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    <title>drupal on Publishing House</title>
    <link>https://publishinghouse.org/tags/drupal/</link>
    <description>Recent content in drupal on Publishing House</description>
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      <title>Drupal vs WordPress for Large Publishing Operations</title>
      <link>https://publishinghouse.org/drupal-vs-wordpress-for-large-publishing-operations/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
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      <description>Both Drupal and WordPress power large publishing operations. The New York Post, The Economist, and Condé Nast have used WordPress at enterprise scale. The Economist, Reuters, and major government and academic publishers have built on Drupal. Saying one is categorically superior gets the question wrong — they represent different engineering philosophies that create different strengths and different friction points.
For a publishing organization evaluating both seriously, the decision turns on a handful of specific characteristics.</description>
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      <title>Getting Started with Drupal for Publishing Organizations</title>
      <link>https://publishinghouse.org/getting-started-with-drupal-for-publishing-organizations/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
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      <description>Drupal occupies a specific and durable niche in the publishing world. It is not the easiest CMS to get started with, and it is not trying to be. What it offers is a structured, extensible content management framework that scales to genuinely complex editorial operations — the kind where content types, taxonomies, workflows, and access control matter as much as the editing interface.
Major news organizations, government publishers, universities, and enterprise media companies run on Drupal.</description>
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