The Content
Management Possibilities Poster
Get a copy of the poster that launched
1000 projects!This poster hangs on walls around the world. It has
guided the thinking of countless new and experienced content managers.
The poster
contains the complete content management system model created by Bob and Chase
Bobko Inc. It has a full glossary at the bottom and shows the relationship
between all of the parts in a CMS. The poster is about 3 feet wide by 2 feet
tall (90 cm by 60 cm). It was conceived by Bob, designed by
Allen Matsumoto and
brought to life by
Shannon
Kavanaugh .
For a closer view of the poster, check out this
Microsoft PowerPoint presentation that zooms in on each part of the poster
(download it) .
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Here is the glossary
from the bottom of the poster.
Author
The human creation of original information. Authors draft and
revise text and media with their preferred tools.
Acquire
Receiving information that was authored outside your
system. Information can be acquired in the form of files or database records
from elsewhere in the organization or from outside the organization in the form
of syndicated (i.e., commercially available) information in files or live
information feeds (e.g., news services).
Aggregate
Bringing disparate information sources into a single
editorial and metatorial system. Editors create stylistic and usage
consistency. Segmentors divide the information into usable chunks called
components. Metators tag the components with meta data.
Metatorial
Processing
The tagging of segmented information with
meta-data to allow that information to be automatically stored, found, and
later combined into publications. Just as editors edit, metators metit.
Metators are guided in their work by a metatorial guide that details accepted
metadata values and how to tag each kind of component.
Extensible
Markup Language (XML)
For the purposes of this
diagram, XML represents all structured text-based content. XML is today's best
and most accepted form of structured content. However, it is not the first,
last or only way to structure content.
Convert
Changing the format and structure of information to match
the accepted standards of the content system. The process consists of stripping
unneeded surrounding information (e.g., headers and footers, unnecessary
content, and unwanted navigation) then mapping the format and structural
tagging to the accepted standard-- in this diagram XML. The result is raw XML
that is ready to be aggregated into the system.
Administer
Setting the parameters and structure of the content
management system. This includes staff configuration where roles and access
rights are set, metatorial configuration where the system of metadata fields
and lists is maintained, and system configuration where the structure and
workflows of the content management system are maintained.
Components
Content objects that divide
information into useful, easily organized and accessed chunks. Information
becomes content when it is rendered into components. A component has internal
information (represented by <XML> in the diagram) and a set of meta
information tags (e.g., author, title, create date, etc.). The tags wrap and
contain the information and provide a set of handles for its use in the
system.
Collection Services
The application
logic and business services provided by a CMS that aid in the collection of
information and its transformation into content. Collection services aid
specifically in the creation, update, and deletion of content components,
content files, and metadata resources (lists, etc.).
Repository
The set of databases, file directories, and other system
structures (e.g., system registries and environment variables) that store the
content of the system as well as any other data associated with the content
management system. Components and other CMS resources are brought into the
repository via the collection services and are extracted by the publishing
services. The management services provide an administrative interface to the
repository.
Content Databases
The databases
within the repository that hold the system's content. Content databases can be
standard relational databases where content components are stored in tables.
Generally, each kind of meta information will have a field in the table and
there will be a single field for the internal information of a component.
Content databases can also be object databases where components are fully
represented as XML and are stored in a large hierarchy.
Content
Files
File-based content in the repository that is
not stored in a database. Media files can be stored in a database but are more
often stored as binary files and linked to database records. Content files may
also include proprietary office files such as word processing files and
spreadsheets that are meant to be handled as if they were part of a document
management system, not a content management system. Finally, content may be
stored in one or more XML files that are parsed and managed by the CMS
services.
Control and Configuration Files
The
on-content files that are managed within the CMS repository. These files
consist of:
- Staff and end-user data files and databases which
hold information that is used for access and personalization.
- Rules
files and databases that hold the definitions of component types, workflows,
and personalization routines.
- Meta information lists and content
index files and databases.
- Log and other control files and structures
such as system registries.
- Scripts and automated maintenance
routines.
Enterprise Data
The
organization's data that is not stored in the repository but is used by the
CMS. Examples include ERP application data, user data, and other files and
databases that are maintained outside the realm of the CMS. Data from these
systems is either read live from these data sources or is loaded periodically
from the source to a database within the repository.
Management
Services
The application logic and business services
provided by a CMS that aid in the management of content and other CMS
resources. Specifically, the management services let you create, update, and
delete the rules and scripts governing workflow, personalization, user rights
and access, repository maintenance and archiving and connectivity as well as
the database and structures within the repository.
Templates
Files that guide the creation of a publication from the
content stored in the repository. Templates include text and media that are
passed directly through to the publication, as well as calls to publication
services that retrieve and format components and meta information for
publication. Templates include navigation- building logic as well as calls to
services outside of the CMS that integrate publications into a wider
organizational infrastructure. Templates use either a proprietary or open
programming language to specify publication building logic.
Publishing
Services
The application logic and business services
provided by a CMS that aid in the creation of publications from the content and
metadata in the repository. The publication services process templates, files
and database records with the goal of marshalling the correct resources to
create a targeted publication. They also execute personalization, conversion
and user access routines that are called by particular templates. In the case
of a dynamic publication, the publishing services are invoked via a request
from a browser and produce a single page. In static publications (static Web
sites as well as other publications) a staff member triggers the publication
services that then produce a complete publication.
Non Content
Management Services
The application logic and
business services NOT provided by a CMS that produce a part of a target
publication. These services generally provide eCommerce and enterprise
connectivity software and may also augment interactivity in a Web publication
by providing collaboration or other software intensive features.
Web
and Application Server
The system software that
allows communication between the CMS and a Web browser. The Web server
processes browser requests and either returns a static page or calls the CMS
publishing services that return a dynamic page. The Web server may include an
application server that provides caching, database pooling and other efficiency
services that help the CMS scale and increase performance.
Web
Publications
The Web sites produced by a CMS. If they
are dynamic, these sites are produced one page at a time in response to user
clicks. If they are static, they are produced all at once by the CMS and served
as HTML files. The sites are a combination of content components and meta
information drawn from the repository by templates. The sites can also include
functionality drawn from non-CMS services called in by templates and integrated
into the content and navigation provided by the CMS.
Other
Publications
Non-live Web sites and other
publications produced by a CMS. These publications include:
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Electronic publications that are static Web sites distributed on CD ROM as well
as any other type of CD ROM or network-based multimedia system. The CMS uses
templates and services that can produce the sort of text and media format and
navigational structure that the electronic publication requires. Microsoft
Help, Adobe Acrobat and email files are examples of non HTML electronic
publications.
- Print publications where the appropriate components and
meta information are drawn out of the repository and converted to the format
that the print system expects. For example, templates and conversion routines
could create a MIF (FrameMaker) file that could then be delivered to a printer
for publication.
- Syndications that are sets of content components
published for commercial distribution and reuse in outside publications. The
most useful format for syndication is XML but the most common format is ASCII
with a header that contains meta information for each syndicated
component.
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