Enterprise digital experience platform (DXP) on Drupal
Firas Ghunaim
June 17, 2020
Updated on:
June 30, 2026
An enterprise digital experience platform (DXP) is the integrated set of technologies an organization uses to compose, manage, deliver, and optimize personalized experiences across every channel its audience touches, from its main website to mobile apps, portals, chat, and increasingly AI assistants. For a global NGO, a university system, or a publisher, the question in 2026 is not whether to have a website. It is how to run a digital experience that is composable, governed, accessible, and ready for a web where AI agents and answer engines, not only people, consume your content.
Quick answer: An enterprise digital experience platform (DXP) is an integrated, API-first system for delivering personalized content across many channels, not a single website. Gartner expects most enterprises to adopt composable DXPs over monolithic suites by 2026. Drupal, through Drupal 11, Drupal CMS, and distributions such as Varbase, provides an open-source, composable DXP that an organization owns rather than rents, which is what makes it defensible for global, multilingual, and public-sector use.
What is an enterprise digital experience platform (DXP)?
An enterprise digital experience platform is a cohesive set of technologies for composing, managing, delivering, and optimizing personalized digital experiences across multiple channels, connected to adjacent systems through API-based integrations. It differs from a standalone website the way an operating system differs from a single app: the website is one surface, while the DXP is the orchestration layer behind all of them. SaaS site builders such as Wix and Squarespace serve simple sites well, but enterprises carry requirements those tools were never built for.
The market is moving decisively toward composability. Gartner forecasts that by 2026 at least 70% of organizations will be mandated to adopt composable DXP technology rather than monolithic suites, up from 50% in 2023, as reported by CMS Critic. Analysts place the DXP market on a double-digit growth path, with Grand View Research projecting roughly 11.9% annual growth to $30.4 billion by 2030. Drupal sits in this market as the leading open-source option, evaluated alongside proprietary suites, with the distinction that organizations own and host it rather than license it.
Why are enterprises moving from monolithic suites to composable DXPs?
Enterprises are moving to composable DXPs because the market has reached feature parity, so the advantage now comes from how capabilities are orchestrated and governed, not from which suite has the longest feature list. The Forrester Wave: Digital Experience Platforms, Q4 2025 describes leaders separating from laggards on orchestration rather than features, and points to the rise of agentic DXPs that embed AI agents across content, data, and workflows.
That shift comes with a clear trade-off. Composability and AI autonomy can outpace governance and operational readiness, a risk Gartner analysts have flagged directly. The organizations that handle it well treat content and data discipline as the foundation, not an afterthought. This matters most for organizations whose content is their value: NGOs, publishers, universities, and public bodies. As answer engine optimization (AEO) and generative engine optimization (GEO) reshape how content is discovered, well-structured, disciplined content is the prerequisite for appearing in AI answers and for letting AI agents act on your experience safely.
What does an enterprise actually need from a digital experience platform?
An enterprise needs a digital experience platform that does six things a standalone website cannot: run many sites from one core, integrate through APIs, publish in many languages, meet accessibility law, protect data and sovereignty, and stay current as standards change.
Multi-site at scale
Run many branded sites, regions, or campaigns from one governed core, sharing brand, security, and design systems instead of rebuilding each time. Choosing the right multi-site architecture is a foundational decision.
API-first integration
Connect to the CRM, marketing automation, payment, analytics, and AI services the business already runs, through APIs rather than custom one-offs.
Multilingual and right-to-left
Publish across many languages, including Arabic and other right-to-left scripts, which is essential for global and UN-family audiences.
Accessibility governance
Meet WCAG and regional law such as the European Accessibility Act and ADA Title II consistently across every site, not page by page.
Security and sovereignty
Control where data lives and how it is protected, including on-premise or sovereign-cloud options for sensitive sectors.
Ongoing evolution
A platform and a support model that keep pace as standards, security, and AI capabilities change. Ongoing support is often the real differentiator between a digital experience that lasts and one that decays.
How does Drupal deliver an enterprise digital experience?
Drupal delivers an enterprise digital experience as an open-source, API-first DXP that organizations own, with multi-site, multilingual, and accessibility capabilities in core and a visual, AI-assisted page builder in Drupal Canvas. The current foundation is Drupal 11 and Drupal CMS, not the older versions many sites still run. Drupal 7 reached end of life in January 2025, Drupal 9 in November 2023, and Drupal 10 reaches its hard end of life on 9 December 2026, so any enterprise still on Drupal 9 or 10 should be planning the move to Drupal 11 now.
For building pages, Drupal Canvas, which reached version 1.0 in December 2025, gives marketing teams a visual, component-based builder with a built-in AI assistant, replacing the older Layout Builder approach and letting campaign and landing pages go live without a developer for every change. Drupal's JSON:API and REST support in core make it a headless-capable, composable back end, and its native multi-site and multilingual handling let one team run many regional sites from a single core. The table below contrasts that open-source, composable model with a monolithic proprietary suite.
