What is a content management system?

29
Aug
Learn about content management systems (CMS) and how they provide modern enterprises with the infrastructure they need to publish content on the web.

A content management system (CMS) is a software application that provides you with the background infrastructure you need to create, edit, and publish content on a website.

A CMS helps you to build for the web without having specialized knowledge or technical skills.

A CMS has two parts. The first is a content management application (CMA), which is the interface the person building the site uses. The other part is a content delivery application (CDA), which updates the content on the website. There are many different CMS platforms available, tailored for everything from massive multi-website enterprises to simple website builders for beginners or small businesses.

Without a CMS, developers would need to build each page on the website one by one — which would be a repetitive waste of time and energy for recurring, templated pieces of content like blog posts, case studies, and other posts. A CMS allows you to standardize and manage templated pages in one place, rather than maintaining a sprawling set of disconnected individual pages.

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