CLCMS01

WEBSITE
CMS GUIDE

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Managing your website

AS A SITE EDITOR

table of contents

Getting started

Logging in to your CMS—and getting back to it.

Knowing your CMS

An overview of your CMS's features and sections.

Creating and managing your content

How to create and edit your site's content.

Content editing in Webflow

In Webflow, content editors can safely update site content without affecting layout, styling, or structure.

As a Content editor, you can:

  • Edit text, images, and links directly on the canvas
  • Update static and CMS-driven content
  • Make page-level SEO updates
  • Collaborate with teammates using comments

What's a CMS?

In the world of web design, CMS stands for content management system, and as the name suggests, it's a system for managing the content of your website. CMSs were invented for two reasons: To help "non-technical" people maintain their websitesTo help everyone publish new content within a consistent design, anytime

What your CMS can do

Your CMS allows you to edit most any existing content on your website, including text (or "copy"), images, buttons, links, etc. It also allows you to create some new pages and blog posts through Collections.

What your CMS can't do

If you need a new page on your site that doesn't fit one of your Collections, contact us!

knowING your CMS

table of contents

Getting started

Logging in to your CMS—and getting back to it.

Knowing your CMS

An overview of your CMS's features and sections.

Creating and managing your content

How to create and edit your site's content.

Saving and publishing your changes

As you edit content on the canvas, your changes are saved automatically. Publishing controls when those changes go live.

Depending on your permissions, you may be able to:

  • Publish content updates immediately
  • Publish to a staging environment
  • Save changes for someone else to publish

If publishing isn’t available to you, Webflow will make that clear, and your updates will remain saved until they’re ready to go live.

What's a CMS?

In the world of web design, CMS stands for content management system, and as the name suggests, it's a system for managing the content of your website. CMSs were invented for two reasons: To help "non-technical" people maintain their websitesTo help everyone publish new content within a consistent design, anytime

What your CMS can do

Your CMS allows you to edit most any existing content on your website, including text (or "copy"), images, buttons, links, etc. It also allows you to create some new pages and blog posts through Collections.

What your CMS can't do

If you need a new page on your site that doesn't fit one of your Collections, contact us!

Creating & managing content

table of contents

Getting started

Logging in to your CMS—and getting back to it.

Knowing your CMS

An overview of your CMS's features and sections.

Creating and managing your content

How to create and edit your site's content.

Your CMS gives you two ways to edit content that’s already on your site:

  1. Right on your live web page
  2. Within your Collection items tab

I'll walk you through both (extremely simple) ways to edit, starting with on-page editing.

On-page editing

Editing right on the page is pretty intuitive with your CMS, but there are a few things to know.

Editing text

Editable areas display a pencil icon in the upper right
If you see the pencil icon in the upper right, the element's editable.

When you first log in to your CMS, you’ll see your live website with the CMS panel (the grey bar) collapsed at the bottom of your screen.

If you see some text you want to edit, just hover your cursor over it. If a light grey outline with a pencil icon in the upper right appears, you can edit that content. Just click into the box and start typing!

Editing text works just like it does in Microsoft Word or Google Docs, but styling your text — bolding, italicizing, etc. — works just a little differently. (Though if you’ve used Medium, it’ll feel pretty familiar.)

Select text to show a toolbar with formatting options
Just select some text to reveal all your formatting options.

To style text, first select it. A grey toolbar will then pop up, giving you the following options:

You can also style text with the following key combinations:

To use a key combination, just press and hold Command (on Mac) / Control (on Windows), then press the letter key (B, I, or K), then release.

Note: Sometimes, a text field will give you fewer options than those listed above. This was likely done intentionally, but if you need more styling options, let me know!

Inserting links

Your CMS allows you to add a variety of link types to achieve various different functionalities.

The toolbar for adding and managing links
Adding links takes a couple of clicks, but gives you a host of options.

When you go to insert a link, the toolbar defaults to entering a URL to link to, but if you click the link icon on the left, you can select from several other options:

Each link type offers its own customization options. Click the gear icon to see what’s available for your current link type.

More text editing options

Some areas of text on your website (typically longer passages) will allow for additional options.

Create a new line to show options for inserting images, video, rich media, and lists
Hit return (or enter) and click the + icon to add images, video, rich media, or a simple list.

When you press enter/return to start a new paragraph, you may see a small + icon. Click it to open the toolbar and see the following options.

The image icon
Image

Allows you to upload an image.

The video icon
Video

Allows you to insert a video. This must be a video hosted on a platform like YouTube or Vimeo — you can’t upload a video file from your computer.

The rich media icon
"Rich media"

Allows you to embed “rich media,” via a link. There are all sorts of objects you can embed using this feature, but here a few of the most popular:

The bulleted list icon
Bulleted list

Allows you to add a bulleted list.

The numbered list icon
Numbered list

Allows you to add a numbered list.

Everything you’ve just read about editing text on the page also applies when you’re in the Items tab of the CMS.

Editing buttons

To edit a button's text or link, click the gear icon, then the appropriate option
Want to edit a button's text or link destination? Just hover over it and look for the gear icon.

