Content Management Tool
(Content Management System)
- Content Management Tools (Content Management System)
- a software tool that enables
content workers to perform
content management tasks
As illustrated in the preceding figure, Content Management Tool is part of the following inheritance hierarchy:
- Type: Concrete
- Superclass: Tool
- Subclasses: None
- Example Instances:
The typical responsibilities of a Content Management System include:
- Content Management Tasks.
A content management system should support all
necessary content management tasks:
- Supporting Capabilities.
A content management system should have the following
supporting capabilities:
- Customizable to the content worker’s workflows.
- Check-in and check-out.
- Version control.
- Rollback to earlier versions of content.
- Audit trail for error tracking.
- Change notification by subscription and email.
- Automatic and dynamic webpage creation via templates and XML tags.
- Central repository for tagged and categorized content.
- Automated conversion from older content formats.
- Handle both structured and unstructured content.
- Support Content Workers:
A content management system should support the direct
contribution and collaboration of all content workers:
- Support geographically dispersed content workers.
- Support technologically diverse content workers.
- Scalable to large numbers of content workers.
- Be Interoperable:
A content management system should:
- Work seamlessly with industry-standard components (e.g., ATG Dynamo, Lotus Notes®, Siebel Call Center).
- Work with popular Web and application servers (e.g., ATG Dynamo, BEA WebLogic, IBM WebSphere).
- Integrate with existing corporate infrastructure and databases.
- Deliver Content:
A content management system should deliver content:
- In multiple formats including Web (HTML, XML), wireless (WML), and print (Acrobat).
- To a wide-range of users and devices.
- Personalized delivery.
- Content management systems tend to be relatively expensive.
- Costs include licensing, support, consulting, training, and deployment.
- Content management systems can take a long time to deploy
and integrate.
- The above list of vendors and products is representative
rather than complete I make no endorsement of any specific
vendor or product. You should do due diligence and evaluate
the vendors and products in terms of your specific needs.