26 Mar 2026
Drupal.org aggregator
Dries Buytaert: State of Drupal presentation (March 2026)
This year, Drupal turned 25. DrupalCon Chicago felt like the right place to mark that milestone. My keynote was part celebration and part wake-up call. I talked about Drupal's foundations, how AI is putting pressure on them, and why I believe we can rebuild them stronger than before.
If you missed the keynote, you can watch the video below or download my slides (32.6 MB).
Site templates and the marketplace
About a year ago at DrupalCon Atlanta, I introduced the idea of site templates and a marketplace to go with them. By DrupalCon Vienna, we had one site template, but no marketplace.
In Chicago, I showed eleven site templates available in a basic marketplace at marketplace.drupal.org. All eleven can be installed directly from the Drupal CMS installer.
AI for site building
For more than 20 years, Drupal's ecosystem has rested on a stable triangle: the platform itself, digital agencies who bring Drupal into the real world, and the community that builds and maintains it. That triangle has proven remarkably resilient through many waves of new technologies.
But what happens when AI disrupts all three sides at the same time? In my keynote, I showed how we are responding.
I started off by showing a demo of a workflow I think will become common for Drupal agencies. You spend 15 minutes prototyping a website with AI, then convert it to a Drupal site with the help of AI and a skilled developer in a matter of hours.
AI gets you to a prototype fast. Drupal gives it the foundations that last.
Organizations will always need real workflows, permissions, security, scalability, integrations, compliance, and governance. Drupal is a great platform for this.
The demo worked because Drupal CMS ships with Drupal Canvas, which includes both CLI tools and AI skills. But the real magic comes from Drupal's foundations: the APIs, building blocks, and architecture we have developed over 25 years. This is the accidental AI advantage I talked about before. Drupal really is the best CMS for AI.

AI for content management
At DrupalCon Vienna, I introduced the Context Control Center as a rough prototype. Since then, we have added many features. It is now nearly production-ready.
The idea is straightforward: AI agents need good context to help manage tasks in Drupal. With the Context Control Center, teams define their brand voice, target audiences, key messages, product details, and editorial guidelines in one place. Then every AI agent on the site draws from this single source of truth. The result is that you create knowledge once, and scale it to all the pages and content on your website.
In my keynote, I showed two demos of the Context Control Center in action. First, Drupal's AI agents turn a simple marketing brief into a complete, on-brand page using Drupal Canvas, consulting the Context Control Center along the way. It followed brand rules, asked clarifying questions, generated structured data for search, and added cross-links.
Second, I showed a proof of concept for dynamic contexts, where the Context Control Center pulls in real-time data from Google Analytics to help improve content performance after publication.
Saying no to AI slop
AI is lowering the barrier to contribute to Open Source projects like Drupal. On paper, that sounds great. More contributors, more patches, more momentum.
But it can also be a real challenge. The volume of contributions is going up while the quality is going down. More patches are landing on a small group of maintainers, and reviewing low-quality code wastes their time.
If you're using AI to contribute, you are responsible for what you submit: don't submit code you don't understand. Our quality standards matter, and we will uphold them.
Drupal Growth Initiative
Having a great product is not enough. We also need to tell a great story. As we approach an important readiness milestone by DrupalCon Rotterdam this fall, the Drupal Association is ready to take marketing to the next level.
We are launching a Drupal Growth Initiative organized across three tracks:
- Enterprise Drupal growth
- Drupal CMS adoption
- AI leadership
Our craft always evolves

In my keynote, I also told the stories of two community members who embraced AI in a meaningful way.
Aidan Foster, who has been running Foster Interactive for 17 years, chose to go all in on the Drupal AI Initiative instead of staying on the sidelines. Together with his team, he is rebuilding the foundations of his agency to leverage AI and prepare for what is next.
And Jürgen Haas, a longtime contributor and creator of the ECA module, used AI to move at the speed of a team and make Drupal's ECA module much easier to use. In both cases, AI amplifies expertise. It does not replace it.
The world is being flooded with AI-generated average. Average is cheap now, but expertise remains hard-earned and valuable. This community has spent 25 years building it, and that is not something AI can replicate.

