Drupal CMS launched to much fanfare... to existing Drupal developers and customers. Now, Drupal comes with AI agents, visual page builders, one-click Recipes. It's genuinely impressive tech. So why don't students or developers care?
Here's the uncomfortable part: we already fixed the technical problems. Drupal CMS isn't hard to use anymore. The learning curve is way better. We have actual innovation happening.
But new developers still aren't showing up. They're on YouTube, Discord, and Twitch learning JavaScript frameworks or the new hotness language. The "Drupal is legacy tech" perception hasn't budged.
I'm a Drupal developer who streams game development on Twitch to an audience that mostly doesn't know what Drupal is. I've built unconventional projects like using Drupal as a game backend, and I spend time in gaming and indie dev communities where Drupal isn't even on the radar. I've learned what makes someone outside the Drupal bubble actually get curious about a technology. And what makes them scroll past.
This session is a frank conversation about the gap between having good tech and getting people to notice. We'll talk about:
- Where developers actually discover new frameworks (spoiler: not drupal.org)
- Why technical excellence doesn't equal excitement
- What we can do as individuals, not just "the community"
- Real examples of what's working vs. what we think should work
What you'll get: 3-5 concrete actions you can take this week, not someday. Plus a clearer picture of why the usual "let's market Drupal better" approach keeps missing the mark.
We have a very short window before Drupal CMS becomes "that cool thing that launched that nobody noticed." Let's actually do something about it.