What’s driving the popularity of the API-first CMS?
The latest statistics by BuiltWith show that the usage of WordPress, the most dominant traditional CMS platform in the CMS space, on the top 10,000 websites has plateaued and is starting to show signs of decrease.
To me, this indicates that more brands are becoming aware of the limitations of a traditional CMS and they are now looking at alternatives. It is for this reason, along with the benefits shown below, why API-first CMS solutions are starting to make some noise.
1. Reach out to consumers to any device
The IoT-era has drastically changed the way consumers interact with a brand. For instance, people are turning to voice-assistant devices like Amazon Echo and Google Home to either shop or listen to the news. According to Think with Google, 41 percent of consumers who own a voice-activated speaker say it is like speaking to a friend or another person.
Traditional CMS platforms are not able to deliver experiences to these kinds of devices, but an API-first CMS can. Brands can simply retrieve or develop an API for that device or touchpoint, and then plug it straight into their stack.
There are no restrictions on what device you can deliver your experiences.
2. MarTech freedom
Thanks to the API-driven environment, brands can break-free from vendor lock-in, where the CMS dictates the authoring experience. Brands can freely integrate their favorite marketing tools like marketing automation, CRM, and analytics, and remove them when they are no longer needed. This enables brands to create their own digital experience platform.
3. Faster content repurposing
Since all the content is stored centrally, this enables brands to deliver their content to any channel. Content creators can write their content once, and then repurpose it for any channel, device or touchpoint. Saving countless hours of work and removing the need of having to create content twice.
4. Create your own applications
Most API-first CMS solutions allow developers to create their own custom frontend applications using HTML, CSS or Javascript. Once the application has been made, it can then be connected to the API-first CMS ready for use.
Developers tend to love API-first CMS solutions due to the flexibility and freedom they provide.