Permissions
Permissions
Permissions help businesses give the right people the right level of access without opening the entire website workflow to everyone.
As soon as multiple people work on the same site, speed and governance have to exist together. Permissions are what allow teams to scale website work without turning every shared asset into a risk.
Why Permissions Matter
Growing website teams need to control:
- who can edit page content
- who can manage reusable assets
- who can work with Forms and Reviews
- who can publish or make broader structural changes
- how responsibilities are separated between routine editing and higher-impact management
FaceFlow helps businesses support faster collaboration without giving up control.
What Teams Use Permissions For
Permissions are especially valuable for:
- separating editors from administrators
- giving content teams safe day-to-day access
- protecting shared Components, Layouts, and workflows
- supporting multi-person website operations
- aligning website ownership to business roles
Business Value
Permissions help teams:
- collaborate more safely
- reduce accidental changes
- scale editing across more people
- keep governance aligned with business responsibility
- support growth without making every workflow depend on one person
Why This Matters for Customers
Customers adopting a more powerful website system often worry about control:
- Can more than one person work in it safely?
- Can editors move fast without breaking shared assets?
- Can the business separate routine content work from higher-impact changes?
Permissions help answer yes to all three.
How It Fits Into FaceFlow
Permissions strengthen the rest of the FaceFlow system:
- Pages can be edited more safely
- shared Components and Layouts stay governed
- Forms and Reviews remain manageable by the right people
- collaboration scales without giving everyone the same access
This is one of the reasons FaceFlow works well for real teams, not just solo site owners.
Best-Fit Teams
Permissions become especially important for:
- marketing teams with multiple editors
- businesses with shared website ownership
- organizations with clear review or approval roles
- sites that depend on reusable assets and page families