1 / 29

CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (CMS)

CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (CMS). By Joseph Stern . Are Custom Coded Websites Dead? . Why Use a CMS?. CMS is simply just a pre-built system from which to build a website that includes : Content Creation Content Management Publishing Presentation .

duy
Download Presentation

CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (CMS)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (CMS) By Joseph Stern

  2. Are Custom Coded Websites Dead?

  3. Why Use a CMS? CMS is simply just a pre-built system from which to build a website that includes: • Content Creation • Content Management • Publishing • Presentation

  4. Why use a CMS? – Videohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRLJ-Lie_ks&feature=related

  5. Overview • Global Developer Communities • Definition of CMS • No HTML Required and it's Free • Most Popular CMSPlatforms • Differences Between Popular CMSPlatforms • Some Notable CMS Sites • WordpressDashboard Demo • CMS Features and Benefits • OMG - I want a CMS! What do I need? • References / Web Resources • Questions???

  6. Global Developer Communities

  7. Definition of CMS • 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. http://en.wikipedia.org/wikiContent_management_system

  8. Definition of CMS Continued • The procedures are designed to do the following: • Allow for a large number of people to share and contribute to stored data. • Control access to data based on user role (i.e., define information users or user groups can view, edit, publish, etc.) • Facilitate storage and retrieval of data. • Control data validity and compliance. • Reduce duplicate inputs. • Simplify report writing. • Improve communication among users.

  9. No HTML Skills Required!Most importantly, an open CMS offers small business's and non-technical users a way to put content into a pre-established framework.

  10. Isn’t Everything These Days? CMS platforms are free to download, install and customize. However, the freemiumpricing model for add-ons and modules will cost you for functionality build outs.

  11. Most Popular Open CMS Platforms Top 3 in Order of Community Prominence 1. Wordpress 2. Joomla 3. Drupal

  12. CMS Usage for Websites • Diagram shows the percentage of websites using various CMS in 2012. Grey: CMS Usage Green: CMS Market Share http://w3techs.com/technologies/overview/content_management/all

  13. Differences Between CMS Platforms Wordpress • Pros: Best blog platform by far. Easiest to install. Very intuitive to non-techy users. Allows quick posting on pages. Largest user community. Has a WYSIWYG Editor. • Cons: Least developer friendly. More limited options with respect to customization.

  14. Differences Between CMS Platforms Joomla • Pros: Platform is harder than Wordpress but easier than Drupal to develop. Has second largest user base and solid community forums and video tutorials. • Cons: Low usage in the United States relative to Wordpress and Drupal.

  15. Differences Between CMS Platforms Drupal • Pros: Best platform for developers and hand-coders. Custom tweaks are easier. The basic architecture options are very advanced. • Cons: Not as user-friendly for novice developers. Thus, Drupal developers charge more on average and it takes more time to build out. • http://www.cmsmatrix.org/matrix/cms-matrix

  16. Some Notable CMS Sites Wordpresshttp://www.nytimes.com/interactive/blogs/directory.html Joomla http://www.ikea.com.sa/ Drupal http://www.whitehouse.gov/

  17. Wordpress Dashboard Demo - CMS Common Features • Theme • QuickPress • Posts • Media • Pages • WYSIWYG • Plugins • Users • http://josephstern.com/wp-admin/

  18. Key CMS Benefits • Simplifies activities such publishing content, revision control, search, indexing, retrieval of content, etc. • Data can be defined as nearly anything: documents, movies, text, pictures, phone numbers, scientific data, and so forth. • Easy to avoid duplicate content. • Frequently used for storing, controlling, revising, semantically enriching, and publishing documentation. • Serves as a central repository, the CMS increases the version level of new updates to an already existing file.

  19. OMG – I Want a CMS! So how do I choose one? How do I know what’s right for my needs?

  20. Focus on Main Functionality What does your website do? • Blog • E-commerce • Video • Informational • Other

  21. Intuitive UX for All Users • Think about the average user in the organization - not a developer. What is too much? • At the most basic level, it’s important that it is easy to post pages, edit pages, change themes and add photos for the users. • The developer must involve the administrative team who will assume control of the website.

  22. Logical and User-friendly Backend • The backend layout and functions must be grouped and positioned so they are easy to navigate. • Pluginsshould be easy to find, integrate and do their job. • The basic backend architecture should be easy to ascertain to the average user.

  23. Functionality that Fitsthe Project's Scope • Advanced functionality that you’ll never use just slows down the whole website. • Find a CMS that does the one thing you want to do really well and forget about the other features. • Do you really need? e-commerce, photo slideshows, video playback or is it just a simple blog.

  24. WYSIWYG Editor • WYSIWYG editors make life easier for your users – especially novices. • Most users don’t know HTML and don’t care to learn. • This allows for ease of editing things like: pages, header tags, text, bold, italics, etc. Btw, WYSIWYG – “what you see is what you get”

  25. Simple Code = Fast Loading Pages • There shouldn’t be a lot of extra code or provisions for unused functionality in the final page code. • This makes the page load times faster. • This lowersthe chance for misrenderingsand errors.

  26. Creative Control of Template • Some CMS templates have very set ideas about what a website should look like. • Whatever CMS you choose should let you design pages the way you want and should work around your needs. • Also, there are many CMS template factories where you can buy designer templates. • Ie: http://www.rockettheme.com/

  27. Support and Documentation • You will eventually run into problems with any CMS you choose. Ie: Updates, add-ons, custom modules, etc. • The more active and helpful the user community is, the better off you are. • Searchable documentation and video tutorials are also extremely helpful. • Documentation should provide information on everything from basic use to advanced functionality.

  28. Web Resources • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_management_system • www.Wordpress.org • www.Joomla.org • www.Drupal.org • http://wp.smashingmagazine.com/2011/11/29/wordpress-cms-crown-drupal-joomla/http:// • www.cmsmatrix.org/matrix/cms-matrix • http://www.rockettheme.com/

  29. Questions Please

More Related