diff --git a/docs/tutorial/blog-netlify-cms-tutorial/index.md b/docs/tutorial/blog-netlify-cms-tutorial/index.md index d2ba44f7c74dc..9a9303685cd6d 100644 --- a/docs/tutorial/blog-netlify-cms-tutorial/index.md +++ b/docs/tutorial/blog-netlify-cms-tutorial/index.md @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ gatsby develop Now you can go to [`localhost:8000`](http://localhost:8000) to see your new site, but what's extra cool is that Netlify CMS is pre-installed and you can access it at [`localhost:8000/admin`](http://localhost:8000/admin). -A CMS, or content management system, is useful because you can add content like blog posts from a dashboard on your site, instead of having to add posts manually with Markdown. However, you'll likely want to be able to access the CMS from a deployed website, not just locally. For that, you'll need to deploy to Netlify through GitHub, set up continuous deployment, and do a few configurations. We'll go over this in [Step-5](#step-5). +A CMS, or content management system, is useful because you can add content like blog posts from a dashboard on your site, instead of having to add posts manually with Markdown. However, you'll likely want to be able to access the CMS from a deployed website, not just locally. For that, you'll need to deploy to Netlify through GitHub, set up continuous deployment, and do a few configurations. You'll go over this in [Step-5](#step-5). ### Step 3