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How to structure environments to balance agility with stability? At Webiny, we recommend going beyond the classic development–production split by introducing a development playground for experimentation, a staging environment for QA and stakeholder validation, a pre-production environment that mirrors production for final testing, and a robust production environment for live content delivery. Why multiple environments matter for safety, quality, confidence, planning, and collaboration? Ultimately, adopting this simple structure helps teams innovate quickly while keeping the codebase and user experience stable.
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Enterprise CMS projects sometimes fail not because of bad technology, but because of bad assumptions. Here, by “failing” I don’t mean that you don’t have a working solution in the end of the day, but you have a project that went significantly overbudget and missed the original planned go-live date by a few months. As a consultant and now as a product delivery manager at Webiny, I’ve seen firsthand how crucial it is to align expectations, define scope early, and ensure every stakeholder knows their role before the first line of code is written. Recently, we worked with a large enterprise client to implement a tailored version of one of Webiny’s applications. At first glance, it seemed straightforward: define the MVP scope, customize the existing application to meet their requirements, and hand it over to their delivery partner so that they can integrate it with their existing CRM and perform some polishing and further extensions where needed. We quickly realized that scope clarity would make or break this project.

We are thrilled to announce the release of our latest Webiny version 5.36.0 and offer our users the Advanced Content Organisation (ACO) for File Manager and a few other File Manager enhancements.

The upgraded Grid is mind blowing! Using all the new functionalities Webiny has introduced will enable you to create almost any design you can think of, but still keep all elements nicely aligned and the space harmonious.

What if Marie Kondo decides to declutter your Content Management System? What would that look like? Perhaps putting all the content entries neatly in boxes and labelling them using your business logic to define the correct categories.