john.hill@netcat.com.au
May 3, 2012
  4176
(5 votes)

In the beginning…

Waaaay back when dinosaurs roamed the Earth I was fortunate enough to be a participant in EPiServer Developer training. Previous to this, I had been involved in the development of many APS.NET web sites and been actively involved in the development and implementation of a small number of CMS’s.

My first response to EPiServer CMS was, and continues to be, very positive – most notably I found the transition from “standard” ASP.NET / previous CMS systems to EPiServer development to be straight forward and relatively hassle free.

For those of you who are seasoned ASP.NET developers and are new to EPiServer development – welcome to the team and breathe a breath of fresh air.

So, back to the training class and my first steps… My first quest was to learn EPiServer in the eyes of a publisher and administrator. The learning curve had a relatively small gradient, due to experience in previous CMS systems.

The next quest was to master the basics – create new page types, display the properties of the page types and start to integrate them into something meaningful. Creating new page types was straight forward – and to my excitement – can be done programmatically – more on that a little later on.

The majority of the next few hours in the training class, and days afterwards were spent experimenting with EPiServer and learning the basics of the SDK, i.e. how to retrieve pages, how to use the EPiServer controls and how to extend EPiServer’s functionality. The sdk.episerver.com site became my new friend and I was quick to get a handle on the Singleton DataFactory class.

So, within a few days I was comfortably able to pump out some beginner level functionality and develop a basic EPiServer CMS web site.

My overall experience so far has been “thumbs up”. I’m looking forward to getting into the depths of the CMS side of the product and taking it to new and exciting heights. Stay tuned!

May 03, 2012

Comments

Please login to comment.
Latest blogs
Optimizely Opal: How to Build Effective Workflow Agents

If you're building workflow agents in Optimizely Opal, this post covers how specialized agents pass context to each other, why keeping agents small...

Andre | May 20, 2026

ReviewPR: An Azure Function That Reviews Your Azure DevOps Pull Requests With Claude

A while back I wrote about an  Azure Function App for PDF creation that we use to offload PDF rendering from our Optimizely DXP site. That same...

KennyG | May 19, 2026

Accelerating Optimizely CMS and Commerce upgrades with agentic AI (Part 2 of 2)

The Real Transformation in Optimizely CMS 13: Why the Upgrade Itself Is the Easy Part. A field-tested playbook for enterprise teams moving from...

Hung Le Hoang | May 18, 2026

Is the most powerful AI model really the best value?

Artificial Intelligence is already becoming part of everyday software development. Developers now use AI tools to generate code, write documentatio...

K Khan | May 16, 2026

Optimizely London Dev Meetup 2026

Well, everyone, it's that time of the year again, and we have another London Developer meet up coming for this summer. The date is set for the 2nd ...

Scott Reed | May 15, 2026

Semantic Search - Deep Dive

Deep dive into semantic search with Optimizely Graph

Michał Mitas | May 14, 2026 |