The Drop Times: Drupal Pivot in Ghent Marks Turning Point for CMS, AI, and Sovereignty

Paul Johnson, an open-source consultant and Drupal community contributor, highlighted the importance of the unconference format and the Chatham House Rules in enabling meaningful discussion. With around 60 participants, he described an environment where agency leaders could speak openly about current challenges, exchange experiences, and explore collaboration without competitive posturing.


Captured at Drupal Pivot event |
Joris Vercammen / LinkedIn


A Milestone Year and a Moment to Take Stock

That perspective aligns closely with developments happening in Drupal itself. Drupal CMS 2.0 was released on the same day Drupal Pivot concluded. The release introduces a new visual building experience, integrated AI tooling, and prebuilt site templates to make Drupal more accessible to a broader set of users while preserving its enterprise-grade foundations. The timing coincidence reinforced a shared sense that the ecosystem is entering a new phase rather than merely debating one.

In our industry, 25 years is a lifetime. Most tools don’t make it past a decade, but Drupal’s story is one of pure resilience.

Ulla also challenged the community to communicate these strengths more clearly, especially around security and compliance. “Have we been vocal enough about this? Probably not,” she wrote, linking technical capability to positioning and messaging.Paul linked this behaviour directly to Drupal’s open source roots, writing that “shared problem solving, transparency and contribution have shaped not only the Drupal software itself, but also the way business leaders work together.” In his view, this approach offers a structural advantage over proprietary ecosystems, particularly in uncertain market conditions.Paolo Mainardi, Chief Technology Officer at SparkFabrik, echoed this grounded approach. He wrote that discussions went well beyond prompting and experimentation, touching instead on the rise of agent-based development and the skills required to remain competitive. Without a willingness to embrace these changes, he warned, “the risk of being left behind is very real.” For Paolo, the Drupal AI Initiative emerged as an essential reference point, but one that requires sustained investment of time, money, and strategic focus.



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Open Conversation as a Competitive Advantage

Digital sovereignty emerged as a recurring theme, particularly in the European context. Imre Gmelig Meijling, CEO at React Online, framed the issue in geopolitical terms, arguing that Drupal’s long-standing vendor independence has become increasingly relevant. “Now more than ever that plays to Drupal’s advantage,” he wrote, positioning open source as a strategic response to growing uncertainty.This reframing connected conversations about AI, sovereignty, and competitiveness, and naturally led to discussions about branding and clarity. There was a shared sense that Drupal’s story needs to more clearly connect technical excellence, open source values, and real-world outcomes.

AI Discussions Grounded in Delivery

In its post-event update, the Drupal Association described the gathering as one that brought together around 50 companies for thoughtful conversations on topics ranging from artificial intelligence and digital sovereignty to productisation, marketing strategy, and collaborative analysis of the Drupal landscape. The emphasis was on shared understanding and collective insight rather than definitive outcomes.

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He tied this directly to the theme of the event, noting that “you don’t stay relevant for 25 years by staying static.” Pivoting, in this framing, was not a reaction to crisis but a capability the community has exercised many times before.Drupal Pivot did not produce a roadmap or a single set of conclusions. What it did produce was a sense of alignment around the seriousness of the moment and confidence in the community’s ability to respond. With Drupal CMS 2.0 launching concurrently, the ecosystem is clearly in motion. As several attendees noted in different ways, the conversations in Ghent were only the beginning. The real test now lies in turning that shared clarity into sustained action.

One of the strongest shared ideas to emerge was a shift in how Drupal itself is positioned. Several attendees described Drupal not simply as a CMS, but as an enabler. Mainardi captured this succinctly when he suggested looking at Drupal “not just as a CMS, but as an enabler,” a stable and sovereign platform on which tailored solutions can be built.

Digital Sovereignty Gains Urgency

Artificial intelligence featured prominently across attendee reflections, but the tone remained notably practical. Ulla Koho, Chief Commercial Officer at Wunder, focused on Drupal’s technical foundations, describing it as “one of the best CMS platforms to build AI solutions on.” She pointed to structured content, APIs, extensibility, and openness as strengths that support responsible, scalable AI implementations.Beyond specific topics, many reflections focused on atmosphere. Will Huggins, CEO of Zoocha Group, described the energy and shared purpose in Ghent as reassuring, writing that it “can be a great comfort to all who use and depend on Drupal.” Posts from SparkFabrik similarly emphasised community as Drupal’s strongest engine after 25 years.

Reframing Drupal’s Role

Koho approached the topic from a consulting perspective, noting that digital sovereignty is often treated as a buzzword rather than a deeply understood concept. She argued that agencies and consultants have a responsibility to ensure that their implications are properly explained and addressed.Rather than framing longevity as something to celebrate for its own sake, Kohek pointed to it as evidence of resilience. In his view, Drupal has endured because it has repeatedly adapted to market downturns, technological shifts, and changing expectations.

Energy, Reassurance, and the Work Ahead

For Ales Kohek, reflecting as a Drupal agency leader, the timing of Drupal Pivot gave the conversations additional weight. Pointing to the fact that Drupal turns 25 this year, he wrote:
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