Discover Drupal
7 min read
**Does Drupal Have a Future? The Answer Lies in Its Identity Crisis**
The Drupal ecosystem stands at a crossroads. With Drupal 7’s end-of-life approaching and DrupalCMS still in its infancy, uncertainty looms over its future. The question isn’t whether Drupal will survive but what it will become.
Josh Koenig, Co-Founder and Chief Strategy Officer at Pantheon, believes Drupal’s path forward depends on redefining its identity. “Yes, Drupal has a future, but the real question is *as what*?” he writes in an open letter to his peers. He argues that the platform must break free from the crumbling Digital Experience Platform (DXP) model and lean into what makes it truly unique.
The failure of the DXP category is one of the biggest hurdles facing Drupal today. Once pitched as a one-stop-shop for digital needs, DXPs have proven to be anything but. Instead of the market consolidating around a handful of large players, the opposite happened. Martech tools multiplied, giving businesses more choices, not fewer. Vendors that tried to dominate by offering everything in a single package—Acquia among them—are now struggling under the weight of their own complexity. “The hypothesis was wrong. In fact, the exact opposite thing happened,” Koenig says.
For Drupal to thrive, it must redefine its value proposition. Competing with WordPress for mass-market adoption is not the answer, nor is clinging to a model that has already failed. Instead, Koenig sees two areas where Drupal’s strengths shine. First, as an “agile business driver” that helps digital teams continuously improve customer experiences without the burden of a massive system overhaul. Second, as a framework that gives large organizations flexibility without forcing them into an all-or-nothing vendor lock-in.
With Drupal 7 reaching end-of-life and DrupalCMS still taking shape, questions about the platform’s future are gaining urgency ahead of DrupalCon Atlanta 2025. Industry leaders, including Pantheon’s Josh Koenig, argue that Drupal must redefine its identity and move beyond the failing Digital Experience Platform (DXP) model. Others, like software engineer Sean Hickey, highlight challenges in adoption, learning curve, and integration with modern frameworks. As perspectives vary across the community, one thing is clear: Drupal must evolve to remain competitive.