Introduction to Content Management Systems
Spend your time managing information, not technology
Short URL: http://fsmsh.com/1262
- 2006-08-25
- Server side | Intermediate
-
Write a full post in response to this!
This content was sponsored by:
In the beginning, the web was simple. You used Mosaic to browse it. You used a text editor to construct pages on it in a language called HTML. If you weren’t a techie, you probably didn’t even know it existed. Then people realised that even non-techies had useful information (“content”) to share. So the Content Management System (CMS) was born.
What is a CMS?
At its heart, the web is a tool for sharing information. To make it possible to display that information (or “content”) on a variety of different machines, people devised a language (HTML) that told the machines how to display it. From the machine’s perspective, this was great: it helped separate information from mere formatting. From the perspective of someone who wanted to share information, it wasn’t so great: they now needed to learn HTML in order to publish their content.
CMSs were developed to resolve this dilemma. A CMS helps you create and store content in a shared repository. It then manages the relationships between content items for you (e.g. keeping track of where they fit into the site hierarchy). Finally, it ensures that each content item is connected to the right style sheet when it comes to be published. Some CMSs also provide facilities to track the status of content items through editorial processes and workflows.
By using a CMS, content editors and the organisations they work for get a number of benefits. For example, they can:
- Create and publish content in a standard format without needing to know HTML or other languages;
- Co-ordinate the work of teams of authors and editors (e.g. by ensuring that only one person is editing any individual content item at any one time);
- Control the branding and quality of content (e.g. by ensuring that the correct style sheets are applied, and that changes to the content are approved before they are published);
- Reuse the same content item in multiple different sites and formats.
A CMS can make it easier to create and publish content, to co-ordinate teams of authors and editors, to control branding, and to reuse content across multiple channels
Case Study—Oxfam
Oxfam is an international confederation of organisations that are working to find lasting solutions to poverty, suffering and injustice. Its websites, built on the Plone content management system, help build public understanding of poverty and its causes. By using Plone, people across Oxfam can collaborate and create engaging content without getting caught up in technical details.
Being free software, Plone was particularly relevant to Oxfam. Hugh Wallace, Oxfam’s Head of Interactive Media, notes:
“As Oxfam works in over 70 countries around the world, we were looking for a system that would enable us to share information across the organisation and beyond. Plone was the right choice and we’re very pleased to have the opportunity to work with the free software community. Investing in free software is win-win for Oxfam as we meet our needs but also know that the technology developed will be of benefit beyond Oxfam, particularly among other Non-Government Organisations.”
How have Content Management Systems evolved?
Until about 1996, most people managed websites by editing HTML files and uploading them to their web servers. As well as creating a barrier for non-technical users, this made it hard for organisations to build consistent messaging into their websites. As companies rushed to get onto the web, this was a problem—they wanted to get their content out quickly, but at the same time they were scared of losing control.
Early CMSs were developed to address this problem. A number of large, expensive systems were very successful because they allowed a small group of knowledgeable people to take control of an organisation’s content. CMS vendors thrived during 1996-1999 as the dotcom boom created large demand for their products, and they developed some highly sophisticated tools.
By 2000, the dotcom boom was cooling and the CMS scene cooled with it. During 2000-2003 the first wave of major vendors consolidated and the pace of development slowed. However, during this period a number of new vendors recognised that many organisations didn’t need a highly sophisticated tool—they needed a “good enough” tool at a lower price. A second wave of CMS vendors started to deliver these tools.
During this second wave, free software content management came into its own. The web thrives on openness and collaboration, and many very capable CMSs were developed to work within this spirit. There is now a thriving marketplace of free software CMSs. Some of these provide basic, easy to use functionality for individuals and small organisations. Some of them provide advanced functionality for more complex organisations.
Case Study—Lynne Azpeitia
For consultant and psychotherapist Lynne Azpeitia, working with talented and creative people means engaging with them at multiple levels. “It’s hard to get people’s attention these days. I need a way to connect to them and work with them so the message can get through. I’m constantly trying to create new ways of putting things together so that people can learn about themselves and develop themselves.” Audio, video, wikis, pictures, articles, teleclasses—they all need to be in the mix.
Lynne doesn’t pretend to be a technical guru. So she’s working with technology change artist Nynke Fokma to rebuild her site on the Joomla free software CMS. Once the site is ready, Lynne will be able to create, manage and update the multi-channel, multi-formatted content herself.
They’ve chosen Joomla for its ease of use. The visual administration interface works for Lynne, and means she’ll be able to manage the site without needing to know any coding. And for Nynke, the system is “freakishly flexible”—easy to make changes, easy to add functionality, easy to transfer content from the existing site. Just the thing for working on the edge of creative chaos.
Write a full post in response to this!
Similar articles
Do you like this post?
Vote for it!
Copyright information
This article is made available under the "Attribution" Creative Commons License 3.0 available from http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/.
Biography
Graham Oakes: Dr Graham Oakes is the principal of Graham Oakes Ltd, a consultancy formed in 2003 to help organisations untangle the complexity within their systems, processes and governance. He helps define business and technology strategies that people will adopt, and then to assure implementation of those strategies. He can be contacted via his web site.
Best voted contents
-
The Jargon of Freedom: 60 Words and Phrases with Context
Terry Hancock, 2010-07-24 -
Defending the Free Commons: Another 30 Words in Context
Terry Hancock, 2010-07-14 -
MediaWiki and Script Translation for the Morevna Project
Terry Hancock, 2010-07-07 -
The Bizarre Cathedral - 75
Ryan Cartwright, 2010-07-13
Buzz authors
Free Software news
- http://tinyurl.com/23w3w9y miniature file #gameanswers #PARIS #Freesoftware
- Snort 2.8.6.1 and Snort 2.9 Beta released http://bit.ly/snort2861 #Sniffer #IDS #FreeSoftware #OpenSource #Software http://bit.ly/czjIlw
- Snort 2.8.6.1 and Snort 2.9 Beta released http://bit.ly/snort2861 #Sniffer #IDS #FreeSoftware #OpenSource #Software
- #cricketworldcup2011 #umineko agreeable site #FREESOFTWARE http://tinyurl.com/258fmff
- RT @wtebbens: #FTA scholarships, starts new courses, new books, community portal, launches Certificate http://ur1.ca/0vfuh #fta #freesoftware #oer #cc
Similar entries
Other sites
- The Top 10 Everything (Dave). The good, the bad and the ugly.
- Free Software news (Dave & Bridget). All about free software -- free as in freedom!
- Book Reviews: Illiterarty (Bridget). Book reviews, blogs, and short stories.
Hot topics - last 60 days
-
Storyboards for a film with Flickr, OpenClipart, Inkscape, Gimp, and ImageMagick
Terry Hancock, 2010-06-09 -
Finding Free Music for a Free Film with Jamendo, VLC, and K3B
Terry Hancock, 2010-07-13 -
Backup up your GoogleMail locally with getmail
Ryan Cartwright, 2010-06-19 -
Creating an Animatic Using Audacity and Kino
Terry Hancock, 2010-06-01 -
MediaWiki and Script Translation for the Morevna Project
Terry Hancock, 2010-07-07
Hot topics - last 21 days
-
Finding Free Music for a Free Film with Jamendo, VLC, and K3B
Terry Hancock, 2010-07-13 -
10 years on: free software wins, but you have nowhere to install it
Tony Mobily, 2010-07-29 -
The mobile banking has been entering an accelerative period
johny875, 2010-07-24 -
The Bizarre Cathedral - 75
Ryan Cartwright, 2010-07-13
Odiogo
Free Software Magazine uses Apollo, project management and CRM for its everyday activities!






