Vern Imrich, Percussion Software's CTO, blogs over on Gilbane about the content management industry today. He makes some excellent observations about the mish-mash of product/technologies/solutions that fall under content management umbrella:
How can buyers be moving up the stack while the major vendors move down? The answer is part semantics, and part market shift. The term "content management," including all of its current acronyms ECM, WCM or just CMS, is too generic. This is largely due to the fact that managing content itself is so new to both applications and infrastructure, that there it belongs in both places. Secondly, there is a real bifurcation going on in the market. The true infrastructure aspects of content management, such as optimal storage and retrieval, indexing, and library services are increasingly becoming commoditized and absorbed into the infrastructure software stack. But as these content services precipitate downward, they become too generic to solve any particular line of business problem on their own. This means that another layer of content-driven applications must emerge at the top of the stack, to provide the horizontal and vertical applications, such as internet and multi-channel marketing, something I blog about quite a bit. All of these very different offerings are today called "content management" with vendors for each moving down and up the stack respectively.
While technologists love the simplicity of block diagrams showing "the content management goes here," the reality is that content management goes in a lot of places. For the foreseeable future, we're going to have many systems, all of which do very different things, and yet all called Content Management of one kind or another. If you can better understand the specific initiative driving each new system or solution, you can better understand how your current systems do or do not apply, and whether you need to add more "content management" to achieve your goals.
The reality is that there are a wide range of "content applications" that can be built on top of content management systems. The more that there are robust, well understood repositories that provide these services to applications, the more interesting the content management space becomes for customers.
[Note: Percussion is an Ephox OEM partner.]
tags: cms, wcm, ecm, content management, percussion software
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