Content Management Systems (CMS)

eLab's development and programming team has more than 10 years of experience in developing and supporting database-driven websites and portals. From Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance to Naval Post Graduate School Foundation, many clients have chosen us for the development of their Content Management Systems (CMS).

The goal of developing a CMS is to provide you with one single application that gives you, and your entire team, the functionalities needed to create, deploy, and manage your Website.

To read more about CMS, check this useful article:

According to Wikipedia, a web content management system is content management system (CMS) software, usually implemented as a web application, for creating and managing HTML content. It is used to manage and control a large, dynamic collection of web material (HTML documents and their associated images). A CMS facilitates content creation, content control, editing, and many essential web maintenance functions.

Usually the software provides authoring (and other) tools designed to allow users with little or no knowledge of programming languages or markup languages to create and manage content with relative ease of use.

Most systems use a database to store content, metadata, and/or artifacts that might be needed by the system.

Administration is typically done through browser-based interfaces, but some systems require the use of a fat client.

A Content Management System (CMS) differs from website builders like Microsoft FrontPage or Adobe Dreamweaver. A CMS allows non-technical users to make changes to an existing website with little or no training. Web content management systems typically require an experienced coder to set-up and add features, but it is primarily a website maintenance tool for non-technical administrators.

Web Content Management Systems Capabilities

A web content management system is a software system used to manage and control a large, dynamic collection of web material (HTML documents and their associated images). A CMS facilitates document control, auditing, editing, and timeline management. A Web CMS provides the following key features:

Automated templates
Create standard visual templates that can be automatically applied to new and existing content, creating one central place to change that look across a group of content on a site.
Easily editable content
Once your content is separate from the visual presentation of your site, it usually becomes much easier and quicker to edit and manipulate. Most CMS software include WYSIWYG editing tools allowing non-technical individuals to create and edit content.
Scalable feature sets
Most CMS have plug-ins or modules that can be easily installed to extend an existing site's functionality.
Web standards upgrades
Active CMS solutions usually receive regular updates that include new feature sets and keep the system up to current web standards.
Workflow management
Workflow is the process of creating cycles of sequential and parallel tasks that must be accomplished in the CMS. For example, a content creator submits a story but it is not published on the website until the copy editor cleans it up, and the editor-in-chief approves it.
Document management
CMS solutions may provide a means of managing the life cycle of a document from initial creation time, through revisions, publication, archive to document destruction.
Content virtualization
CMS systems may provide a means of allowing each user to work within a virtual copy of the entire website, document set, and/or code base. This enables changes to multiple interdependent resources to be viewed and/or executed in-context prior to submission.
References
  1. ^ Ethier, Kay, and Scott Abel. Introduction to Structured Content Management with XML. CMS Watch. Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
  2. ^ Tivy, Jim, et al.. The XML Content Management System for Document Centric XML. Bluestream Database Software Corporation. Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
  3. ^ Woric Faithfull. Using XSLT to Make Websites. woric.net. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.

 

 
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