You can also edit buttons in the CMS. Just hover your cursor over the button and look for a gear icon in the upper right. Click the gear icon and you’ll see two options:

Button with options for editing links and text

Editing images

Editable images show the image icon in the upper right
Replacing images works just like buttons — just hover and look for an icon in the upper right!

You can also replace images on your site with the CMS. Just hover your cursor over the image you want to update, then click the picture icon.

This will open your computer’s file finder, where you can select any image you’d like.

Note: Sometimes, certain visual styles will automatically apply to the image you upload, so don’t be surprised if your image suddenly changes size, acquires a colored border or shadow, etc.

Managing Collection items in bulk

Click the "Select" button to bulk manage Collection items
Click the Select... button to manage Collection items in bulk.

Sometimes you'll want to delete, archive, or publish several items all at the same time. In those moments, you can click the Select... button to change the status of multiple items, just like in Gmail. This can be especially handy if you want to publish multiple connected connected pieces (such as a series of articles) all at once.

Creating new content

You can use your CMS to produce new content through any of your Collections, so it’s super easy to create a new blog post, menu item, product or service page — whatever your Collections enable!

Creating a new Collection item

This should all be fairly intuitive, and the labels and descriptive text for each field should also help you out immensely. But there are a few things worth calling out:

The Name field

The Name field is a default for all Collections, and it typically does triple-duty as:

There may, however, be separate fields for items 1 and 2.

Image fields

Anywhere you see “Drag & Drop Image Here,” you’re looking at an image field. You can either drag an image from another app on your computer into the CMS, or click the “Upload an Image” link to upload it through your computer’s file management system.

Note that your CMS can’t handle image files over 4MB. If your file is bigger than that, you can use Photoshop or an online tool like TinyPNG or Compressor to get your files under that threshold. Just keep in mind that the larger the image, the longer it takes to load, so try to get your images as small as possible without losing quality.

It’s also up to you to ensure that you have the right to use any images on your website.

Reference fields

If you see any fields with a magnifying glass icon on the right, your Collection has a Reference or Multi-Reference field. This allows you to import content from one Collection into another, which can be used to power things like categories and tags (common blog features).

To use a Reference field, just click into the field and selected the right reference for your new item. If you don’t see the right reference for your new page, you may need to create a new item in the Collection this field references.

This may be explained in the help text for your Collection item, but if it isn’t, contact me for help.

Option field

The Option field works similarly to References, but isn’t connected to another Collection item. So you can just click into the field and pick the right option for the new content. If you need a new Option to fit your content, contact me.

Video field

The video field lets you add a video to your new content. It works by pulling your content from a public video host like YouTube or Vimeo, so you can’t just upload a video file. If you have a video file you want on your site, upload it to YouTube or another service, then just copy and paste the URL into the Video field.

Note: you don’t need the embed code generated by services like YouTube, just the URL.

Switch field

The Switch field is a simple on/off, yes/no toggle that enables or disables functionality on your website. If you’re not sure how this works on your site, ask me.

Color field

The Color field allows you to add a splash of color to your content in a way that your site’s designer defines. The field itself allows you to choose a color visually, from the picker, or to enter what’s called a “hex code” — a numeric representation of the color.

The color field

Using the color picker can take a little getting used to at first, but you’ll get the hang of it quickly. The bar on the left represents the whole spectrum of available colors — clicking here will update the color swatch in the middle to a range of tones in the area you clicked. The middle area is where you’ll choose the exact color you want. The bar on the right represents the color’s opacity, which controls how transparent the color is.

If you'll be working with color on your site a lot, you might want to grab the Chrome / Firefox plugin ColorZilla, which essentially lets you copy any color you see on the web to then paste into the color picker.

Managing your editorial workflow

If you’re the only person working with the CMS on your website, you’ll get along just fine writing, editing, and publishing, all within the CMS.

But if your writing and editing team is larger than one, you’ll probably want to use a different tool for writing, sharing, editing, and collaborating on content.

Why? Well, there are two big reasons:

Recommended writing and editing tools

Here are a few writing tools that offer a great writing experience, easy collaboration with others, and work well with your CMS, in that you won’t lose formatting when you copy and paste content from them into the CMS.

I do not recommend using Microsoft Word.

Handy key shortcuts

Writing gets a lot faster when you can keep your fingers on the keys. These key combinations help you do that:

  • Command/Control + B to bold
  • Command/Control + I to italicize
  • Command/Control + K to insert a link
  • Command/Control + Z to undo what you just did

Use Command on Macs, and Control on Windows.

What's a CMS?

In the world of web design, CMS stands for content management system, and as the name suggests, it's a system for managing the content of your website. CMSs were invented for two reasons: To help "non-technical" people maintain their websitesTo help everyone publish new content within a consistent design, anytime

What your CMS can do

Your CMS allows you to edit most any existing content on your website, including text (or "copy"), images, buttons, links, etc. It also allows you to create some new pages and blog posts through Collections.

What your CMS can't do

If you need a new page on your site that doesn't fit one of your Collections, contact us!