Dimension
Composable open-source DXP (Drupal)
Monolithic proprietary suite
Ownership
You own and host the platform and the data
You license the platform; the vendor hosts and controls it
Cost model
No platform license fee; investment goes into build and support
Recurring license fees that scale with use and seats
Composability
API-first; swap or add specialized, best-fit services
Capabilities bundled; individual parts are harder to replace
Data sovereignty
Choose where data lives, including on-premise or sovereign cloud
Constrained to the vendor's hosting and regions
Lock-in
Open-source code and standards reduce switching cost
Proprietary stack raises switching cost
AI and AEO readiness
Structured, owned content you can expose to AI and answer engines
Dependent on the vendor's AI roadmap and access model
Our view: governance and ownership decide the enterprise digital experience, not features
Our view: in 2026 the enterprise digital experience is decided by governance and ownership, not by feature lists, because every serious DXP now ships the same core capabilities, and AI agents and answer engines can only act on experiences that are well-structured, accessible, and owned. The organizations that pull ahead treat their digital experience as infrastructure they govern, not a suite they rent.
In Vardot's work building multi-country platforms for NGOs, UN-family agencies, and universities, the projects that age well are not the ones that bought the most features. They are the ones that governed their content structure, component library, accessibility, and integrations from the start. When those foundations are owned and disciplined, adding AI, a new channel, or a new region is a configuration change. When they are rented and undisciplined, every change becomes a renegotiation with a vendor. Feature parity across the market is exactly why this is now the deciding factor.
How should you evaluate an enterprise digital experience platform?
Evaluate an enterprise digital experience platform against five pillars, not a feature checklist: cost, speed, security, sovereignty, and scale. The questions below separate a platform you can grow on from one you will replatform off in three years.
Cost
What is the total cost over five years, including license, build, and support, not only year one? Open-source removes license fees but assumes a capable build-and-support partner.
Speed
How fast can marketing launch a campaign, landing page, or new region without engineering involved in every change?
Security
How does the platform protect data and meet compliance, and who is accountable for patching and monitoring over time?
Sovereignty
Do you control where data lives, and can you meet data-residency and privacy requirements in every market you operate in?
Scale
Can one core run many sites, languages, and traffic peaks without duplicating teams for each property?
Building an enterprise DXP on Drupal with Varbase
As a Drupal Diamond Certified Partner with more than 200 launched platforms for organizations including UNHCR, UNICEF, and Georgetown University, Vardot builds enterprise digital experiences on Drupal using Varbase, its Drupal distribution, and Drupal CMS, so organizations start with multi-site, multilingual, accessibility, and component-based building already in place rather than assembled from scratch. That shortens delivery and enforces consistency across large, multi-property estates, which is what a reliable AI-assisted workflow depends on.
The build is only half of it. Standards, security, and AI capabilities change continuously, so the platform has to evolve with them, which is why Vardot, a Gold Sponsor of the Drupal AI Initiative, pairs an enterprise Drupal platform with managed services that keep it current. For enterprises and international organizations that need to own their digital experience rather than rent it, and to keep it accessible, sovereign, and AI-ready over time, that combination is the foundation worth building on.
Ready to own your enterprise digital experience rather than rent it?
Firas Ghunaim is Marketing Manager at Vardot, a Drupal Diamond Certified Partner and Drupal AI Initiative Gold Sponsor. He has spent more than 16 years in Drupal design, development, marketing, and user experience.
An enterprise digital experience platform (DXP) is an integrated, API-first set of technologies for composing, managing, delivering, and optimizing personalized content across many channels, including websites, apps, portals, chat, and AI assistants. It is the orchestration layer behind all of an organization's digital touchpoints, connected to systems like CRM and analytics through APIs, rather than a single website.
A website is one channel; a digital experience platform (DXP) is the system that powers and connects all of them. A DXP manages content once and delivers it across web, mobile, portals, and AI surfaces, integrates with business systems through APIs, and supports multi-site, multilingual, and personalization needs that standalone site builders like Wix or Squarespace were not designed to handle at enterprise scale.
Enterprises are choosing composable DXPs because the market has reached feature parity, so orchestration and governance now decide outcomes more than feature lists. Gartner expects most organizations to adopt composable rather than monolithic DXP technology by 2026. Composable, API-first platforms let teams swap or add best-of-breed services and avoid lock-in, which monolithic suites make harder.
Drupal is a strong enterprise DXP because it is open-source and API-first, with multi-site, multilingual, and accessibility capabilities in core, plus a visual AI-assisted page builder in Drupal Canvas. Organizations own and host Drupal rather than license it, which supports data sovereignty and avoids per-seat fees. Enterprises should build on Drupal 11, since Drupal 10 reaches end of life on 9 December 2026.
Drupal handles multiple websites through native multi-site capabilities, letting one governed core run many branded sites, regions, or campaigns that share brand, security, and design systems. This avoids rebuilding each site from scratch and lets a single team manage many properties, which lowers cost and duplicated effort for global organizations running country or brand sites at scale.