Webinar: Taxonomy for DXP, Personalization, and AI
1 juin 2026 • 2 Minute Read
Your CMS is what enables your marketing team to create, manage, and deliver content more effectively. Shouldn't your upgrade strategy focus on them and not just keeping the platform current? In this article, we explore how Optimizely CMS 13 is changing the way marketers work and helping them get more value out of their content platform.
Your content strategy is aiming for personalization, AI-assisted discovery, omnichannel delivery, and content reuse. But is your content management system (CMS) helping you get there?
As digital experiences become more content-driven, the role of the CMS has expanded beyond simply publishing web pages. Instead, it has become the foundation for how teams create and deliver content at scale.
For Optimizely customers, the launch of CMS 13 represents a clear way to close the gap between their content goals and operational reality. In this guide, we explore how the latest version paves the way to more efficient content operations, helping teams redefine how they work and deliver more value from their content ecosystem.
Most upgrade strategies focus on getting to the next version and making sure nothing breaks along the way. But CMS 13 introduces capabilities that fundamentally change content management.
For example, Optimizely Graph isn't simply a replacement for Search & Navigation. It provides a more flexible content layer that makes content easier to identify and connect across experiences, channels, and future AI use cases. Similarly, Opal isn't just another feature—it's a powerful AI assistant that helps teams find information faster, reduce manual effort, and create higher-impact assets.
The launch of CMS 13 doesn't mean every organization needs a full rearchitecture now. But it does mean that teams should rethink their CMS modernization plan so that it's guided by where digital experiences are headed, not just current-state requirements.
CMS 13 is designed to support both today's content requirements and tomorrow's.
Historically, CMS upgrades were treated as deferred maintenance projects. Necessary eventually, but difficult to prioritize against digital transformation roadmaps.
That framing no longer holds up well, because digital teams today are being measured on:
CMS upgrades shouldn't be considered deferred maintenance. Instead, they're operational resets.
Older CMS implementations weren't designed around those KPIs. The result is usually accumulated inefficiencies, such as:
None of those problems appear dramatic individually, but together they create measurable operational costs.
Optimizely CMS 13 changes that conversation because it simplifies the platform while modernizing how marketers work.
With this upgrade, teams don't recreate existing capabilities on a newer platform, but rather build content systems and processes that are more scalable, discoverable, and adaptable for the future.
Most organizations already know where the friction exists. The challenge is that teams have just adapted their processes around it over time, and the workarounds become routine.
A few common indicators show up consistently in older legacy environments:
Older implementations often accumulate years of customization without reevaluating workflow design.
The result is:
Teams compensate by adding process overhead rather than investing in platform improvements.
CMS 13 provides an opportunity to revisit workflows holistically rather than continuing to layer processes onto technical limitations.
This is usually the first signal. If content editors regularly need technical support for:
…then it's a big indicator that the CMS is no longer serving the modern needs of marketers.
For example, CMS 13 includes capabilities like Visual Builder, which shift routine content tasks like page edits and layout updates from developers back to marketers. This enables faster campaign execution and more efficient use of technical resources.
It's also important to remember that the cost of developer time is further compounded by the operational cost of slowed campaign execution and reduced responsiveness from marketing teams. As a result, the cost of an outdated CMS is shared between both marketing and IT.
Search degradation tends to occur gradually, leading to inconsistent results and harder-to-find content. As a result, editors lose confidence in indexing behavior and site visitors rely on navigation because search quality becomes unreliable.
In many older implementations, Search & Navigation were configured once and rarely revisited afterward. The tuning was done with the content on-site at the time, but as new content was added, nobody checked user search performance for changes needed to surface Best Bets and synonyms.
An upgrade is often the right time to re-evaluate your search architecture, taxonomy-driven search, and content discovery experiences. Specifically, the Optimizely CMS 13 upgrade gives teams the chance to move search experiences from Search & Navigation to Optimizely Graph.
Graph introduces greater flexibility around structured content access, cross-channel delivery, discovery experiences, and future AI or personalization initiatives. It includes natural language processing features such as semantic keyword search while also maintaining feature parity with Search & Navigation. This gives teams the best of both worlds: preserve what works and enhance the rest with advanced tech.
Older CMS environments frequently carry years of accumulated technical debt:
The platform may still technically function, but the cost of extending it continues to rise.
That directly impacts roadmap velocity and organizations eventually reach a point where maintaining the current state costs more than modernizing it. With the upgrade to CMS 13, teams have the chance to not only eliminate their technical debt, but also deliver new sources of value and enhanced CMS ROI.
"Lift-and-shift" upgrades may seem like the easiest choice in the moment, but, over time, teams will pay the price in inefficiency, accumulated technical debt, and platform risk. Instead, upgrades should be treated as a reset point that improves how content is managed, how teams operate, and what's possible for the future.
That means evaluating:
When done effectively, the biggest gains are operational, and they will compound over time.
In our recent client engagements, we've seen improvements like faster publishing, reduced developer dependency, better editor usability, cleaner governance, more scalable content operations, and easier future enhancements.
For years, CMS investments focused on making content easier to publish. Increasingly, the challenge is making content easier to find, reuse, manage, and activate across experiences.
That's where Opal becomes strategically relevant.
Older CMS implementations were not designed for AI-assisted content operations. As a result, when content volumes grew, teams often struggled to locate existing assets, identify opportunities for reuse, and maintain consistency across channels. That led to duplicated effort, slower execution, and content that delivered less value than it should.
CMS 13 provides a stronger foundation for addressing these challenges. Combined with Opal, organizations can begin to shift from manually managing content to intelligently orchestrating it.
Organizations evaluating CMS modernization should ask:
Most CMS upgrades begin as maintenance projects. But the most successful ones focus instead on operational improvement.
For Optimizely customers still operating on older implementations, CMS 13 represents a natural opportunity to improve marketing agility, modernize search and discovery strategy, and create a more scalable foundation for future digital experiences. And that's not just a technical update—it's a true upgrade.
To see the greatest value, we recommend approaching your upgrade to CMS 13 not as a technical task to keep the platform current, but as a strategic opportunity to improve how teams work. To learn more, connect with our team to evaluate your current Optimizely environment and explore how you can unlock more value with CMS 13.