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Johns Hopkins Institutions Content Management System

What is a content management system?

Simply put, a content management system uses templates, web-based tools and a database to create and manage the web pages on a site. It allows a large, decentralized institution such as Johns Hopkins Medicine to manage a diverse web presence while maintaining a common look and feel and ensuring maximum site efficiency.

For example, JHM and JHU have a wide variety of web sites and pages with varying designs, navigation and content relevance. Due to the unique needs of individual departments, responsibility for site maintenance falls to many individuals in different locations and with varying skills who need controlled access to their sites to update specific information. Currently, sites hosted on hopkinsmedicine.org have no functionality to easily update content and often must be changed by a person familiar with HTML and/or graphic design.

A content management system facilitates ongoing site management by separating content creation/updating from the design and technology associated with maintaining an online presence. By empowering those who create the content to easily update it, the publication process is streamlined and the maintenance workload of an organization’s staff is drastically reduced. From WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) input areas similar to Microsoft Word, to function-rich modules, to auto-checking for broken links, a solid CMS can mean the difference between old content and relevant content for your end users.

What are the benefits of using a CMS?

How will using Site Executive benefit my department?


Since the content management system is being implemented on the www.hopkinsmedicine.org server first and is being managed by the Office of Communications and Public Affairs (OCPA), sites hosted on that server will be the first to benefit from the CMS. OCPA has worked with a professional web services company to develop a set of standard web templates to be used institution-wide. These templates reflect the diverse needs of the JHM departments and their many and varied audiences. In order to take advantage of the benefits of the CMS, sites must be created using these templates.

OCPA’s Web Center will work closely with interested departments to create or recreate web sites within the CMS with the standard templates. In addition, Web Center staff will train end-users on the CMS and provide account management support throughout the site development cycle. This process will allow individual departments to have more control over their web presence and will allow for a more efficient use of dedicated web resources.

For more information on using the CMS or developing web sites within JHM, please contact Heather Molnar at hmolnar1@jhmi.edu.



Before beginning any Johns Hopkins Institutions web project, please contact the appropriate office in your area for assistance with guidelines, standards or existing programs.

If there is any doubt about the methods for collecting, storing, or displaying sensitive information on web sites, the Johns Hopkins legal departments (410-516-8128) should be contacted for a definitive answer about Hopkins' liability and responsibility.