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 Partner, trusted by Google, Meta, Cox, and more, helping them build scalable, open, and high-performance web systems.
His 20+ year WordPress journey spans blogging, server engineering, development, and product innovation.
Rahul believes in building things that last and long-term thinking over short-term wins. A strong open-source advocate, he believes contributing back to the community is non-negotiable. He’s spoken at WordCamps across the globe and still finds time to mentor juniors like a peer, not a boss. When not building, he’s at the gym or hunting for great food.
WordPress is more than just a platform; it’s a community where innovation meets collaboration.
Beyond Big Websites: What Enterprise WordPress Really Demands
WordPress doesn’t scale, WordPress isn’t secure, and is only for small sites. Rahul Bansal, explains why these assumptions miss the real challenge and why enterprise WordPress success has far more to do with process than code. From understanding how enterprises operate to governance, security ownership, workflows, and long-term responsibility – this conversation breaks down what WordPress truly demands beyond “enterprise-scale” code.

A new edition of rtMedia is soon going to be released with exciting features. It will rely on a fresh and new development process.


BuddyPress 1.8 is released with a patch by contributed by rtCamper Saurabh Shukla 🙂


Nginx now powers 34.9% of sites among top 1000 sites in the world, making it #1 webserver in big league.


All free plans now have 200MB file-upload limit and 10GB bandwidth limit per month. Premium plans users can upload files upto 16GB (8 times more as compared to previous 2GB limit)


rtCamp’s little-known plugin Nginx-Helper crossed 10,000 downloads. Unlike our other plugins where rtCampers do all the work, Nginx-helper has 5 contributors.

A remote code execution vulnerability is discovered in WP Super Cache and W3 Total Cache Plugins. Update immediately to stay safe!