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WordPress 7.0: Enterprise-Grade by Default

1 May 2026 at 13:09

After a couple of delays, WordPress 7.0 is scheduled to land on May 20th.

We’re looking at this through the lens of the beta releases and recent core updates, so some details may still shift. But the overall direction is already clear, and it’s one enterprise teams have been waiting for.

This is the release where WordPress starts to feel like it’s designed for how large organisations actually run.

A platform that’s catching up with how it’s used

Enterprise teams have been stretching WordPress to fit complex needs for years. Governance, consistency, performance, multi-team workflows, all solved through a mix of plugins, custom code, and process.

It works well, but it comes at a cost.

What’s happening in 7.0 is a gradual pullback of that complexity into core. The platform is starting to take responsibility for problems teams have been solving themselves for a long time.

That shift is where the real value is.

The editor finally behaves like a controlled environment

One of the most important changes in 7.0 is also one of the least visible.

The editor is now always iframed.

That brings a level of consistency that has been hard to guarantee across environments. Styles are properly isolated. What you see in the editor is far closer to what gets rendered on the front end, without unexpected bleed from themes or admin styles.

For teams running large platforms, this is a big step forward.

There is some cleanup involved. Older plugins and custom integrations that rely on direct access to the global document will need updating. But once that’s done, the editing experience becomes much more predictable.

And predictability is what scales.

Design systems start to hold their shape

Keeping content consistent across teams, regions, and brands is where things usually start to drift.

Building on the leaps forward in WordPress 6.9, WordPress 7.0 gives teams better tools to keep that under control without slowing anyone down.

Templates are clearer about what can and can’t be changed. Patterns are easier to treat as reusable, governed components. Block-level controls behave more reliably across different contexts.

All of that adds up to a system that reinforces the design system instead of relying on people to remember it.

For engineering teams, it means fewer edge cases and less defensive code. For content teams, it means fewer accidental breakages and a smoother path to publishing.

Governance gets simpler

If you’ve ever had to manage permissions and workflows across a large editorial team in WordPress, you’ll know how quickly things can get complicated.

Plugins help, but they also introduce more moving parts.

WordPress 7.0 improves the baseline here. Permissions are more flexible, ownership is clearer, and a lot of the common governance needs can be handled without reaching straight for additional tooling.

That doesn’t remove the need for custom workflows in complex organisations, but it does reduce how much of that logic sits outside core.

Fewer dependencies, fewer surprises when it comes time to upgrade.

Performance that keeps up with modern builds

Block-based sites are powerful, but they can get heavy fast.

7.0 includes improvements that target that complexity directly. Rendering is more efficient, assets are loaded more selectively, and caching behaves more consistently.

These are the kinds of changes that don’t always show up in screenshots but make a real difference in production.

For high-traffic platforms, it means more stable performance without as much ongoing tuning. For teams, it means less time chasing regressions and more time building.

Developer experience is moving in the right direction

There are a few updates in the recent developer notes that are worth paying attention to.

Block visibility tied to viewport opens up new ways to handle responsive behaviour directly in the editor. That changes how content models are designed and reduces reliance on front-end-only solutions.

Per-block custom CSS is also coming into play. Useful, but something teams will want to manage carefully to avoid introducing inconsistency at scale.

The common thread is that more capability is moving into the block layer. That’s powerful, but it also means teams need to think more deliberately about how they govern it.

A better fit for modern architectures

Most enterprise platforms aren’t running WordPress in isolation.

They’re integrating with front-end frameworks, personalisation tools, analytics platforms, and more. In that world, consistency in data and APIs is essential.

7.0 continues to make progress here. Block data is easier to work with, API responses are more predictable, and the gap between what editors create and what developers consume keeps getting smaller.

For headless and hybrid setups, that reduces friction across the board.

WordPress 7.0: What to look at before May 20th

With the release just around the corner, now is the time to start testing.

