US Trends

what cms is that

A CMS is a content management system : software used to create, edit, organize, and publish digital content, especially websites. It usually gives you a dashboard, roles/permissions, and tools for pages, posts, media, and publishing workflows.

In plain English

If a site is built on a CMS, the owner can update text, images, and pages without coding everything by hand. Common examples include WordPress, Drupal, and HubSpot Content Hub.

What it typically includes

  • A content editor for writing and formatting posts.
  • Media upload tools for images and files.
  • User roles like author, editor, and admin.
  • Version history and scheduled publishing.

Why people use it

A CMS makes websites easier to maintain, especially for teams that need collaboration and regular updates. It also helps separate the content from the underlying code so non-technical users can manage the site more easily.

TL;DR: “CMS” almost always means content management system, the software behind many websites and blogs.