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Comparison · Mkt Auto

Act-On vs Keila

Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.

A
Act-On
MKT AUTO
2.5

Marketing-blog feed crawled as a changelog — thought-leadership posts, no product releases.

◆ Current state

The tracked feed is Act-On's marketing blog: posts on AI in marketing, deliverability policy changes, and vertical playbooks for manufacturing and financial services. These are content-marketing pieces, not product release notes. As product signal, they carry no information about what shipped in the platform.

◆ Where it's heading

The feed will keep publishing SEO-oriented thought leadership, heavily weighted toward AI-in-marketing themes and industry verticals. No product-development trajectory is visible from this source.

◆ Prediction

Expect more blog posts on AI, lifecycle marketing, and vertical strategies. To track actual Act-On product changes, the crawl source needs pointing at a release-notes feed rather than the blog.

K
Keila
MKT AUTO
6.3

Keila adds transactional emails and multi-format templates, broadening past pure newsletters

◆ Current state

Keila, an open-source, privacy-focused newsletter tool, made a notable leap in v0.30.0: MJML/HTML/plain-text templates, reusable content slots, and transactional emails — a new product surface beyond bulk campaigns. Surrounding releases add manual contact-status control, API-driven contact events, pre-filled forms, more languages, and a new email scheduler that re-architected the messages schema to enable transactional sending.

◆ Where it's heading

The direction is clear: Keila is evolving from a newsletter sender into a more general email platform. The v0.20.0 scheduler/messages-schema rework laid the groundwork, and v0.30.0 cashed it in with transactional email and flexible templating. Internationalization and API/contact-lifecycle features show parallel investment in reach and automation.

◆ Prediction

Expect transactional email and content-slot templating to mature, with follow-on work on triggered/automated messages now that the messages schema supports them. Continued localization and contact-API expansion are likely.

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