Wiki style content structure

By wiki-style content structure, we mean that internal links between concepts in texts (also) provide navigation for users, instead of a traditional menu structure or chronological order.

This has a number of advantages: no traditional headings, no menus, which means the glossary is more usable on mobile and easier to integrate into an existing site, easy and clear grouping, and it’s also very popular with Google.

And one more thing. Many publishing software and applications strive to give the user as much freedom as possible in the design of the content structure, which is a difficult and time-consuming task. For Pressonline CMS, we took a different approach: we tried to design the structure that best serves the function of glossaries, FAQs, and knowledge repositories, so that you don’t have to deal with it. 

Last edited: August 21, 2023

Last viewed definitions