Content Management System

A content management system manages the creation and modification of digital content. It typically supports multiple users in a collaborative environment.

CMS features vary widely. They are widely used for either enterprise content management or web content management. Most CMS include Web-based publishing, format management, history editing and version control, indexing, search, and retrieval. By their nature, content management systems support the separation of content and presentation.

A web content management system (WCM or WCMS) is a CMS designed to support the management of the content of Web pages. Most popular CMSs are also WCMSs. Web content includes text and embedded graphics, photos, video, audio, maps, and program code (such as for applications) that displays content or interacts with the user.

Such a content management system (CMS) typically has two major components. A content management application (CMA) is the front-end user interface that allows a user, even with limited expertise, to add, modify, and remove content from a website without the intervention of a webmaster. A content delivery application (CDA) compiles that information and updates the website. Digital asset management systems are another type of CMS. They manage content with clearly defined author or ownership, such as documents, movies, pictures, phone numbers, and scientific data. Companies also use CMSs to store, control, revise, and publish documentation.

cms

CMS Capabilities

Customer Experience

Personalization to deliver targeted and relevant content.
Build responsive sites for devices like mobile and tablets.

Handle Your Content

Operate multilingual sites from one platform.
Optimize content for SEO with keyword analysis tool.

Scale and Customize

Based on scalable Microsoft .NET technology.
Create your own apps or integrate with other systems.