Content management system

From Wikipedia(View original Wikipedia Article) Last modified on 5 February 2012, at 02:24 

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A content management system (CMS) is a system providing a collection of procedures used to manage work flow in a collaborative environment. These procedures can be manual or computer-based. The procedures are designed to do the following:

  • Allow for a large number of people to contribute to and share stored data
  • Control access to data, based on user roles (defining which information users or user groups can view, edit, publish, etc.)
  • Aid in easy storage and retrieval of data
  • Control of data validity and compliance
  • Reduce repetitive duplicate input
  • Improve the ease of report writing
  • Improve communication between users

In a CMS, data can be defined as nearly anything: documents, movies, text, pictures, phone numbers, scientific data, and so forth. CMSs are frequently used for storing, controlling, revising, semantically enriching, and publishing documentation. Serving as a central repository, the CMS increases the version level of new updates to an already existing file. Version control is one of the primary advantages of a CMS.

 
Table of Contents
1Enterprise content management systems
2Component content management system
3Web Content Management System
4See also
5References
6External links

Enterprise content management systems

An enterprise content management system (ECM) is content, documents, details and records related to the organizational processes of an enterprise. The purpose and result is to manage the organization's unstructured information content, with all its diversity of format and location. The system manages the content related to commercial organizations. The main objectives of Enterprise content management are to streamline access, eliminate bottlenecks, optimize security and maintain integrity.

Component content management system

In a component content management system (CCMS), the content is stored and managed at the sub-document (or component) level for greater content reuse.

CMS has five main functions:

  1. Maintaining Security
  2. Managing Objects
  3. Managing Servers
  4. Managing Auditing
  5. Maintaining Reports.

Web Content Management System

Web content management (WCM) is a bundled or stand-alone application used to create, manage, store and deploy content on Web pages. Web content types can include text, graphics and photos, video or audio, and application code that renders other content or interacts with the visitor. WCM may also catalog or index content, select or assemble content at runtime, or deliver content to specific visitors in a personalized way or in different languages.

See also

References

External links

Media related to [//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Content_management_systems Content management systems] at Wikimedia Commons

The content on this page originates from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Document License or the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA license.
 
 
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A content management system is a system used to organize and stord all kinds of procedures and data for a company or an organization. It can be used to easily get information for report writing, or re...
A content management system (CMS) is a system used to manage the content of a Web site. Typically, a CMS consists of two elements: the content management application (CMA) and the content delivery app...
As your company and website grow, you may find yourself overwhelmed with the sheer volume of updates that you have to do. If it is taking far too long to update your website, a content management syst...
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