CartStack vs Kit (formerly ConvertKit)
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
A long-quiet cart-recovery tool resurfaces with a 5.0 experience refresh.
CartStack is a cart- and browse-abandonment recovery tool. Its changelog is sparse, spanning several years with long gaps, and the one recent entry is CartStack 5.0 — described as a full experience overhaul where 'everything is new' but the underlying recovery engine is unchanged. The older history shows incremental email and reporting features: webhooks, pre-send email validation, one-click unsubscribe, aggregate reporting.
5.0 reads as a UI and platform refresh rather than a capability change — the company is explicit that the results-delivering engine stays the same. After a quiet stretch, this could signal renewed investment, but the sparse release history makes it hard to read a sustained trajectory from these entries alone.
Whether 5.0 marks a return to steady shipping or a one-off refresh is unclear from the changelog; the multi-year gaps between releases make cadence hard to predict.
Kit pushes past email tooling toward audience intelligence and AI-tool access.
Kit (formerly ConvertKit) is layering two new capabilities on top of its email and automation core: subscriber intelligence and AI-tool integration. Alongside those, it shipped a navigation redesign, a rebuilt landing page editor, and a rename of Creator profile to Newsletter site. The base product keeps getting incremental search and editor polish while the headline bets are data and AI.
The direction is from send-and-automate toward understand-your-audience and operate-Kit-from-anywhere. Subscriber Signals adds an audience data layer that competes with standalone enrichment tools, while the Kit MCP exposes the platform to external AI assistants. Together they reposition Kit as creator infrastructure rather than just an email sender.
Expect Subscriber Signals to move from early access toward general availability and the MCP to graduate from beta with broader write actions across lists, sequences, and broadcasts.
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