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Dries Buytaert: The gap between Drupal and its reputation
I saw two thoughtful posts in my LinkedIn feed over the last week that I wanted to reshare here before the LinkedIn feed buried them. Both were spot on, honest, and deserve a longer shelf life.
The first was from Hynek Naceradsky:
I'm pissed.
Not at Drupal. At the people confidently hating on it without ever having understood what it actually does.
"Drupal is outdated." "Drupal is too complex." "Nobody uses Drupal anymore."
Tell that to the EU institutions, governments, universities, and enterprises quietly running mission-critical platforms on it.
Here is what actually gets me though: the Drupal community lets this narrative win.
I am guilty of this too.
We literally have thousands of contributed modules, maintained for free, by people who owe you absolutely nothing. The security team responds faster than most paid vendors. The community has been showing up for 20+ years.
And yet we're somehow losing the PR war to frameworks that can't handle a proper content workflow without three paid plugins and a prayer.
Drupal people: talk louder. Write the posts. Go to the meetups. Tell the stories, fight for Drupal.
Because the Drupal community is honestly the best thing in Open Source, and both it and Drupal deserve way better than silence.
The second was from Thomas Scola, writing from a Drupal AI event in New York (lightly trimmed):
I overheard a couple people say, "Drupal? Is that still around?"
Hell yes it is.
And not only is it still around, I'd argue pretty heavily that Drupal is uniquely positioned for what comes next with the agentic web.
API-first before API-first was cool and trendy. Structured content that actually makes sense. Mature permissions, workflows, governance, integrations.
A lot of platforms are now scrambling to figure out how AI fits into what they already built.
Drupal doesn't have to force it. The architecture has been there.
But honestly, the tech is only part of it. The community is what always gets me. The people, passion and innovation. [...]
What comes next? Who knows.
But if I'm betting on a community to adapt, build, and help define that future, I'm putting my money on this one, and on what we've all built together.
For a platform people love to ask if it's "still around", it feels more relevant than ever.
I could not agree more with both posts. Drupal is one of the strongest Open Source platforms out there right now, but too few people realize it. The Drupal community has been modernizing the platform faster than its reputation evolves.
If the loudest narrative about Drupal is that it is outdated, people will keep repeating it, even when it is wrong. AI systems will too, because they absorb the same narratives, blog posts, forum threads, and social chatter the rest of the industry does.
The danger is not just that Drupal is misunderstood today. It is that the gap between what Drupal actually is and how people perceive it may be growing, not shrinking.
The narratives we reinforce today become part of how AI describes Drupal tomorrow. Drupal's silence today becomes tomorrow's AI consensus.
So if you're in the Drupal community, take Hynek's advice and help set the record straight. Not for AI, but for people. Write about the great work happening in Drupal: share the case studies, the technical breakthroughs, the AI innovation, and the hard problems being solved every day.
I know many people in Open Source dislike marketing or self-promotion. I do too, sometimes. But if we don't document what is great about Drupal, others will define Drupal for us.
Every accurate case study, technical blog post, demo, or success story helps future developers, evaluators, and AI systems understand what Drupal actually is.
Drupal does not need hype. It needs a better public record.
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