A few areas worth focusing on:

  • Editor integrations
    Check anything that interacts directly with the editor environment, especially where it touches the DOM.
  • Design system enforcement
    Look at how templates and patterns are used today and where core features can take over.
  • Permissions and workflows
    Review your governance model and see what can be simplified.
  • Performance on complex pages
    Test the pages that tend to cause problems and see how they behave on the latest beta.
  • Plugin compatibility
    Pay close attention to plugins that interact with the admin or editor experience.

Where this leaves enterprise WordPress

WordPress has been running enterprise platforms for a long time. What’s changing with WordPress 7.0 is how much effort it takes to keep things running well.

More of the patterns that teams have built around WordPress are now becoming part of the platform itself. That reduces duplication, lowers maintenance overhead, and makes upgrades less of a balancing act.

There’s still work to do, especially for platforms with a lot of legacy customisation. But once that alignment is in place, the payoff is a system that’s easier to manage and more predictable over time.

That’s a meaningful step forward.

The post WordPress 7.0: Enterprise-Grade by Default appeared first on Human Made.

5 AI Tools Enterprise Teams Should Know (But Probably Don’t)

5 March 2026 at 14:19

By now, every enterprise has a position on ChatGPT. Most have piloted Copilot. A growing number are exploring how large language models fit into their product and operational strategies. But the most useful AI tools for enterprise teams in 2026 aren’t the ones making headlines.

While the boardroom conversation centres on the big platforms, a different category of AI tool is quietly solving the problems that actually slow enterprise teams down: the contract review that takes three days, the data question that requires a ticket to analytics, the video that never gets produced because editing is a bottleneck.

These aren’t experimental enterprise AI tools. They’re production-ready, security-conscious, and built for the specific workflows where general-purpose AI falls short. Here are five worth your attention.

1. Julius AI — Ask your data a question. Get an answer.

The problem it solves: Your team has the data. What they don’t have is a fast way to interrogate it without filing a request to analytics or wrestling with pivot tables.

Julius lets anyone — marketing managers, operations leads, finance teams — upload a spreadsheet or connect a database and ask questions in plain English. “Which campaign had the highest ROI in Q3?” returns a chart in seconds, not a Jira ticket that takes a week.

Why enterprise teams should care: The gap between having data and acting on data is where most organisations bleed time. Julius closes it by making analysis conversational. Its “Notebooks” feature lets you build repeatable analysis workflows — run the same query on updated data with a single click. For teams producing regular reports, that alone can reclaim hours every month.

It won’t replace your data science function, but it will dramatically reduce the number of questions that need to reach them.

Price: Free (limited) / from $20/mo
Website: julius.ai

2. Gumloop — AI-powered workflow automation, no engineering queue required

The problem it solves: You’ve identified dozens of processes that could benefit from AI — classifying support tickets, extracting data from documents, enriching CRM records — but every one of them is stuck behind an engineering backlog.

Gumloop is a drag-and-drop builder that connects any major LLM (GPT-4, Claude, Gemini) to your internal tools: CRMs, document stores, email, web scrapers — without writing code. Think of it as what happens when you cross Zapier with an AI reasoning layer.

Why enterprise teams should care: The real bottleneck in enterprise AI adoption isn’t the model — it’s the integration. Gumloop lets operations teams build and iterate on AI workflows without waiting for developer resources. Process documents, classify inbound requests, update records, extract structured data — all in visual workflows that non-technical team members can own.

It’s already used by teams at Instacart and Shopify. The platform provides access to premium LLMs out of the box, so you don’t need to manage your own API keys to get started.

Price: Free / from $37/mo
Website: gumloop.com

3. Spellbook — AI contract review that works where your lawyers already work

The problem it solves: Contract review is slow, expensive, and scales badly. Most AI legal tools require copying text into a separate interface. Spellbook works directly inside Microsoft Word.

It reviews contracts, suggests language, identifies missing clauses, flags risks, and handles redlining — all within the document itself. Critically, it understands legal language semantically, not just through keyword matching, which means it catches issues that a simple search would miss.

Why enterprise teams should care: Over 3,400 law firms and in-house teams already use Spellbook. It’s SOC 2 Type II certified with zero data retention — the security posture enterprise legal and procurement teams require.

