What 18 Years of Drupal Consulting Taught One Architect
Nearly two decades of Drupal consulting have led architect Darrell Green to conclude that the most difficult project challenges are often organisational rather than technical. In a DrupalRX field note, Green reflects on work across enterprise, government, media, startup, and consulting environments.
Green argues that struggling projects are more often affected by unclear requirements, stakeholder misalignment, scope creep, and weak decision-making structures than by Drupal itself. According to the post, organisational alignment often has a greater influence on project outcomes than technology choices.
The article also examines how the role of experienced Drupal professionals evolves over time. While developers are initially valued for their ability to build solutions, senior practitioners increasingly focus on architecture, risk management, and strategic decision-making. Green discusses common trade-offs involving headless architectures, custom versus contributed solutions, platform upgrades, and technical debt, arguing that many legacy decisions were reasonable responses to business constraints at the time they were made.
The post further highlights communication and business understanding as critical consulting skills. Green writes that clients are primarily concerned with outcomes such as publishing efficiency, reliability, and delivery schedules rather than the technologies used to achieve them. Although the article contains limited technical detail, it offers an experience-based perspective on the organisational, architectural, and human factors that shape long-term Drupal consulting careers.