AI is the storm, and AI is the way through the storm. I said that first in Vienna. Six months later, I believe it more than ever. Not as a slogan, but as something I have watched happen. We need more people like Aidan and Jürgen. If you want to get involved, join us on Drupal Slack or attend DrupalCon Rotterdam this fall.
26 Mar 2026 11:06pm GMT
Drupal AI Initiative: Six months following DrupalCon Vienna: the Drupal AI Initiative arrives in Chicago, showing significant progress and major releases
At DrupalCon Vienna, Dries Buytaert opened his keynote with a question the room was already asking: what happens to Drupal in a world full of AI?
He answered with a live demonstration showcasing three things the initiative had built and shipped:
- Pace of delivery: pages that used to take hours now get built in minutes.
- Brand and voice control: a new Context Control Center feature lets teams set their brand voice once, and every AI agent applies it.
- Governance at scale: autonomous agents scan the site, find internal references, and propose updates.
The keynote highlighted an important aspect: humans stay in the loop and approve every change before anything goes live.
The Drupal AI Initiative arrives in Chicago with more to show
Since Vienna, 10 new organisations have joined as partners, bringing the total to 31. The initiative has now secured the equivalent of $1.5 million in combined support, comprising both direct funding and a committed contribution of 50 staff dedicated to advancing the work.
What is most exciting to me is not just what we've built, but how we've built it. With a growing group of contributors and more than $1.5 million in funding, this is now a coordinated effort to bring AI into Drupal in a way that is open, trusted, and built to last.
Dries Buytaert

A portion of funds is being invested in delivery management. The initiative conducted a formal Request for Proposal (RFP) process to appoint delivery partners responsible for coordinating work across both the innovation and product development streams. QED42 and 1xINTERNET were selected to lead the innovation and product development work streams respectively.
Progress is also visible in what has shipped since Vienna. Drupal AI 1.2.0 came first. MCP support followed. Drupal CMS 2.0 launched with Canvas as the default editing experience.
Drupal AI 1.3.0 introduced governance controls, editorial workflows, and production visibility for organisations running AI seriously.
Dedicated AI Marketing Leads Appointed
With the increased momentum in development it has been essential to scale marketing capacity. Paul Johnson announced the appointment of 10 marketing leads. Each will specialise on delivering specific key elements of the marketing strategy.

- Media Relations: Pritam Prasun, Open Sense Labs
- Social Media: Amber Henry, Morpht
- Webinars: Matthew Saunders, Amazee.io
- Events: Paul Johnson, 1xINTERNET
- Sales Enablement: James Tillotson, 1xINTERNET
- Case Studies: Rosie Gladden, ImageX
- Existing Capabilities: Duncan Worrel, Zoocha
- Upcoming Roadmap Capabilities: Will Huggins, Zoocha
- Demos: Dan Lemon
- Brand and Design Strategy: Dan Stratton, Zoocha
The initiative has been successful in bringing Drupal to external audiences across multiple global locations including Oaisys Conference in Pune, Drupal AI Summit Paris, DrupalCon Nara in Japan, the European Commission hackathon, and a growing number of workshops and meetups kept the work visible across contributors, regions, and practical discussions.
In the near future we have Drupal AI Summit New York City, May 14th, intended to bring the same conversation to enterprise leaders and practitioners. The team will exhibit at The AI Summit London as part of London Tech week which sees more than 45 000 attendees from around 90 countries across multiple days of programming.
In Chicago, that momentum was particularly easy to see
Drupal AI has moved beyond being merely a set of separate features. It is now realised through connected capabilities. Content, context, and editorial decisions begin to work together inside the same system.
Early in his Keynote at DrupalCon Chicago, Dries Buytaert widened the conversation. He said AI is now affecting three parts of Drupal at once. The product. The agencies around it. The open source community behind both.
That makes Chicago feel larger for Drupal AI. The releases matter. But they now sit inside a broader shift already affecting how Drupal is built, funded, and extended.

