Content Management System
Definition
A Content Management System is software that lets you create, edit, and organize website content without needing to code. It centralizes pages, media, and publishing workflows for teams.
Using a CMS simplifies updates, reduces development effort, and supports consistent publishing. You can collaborate with writers, designers, and developers in one place and scale content operations more efficiently as your site grows.
Related Glossary Terms
- Customer Journey Mapping
- Visualizes how customers move through stages like awareness, consideration, purchase, onboarding, and loyalty.
- Customer Journey Management
- Focuses on designing, monitoring, and improving the end-to-end experience users have with a brand across channels.
- Customer Data Platform (CDP)
- Unifies data from multiple touch-points, such as websites, apps, CRM systems, and support tools into a single, persistent customer profile.
- Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
- Measures how much a business spends to acquire one new customer, including marketing, sales, and sometimes onboarding expenses.
- Custom Conversion
- A user-defined goal in analytics or advertising platforms used to measure specific actions that matter to a business.
- CUPED (Controlled Pre-Experiment Data)
- A statistical technique used in experimentation to reduce variance and improve test sensitivity.