Simon Data vs Ghost
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Simon Data is shipping integration after integration — Movable Ink Da Vinci, Rokt, Criteo semantic matching, Amazon Ads.
Simon Data's recent cadence is dominated by activation-channel reach. April 2026 added Movable Ink Da Vinci (AI-driven email orchestration via SFTP) and Rokt (e-commerce engagement audiences). Q1 2026 brought Criteo semantic email matching, custom base URL support for self-hosted MessageFlow and ExpertSender deployments, a 14-day send-or-click attribution window, credentials search, and a Redlink → MessageFlow rename. Earlier shipping included Oracle Hospitality as a data source, Privacy Request Expirations with configurable TTL, and Braze user-alias fallback.
Simon Data is positioning itself as the CDP that plays nicely with the broadest set of activation channels — including AI-driven ones like Movable Ink Da Vinci. The integration roadmap is working harder than the core product on the value story; that's defensible for a CDP, where each connector represents real revenue, but it suggests the platform itself is in maintenance mode while the integrations team carries the cadence.
Expect more AI-activation integrations (other generative-email vendors, retail-media platforms beyond Amazon and Rokt), continued attribution-window flexibility, and possibly a Simon-side AI feature that uses the customer-data graph to suggest segments — that would be the directional break from pure integration cadence.
Ghost ships steady creator-facing polish and cements its public-good positioning.
Ghost's recent cadence is a weekly drumbeat of small but visible creator UX wins: in-product theme editing, saved audience segments, native share buttons, welcome-email design controls, and a Home Assistant integration. Alongside that, the project secured Digital Public Goods Alliance recognition, which is more positioning than feature, but a deliberate one for a platform that competes against venture-backed newsletter tools.
The product direction is unmistakably 'reduce the friction between idea and published newsletter,' with each release smoothing a step in the author and member workflow. The DPG recognition reinforces the open-source narrative that distinguishes Ghost from Substack and Beehiiv on values rather than features. Expect more in-product editing surfaces and audience-segmentation tools, plus continued strategic emphasis on independence and portability.
The next visible moves will likely deepen member analytics and segmentation tooling, and broaden in-product editing beyond themes to other site assets. A pricing or partnership announcement tied to the DPG positioning would not be surprising.
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