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Strategies For Headless Projects With Structured Content Management Systems

November 29th, 2018 Leave a comment Go to comments

Strategies For Headless Projects With Structured Content Management Systems

Strategies For Headless Projects With Structured Content Management Systems

Knut Melvær

2018-11-29T13:35:41+01:002018-12-02T12:47:19+00:00

This is the guide I wish I had the last couple of years when running projects with headless Content Management Systems (CMSs). I’ve been a developer, a user-experience and technology consultant, a project manager, information architect, and an author. The different hats have made me realize that even if we’ve had so-called “headless” CMSs for a while now, there’s still a way to go about thinking how to use them best.

We are now at a place where many of us rely on JavaScript frameworks for frontend work, using design systems made of components and compositions, rather than just implementing flat page layouts. There’s a lot of traction towards the JAMstacks and isomorphic/universal apps that run both on the server and the client. The final piece of the puzzle then is how we manage all the content.

Traditional CMSs are adding APIs to serve content through network requests and the JSON format. In addition, “headless” CMSs have emerged to exclusively serve content through APIs. My argument in this article though, is that we should spend less time talking about “headless”, and more about “structured content”. Because that is the essential quality of these systems. There are lots of implications for our craft implied by these systems, and we still have a way to go in terms of figuring out the good patterns of how we should deal with these technologies.

Coming to technology consulting from a background in humanities, I have learned a lot about how to organize and work with web projects that take a content-centric approach — both with the newer API-based as well as the traditional CMSs. I have come to appreciate how getting started early with actual live content from a CMS; doing so in a cross-disciplinary setting has not only made it possible to uncover complexities at an earlier stage but also lends agency to everyone involved, and gives opportunities to reflect on the challenges and possibilities of technology and design in its broadest sense.

Headless WordPress

Everyone knows that if a website is slow, users will abandon it. Let’s take a closer look at the basics of creating a decoupled WordPress. Read article ?

In this article, I’ll suggest some overarching strategies, with some concrete, real-world examples on how to think about working with structured content. At the time of writing, I have just started working for a SaaS company that provides such a content management service, for hosting content delivered over APIs. I will make references to it, both because of my past experience with it in projects I was involved in as a consultant, but also because I think it aptly illustrates the points I want to make. So consider this a disclaimer of sorts.

That being said, I have been thinking about writing this article for a couple of years, and I have strived to make it applicable to whatever platform you choose to go with. So without further ado, let’s jump twenty years back in time in order to understand a bit more where we are today.

First Moves With Web Standards

In the early 2000s, the Web Standards movement inspired a field to change their ways of working. From a “layout-first” approach, they directed our attention towards how content on a page should be marked up semantically using HTML: A website’s menu isn’t a

, it’s a