Ghost vs WPForms
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Ghost keeps layering membership, monetization and now lifecycle email onto its newsletter core
Ghost is an open-source publishing and newsletter platform that has spent the last two months steadily building out the business layer around its core: memberships, paid subscriptions, gifting, richer comments, and saved audience segments. The changelog reads as a creator-business stack being assembled feature by feature rather than a single headline release.
The direction is clear: move from broadcast newsletters toward a full creator-business operating system. Recent work spans monetization (gift links, gift subscriptions), audience management (dynamic and saved member views), social distribution (connecting more profiles, bringing followers over), and now lifecycle email automation. Each release fills a gap a serious publisher would otherwise leave for a third-party tool.
Expect email sequences to graduate from beta to GA and gain branching or trigger logic, alongside continued investment in social/fediverse distribution to pull external followers onto Ghost.
WPForms' feed is a how-to blog, but AI-assistant form building is its real thread.
The tracked feed is WPForms' tutorial blog — how-tos on Klaviyo signup forms, survey analysis, GDPR entry deletion, and file-storage routing. The substantive thread running through it is AI: tutorials showing external assistants, Claude and then ChatGPT, building and editing WordPress forms inside WPForms, alongside its own AI builder and prompt-driven editing.
WPForms is steadily turning form building into something driven by conversation — its own AI features plus integrations that let Claude and ChatGPT construct and edit forms directly. Because these arrive as tutorials rather than release notes, exact shipping and GA status is unclear, but the direction is clearly AI-assistant-driven form creation.
Expect more assistant integrations and AI-editing tutorials; a crisp release or named connector, rather than a how-to, would confirm how far the external-assistant form building has actually shipped.
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