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Last updated on Mar 26, 2026

Ecosystem and integrations

WordPress offers 5–10× more ready-made connectors. Drupal counters with genuine advantages in Salesforce integration, multilingual architecture, and enterprise CDN cache invalidation.

Marketing automation favors WordPress

HubSpot’s first-party WordPress plugin has 200,000+ installations. Drupal’s HubSpot ecosystem is fragmented and minimally maintained. ActiveCampaign maintains an official WordPress plugin; Drupal’s was never ported beyond D7. Mailchimp’s MC4WP has 2M+ WordPress installations.

HubSpot, Google, ActiveCampaign, and Piano build their own WordPress integrations. Drupal’s are predominantly community-maintained, making them vulnerable to API changes and maintainer burnout.

Acquia DXP vs WordPress VIP

Acquia offers a full DXP stack (hosting, DAM, CDP, Campaign Studio) at ~$100,000+/year. WordPress VIP starts at $25,000/year with a composable approach with Parse.ly Content Intelligence. The trade-off is single-vendor integration (Acquia) versus lower cost with more assembly required (VIP).

Key takeaway

🏆 WordPress wins on integration breadth and vendor commitment. First-party integrations and publisher-specific tooling deliver faster time-to-market.

Where Drupal holds ground: Salesforce Suite depth, core multilingual across 100+ languages, and Acquia’s integrated DXP for organizations with complex CRM or single-vendor platform requirements.


Credits

Rahul

Rahul Bansal

Author

Rahul Bansal

Author

Rahul Bansal is the Founder & CEO of rtCamp, an enterprise WordPress agency he built from a freelancing side project into a 200+ member organisation and Asia’s first WordPress VIP Premier Partn…

Naweed

Naweed Chougle

Co-Author

Naweed Chougle

Co-Author

Naweed is a Senior Technical Content Writer at rtCamp, specializing in WordPress and enterprise CMS content. With over ten years of experience in the enterprise WordPress ecosystem, he now helps bu…

Aviral

Aviral Mittal

Editor

Aviral Mittal

Editor

Aviral Mittal is the Chief Marketing Officer at rtCamp, where he established and leads the marketing function, building and growing a team of 20+ specialists across content, SEO, design, and growth…