For organisations that process a high volume of contracts — vendor agreements, NDAs, partnership terms — the time savings compound quickly. And because it sits inside Word, adoption friction is minimal. There’s nothing new to learn; the AI meets your team in their existing workflow.

Price: Free trial / subscription-based
Website: spellbook.legal

4. Descript — Video production without the production bottleneck

The problem it solves: Your team knows video content is essential — for training, marketing, internal communications — but the editing process creates a bottleneck that means most footage never gets published.

Descript turns video editing into text editing. Upload a video, get an AI transcription, then edit the video by editing the transcript. Delete a sentence from the text, the video cut happens automatically. Remove every “um” and filler word with a single click. Rearrange sections by moving paragraphs.

Why enterprise teams should care: The real barrier to enterprise video production isn’t recording — it’s post-production. Descript means anyone who can edit a document can edit a video. That fundamentally changes who in the organisation can produce and ship video content.

The Overdub feature takes it further: clone a speaker’s voice and fix mistakes or add sentences by typing them. Mispronounced a product name in an otherwise perfect take? Type the correction. For distributed teams where reshoots are impractical, this is a genuine operational advantage.

Price: Free / from $24/mo
Website: descript.com

5. Reclaim.ai — AI calendar management that scales across teams

The problem it solves: In any enterprise with distributed teams, calendar management is an invisible productivity drain. Meeting overload crowds out focused work. Scheduling across time zones consumes hours. And “protected time” is only protected until the next urgent invite.

Reclaim automatically schedules and defends time for deep work, meetings, habits, and breaks — then dynamically adjusts when priorities shift. Mark focused work as high priority, and it will actively reschedule lower-priority blocks to protect it from incoming meeting requests.

Why enterprise teams should care: This isn’t a scheduling link tool. It’s an AI layer over your calendar that understands priorities and makes trade-offs on your behalf. For leadership teams and project managers juggling complex schedules across time zones, the compounding time savings are significant.

It integrates with Google Calendar, Slack, Asana, Jira, and Linear. For organisations already invested in these ecosystems, Reclaim slots in without adding another platform to manage.

Price: Free / from $10/mo
Website: reclaim.ai

The pattern worth noticing

These five enterprise AI tools share something important: none of them are trying to be a general-purpose AI assistant. Each one targets a specific enterprise workflow — data analysis, process automation, legal review, content production, time management — and solves it with a depth that horizontal platforms can’t match.

That’s the real shift happening in enterprise AI right now. The competitive advantage isn’t in which LLM you’ve chosen. It’s in how precisely you’ve matched specialised tools to the workflows where your teams actually lose time.

The tools everyone’s heard of are table stakes. The ones that solve your specific bottlenecks? That’s where the value compounds.

Learn more about where AI is heading and the difference it’ll make to your teams.

The post 5 AI Tools Enterprise Teams Should Know (But Probably Don’t) appeared first on Human Made.

WordPress 6.9: The Collaboration Release That Changes Everything

2 December 2025 at 11:13

WordPress 6.9 arrives on December 2, 2025, and it’s not just another incremental update. This release marks the beginning of Phase 3 of Gutenberg—the collaboration phase—and introduces features that fundamentally reshape how teams work together in WordPress. At the heart of this release is Notes, a feature we’re particularly proud to see land, given that Human Made sponsors Adam Silverstein, the WordPress core committer who has been instrumental in bringing collaborative editing to the platform.

For enterprise teams managing complex content workflows, this is the release we’ve been waiting for.

Block-Level Notes: Real-Time Collaboration Comes to WordPress

The headline feature of WordPress 6.9 is Notes—a block-level commenting system that brings asynchronous collaboration directly into the content editor. Teams can now leave threaded comments attached to specific blocks, resolve discussions, and reopen them as needed. Post authors receive email notifications when notes are added, keeping everyone in the loop without leaving WordPress.

