the Niitsitapi (Blackfoot) and the people of Treaty 7 which includes the Siksika, the Piikani, the Kainai, the Tsuut’ina and the Îyârhe Nakoda of Bearspaw, Chiniki and Goodstoney.

We are situated in an area the Blackfoot tribes traditionally called Moh’kinsstis, where the Bow River meets the Elbow River. We now call it the city of Calgary, which is also home to the Métis Nation of Alberta.