Photo: Paul Johnson
What Chicago made clear
Drupal AI is being deliberately designed as a native part of the platform, embedded within how Drupal operates rather than introduced as an additional layer on top. In doing so, AI becomes more useful as it works inside systems that already carry structure and context.
That is why Canvas AI mattered in Chicago. The demonstration was less about generating a page quickly and more about showing how content could move through Drupal while keeping structure, linking, and reusable patterns intact.
The same logic appeared when Dries returned to the Context Control Center, first introduced in Vienna. If AI is expected to assist meaningfully, organisational knowledge cannot remain outside the system. Brand rules, editorial priorities, and internal decisions need to stay close to where content is shaped.
That is what Chicago makes clearer: Drupal AI is being positioned around context as much as capability.
What this means for agencies
One of the clearest shifts in Chicago came when the conversation moved from product to agency work.
AI is rapidly reducing the cost of production, but that does not reduce the need for judgment. It changes where the value sits.
Dries brought in Aidan Foster's observation directly: the bottleneck is no longer making things. The harder part is deciding what should be made, how it should work, and what quality still means when output becomes easier to create.
That is why agencies remain part of the same conversation. As production speeds up, strategy, interpretation, and institutional understanding begin to matter more, not less.
In that sense, as production becomes easier, the harder part shifts elsewhere. Context, judgment, and internal knowledge begin to matter more, which is exactly where Drupal is placing more emphasis.
What do we want to accomplish by Rotterdam?
The initiative now feels materially different from where it stood even a few months ago. Prototypes are moving into alpha and beta stages, stable releases are approaching, and coordination across teams is visibly stronger. More people are involved, and the relationship between Drupal CMS, Drupal AI, and core has become easier to follow.
That shift matters because the work no longer reads as parallel experimentation. Product releases, editorial workflows, and context systems are beginning to move toward the same operating idea: AI becomes more useful when it works inside structures organisations already trust.

Photo: Jeremy Chinquist (jjchinquist)
The roadmap shown in Chicago reinforces that direction. For organisations already evaluating open source AI for digital platforms, Drupal AI now presents a clearer path to adoption.
For a complete view of how Drupal AI is framing that next stage, Dries Buytaert's full DriesNote from Chicago is worth watching.
26 Mar 2026 8:16pm GMT
Drupal AI Initiative: Beyond the "AI Average": How Drupal is the Future of ‘Quality at Scale’
In his '#DriesNote' presentation at DrupalCon Chicago 2026, Dries addressed the elephant in the room: AI is currently flooding the web with "average" content: fast to produce, but hard to distinguish. While there are tools that can generate beautiful prototypes in 15 minutes with no technical skill, those prototypes lack the structured data, governance, and durability required by serious organizations.
Drupal is bridging the gap between "AI speed" and enterprise assurance through two key innovations: the Context Control Centre (CCC) and Drupal Canvas AI, a new approach to building digital experiences.
The Context Control Centre (CCC): Institutional 'Knowledge as a Service'
The most significant hurdle for AI today is a lack of context. Without it, AI simply gives you the "average response." The Context Control Centre changes this by allowing organizations to store their unique "DNA" directly within Drupal.
The CCC organizes institutional knowledge into actionable data:
-
Brand Guidelines: Specific rules for tone, voice, and formatting.
-
Personas: Detailed profiles of target audiences (e.g., Controllers vs. IT Ops).
-
Dynamic Context: A groundbreaking feature where the CCC connects to live data sources like Google Analytics 4 (GA4).
Built into your Drupal CMS, AI tools don't just guess; they work within your specific business reality to ensure their output is always on brand, within guidelines, and relevant to the contextual nuances of the task at hand.
Drupal Canvas AI: Where Speed Meets Substance
The second half of the equation is Drupal Canvas AI, the next-generation page builder.
Instead of dragging and dropping components, you can just tell the AI what you want with prompts that describe the page and content you want to produce. Canvas AI, in conjunction with the CCC, will create the page and include the components you need.
As Dries noted, production is becoming a commodity, but judgment and strategy remain human. Drupal AI doesn't replace your teams, it amplifies their capability to deliver 'Quality at Scale.'
26 Mar 2026 8:00pm GMT
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