This isn’t just a convenience feature. For organisations with editorial review processes, compliance requirements, or distributed content teams, Notes eliminates the friction of switching between WordPress and external collaboration tools. The feedback lives where the content lives.

Notes are enabled by default for Posts and Pages, and developers can extend this to custom post types through the register_post_type function—a straightforward integration for enterprise implementations.

The Abilities API: Building for an AI-Ready Future

Perhaps the most forward-looking addition in 6.9 is the Abilities API, a foundational system that standardises how plugins, themes, and WordPress core register and expose their capabilities. This creates a unified, machine-readable registry of functionalities accessible through PHP, REST API endpoints, and—crucially—AI integrations.

GitHub for the Abilities API, part of WordPress 6.9

For enterprise teams, this signals WordPress’s commitment to remaining relevant as AI transforms content operations. The Abilities API provides the infrastructure for secure automation and intelligent content workflows, positioning WordPress as a platform that can evolve alongside emerging technologies.

Six New Blocks That Address Real Needs

WordPress 6.9 introduces six new blocks, each solving genuine content challenges:

Accordion Block finally arrives in core after years of community requests. The nested structure—comprising Accordion, Accordion Item, Accordion Heading, and Accordion Panel blocks—provides flexible FAQ and content organisation options with minimal default styling, leaving room for brand customisation.

Term Query Block transforms how sites handle categories and tags. Similar to how the Query block manages posts, Term Query provides built-in taxonomy display and organisation—particularly valuable for directory sites, publications, and content-heavy platforms.

Time to Read Block includes accessibility-reviewed reading time estimates with options for time ranges and word counts. A small addition, but one that reflects WordPress’s maturing approach to inclusive design.

Math Block enables LaTeX syntax for mathematical formulas, opening WordPress to academic, scientific, and technical publishing use cases that previously required plugins.

Comment Count and Comment Link Blocks give theme builders granular control over comment functionality, supporting more intentional approaches to community engagement.

Editor Improvements That Matter

Beyond the headline features, 6.9 delivers substantive editor refinements:

Visual Drag and Drop now provides live feedback as you reposition blocks, showing exactly where elements will land before you release. Currently limited to single blocks, with multi-block support planned for WordPress 7.0.

Allowed Blocks UI moves block restriction management from code to interface. Agencies and site administrators can now enforce block rules in patterns and templates without touching markup—a meaningful step toward no-code site governance.

Hide and Show Blocks enables visibility toggling while preserving block structure. Seasonal content, conditional elements, and A/B testing scenarios become simpler to manage.

Command Palette Everywhere extends the Ctrl+K / Cmd+K quick-access tool beyond the Site Editor to every admin screen, streamlining navigation across the entire WordPress dashboard.

Performance and Developer Experience

WordPress 6.9 continues the platform’s performance trajectory with optimised script loading, on-demand block-style loading, and improved cron execution. The new Block Processor class enables efficient, streaming block manipulation that should prevent out-of-memory issues in complex document processing scenarios.

For developers, updates to the Block Bindings API, DataViews components, and Interactivity API provide more sophisticated tools for building custom solutions. The iframe transition for the post editor—completing in WordPress 7.0—resolves long-standing style conflicts between admin interface and content preview.

What This Means for Enterprise WordPress

WordPress 6.9 represents a maturation of the platform’s enterprise capabilities. The Notes feature addresses a genuine gap in content collaboration. The Abilities API demonstrates strategic thinking about WordPress’s role in an AI-augmented future. The continued investment in performance and developer tooling reinforces WordPress’s viability for complex, high-traffic implementations.

At Human Made, we see this release as validation of WordPress’s trajectory toward genuine enterprise readiness—not through bolted-on features, but through thoughtful platform evolution that respects the open-source ecosystem while meeting organisational needs.

The collaboration era of WordPress has begun. The question now is how organisations will adapt their content workflows to take advantage of it.

WordPress 6.9 releases on December 2, 2025

For implementation guidance or to discuss how these features align with your digital strategy, get in touch with our team.

The post WordPress 6.9: The Collaboration Release That Changes Everything appeared first on Human Made.

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