Drupal is a free, open-source content management system written in PHP that competes primarily with Joomla and Plone. The standard release of Drupal, known as Drupal core, contains basic features such as account and menu management, RSS feeds, page layout customization, and system administration.
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Veeva Vault PromoMats
Score 8.1 out of 10
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Veeva Vault PromoMats streamlines the creation, review, and distribution of compliant content at scale. PromoMats is a regulated content management application that supports the full lifecycle of promotional content. It enables content creation, review and approval, digital asset management (DAM), claims management, and modular content. PromoMats includes Brand Portal, a central repository that makes content accessible for internal users while enhancing content reuse. PromoMats generates eCTD…
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Pricing
Drupal
Veeva Vault PromoMats
Editions & Modules
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Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Drupal
Veeva Vault PromoMats
Free Trial
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No
Free/Freemium Version
No
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
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More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Drupal
Veeva Vault PromoMats
Features
Drupal
Veeva Vault PromoMats
Security
Comparison of Security features of Product A and Product B
Drupal
6.1
67 Ratings
29% below category average
Veeva Vault PromoMats
-
Ratings
Role-based user permissions
6.167 Ratings
00 Ratings
Platform & Infrastructure
Comparison of Platform & Infrastructure features of Product A and Product B
Drupal
6.7
64 Ratings
14% below category average
Veeva Vault PromoMats
-
Ratings
API
5.359 Ratings
00 Ratings
Internationalization / multi-language
8.155 Ratings
00 Ratings
Web Content Creation
Comparison of Web Content Creation features of Product A and Product B
Drupal
6.7
70 Ratings
15% below category average
Veeva Vault PromoMats
-
Ratings
WYSIWYG editor
5.663 Ratings
00 Ratings
Code quality / cleanliness
7.167 Ratings
00 Ratings
Admin section
6.670 Ratings
00 Ratings
Page templates
5.669 Ratings
00 Ratings
Library of website themes
6.660 Ratings
00 Ratings
Mobile optimization / responsive design
8.164 Ratings
00 Ratings
Publishing workflow
9.068 Ratings
00 Ratings
Form generator
5.265 Ratings
00 Ratings
Web Content Management
Comparison of Web Content Management features of Product A and Product B
Drupal
6.8
69 Ratings
9% below category average
Veeva Vault PromoMats
-
Ratings
Content taxonomy
10.064 Ratings
00 Ratings
SEO support
3.764 Ratings
00 Ratings
Bulk management
8.160 Ratings
00 Ratings
Availability / breadth of extensions
6.163 Ratings
00 Ratings
Community / comment management
6.163 Ratings
00 Ratings
Enterprise Content Management
Comparison of Enterprise Content Management features of Product A and Product B
Drupal
-
Ratings
Veeva Vault PromoMats
5.2
5 Ratings
43% below category average
Content capture & imaging
00 Ratings
6.65 Ratings
File sync, storage & archiving
00 Ratings
7.05 Ratings
Document management
00 Ratings
7.05 Ratings
Records management
00 Ratings
7.05 Ratings
Content search & retrieval
00 Ratings
4.65 Ratings
Enterprise content collaboration
00 Ratings
4.04 Ratings
Content publishing & creation
00 Ratings
2.03 Ratings
Security, risk management & information governance
Drupal is best suited for a dynamic website that needs customization and may need different user roles. It’s also great at learning to build a complex web application without knowing how to code a complex website. Although it can be implemented with minimal coding, knowing how to debug is almost necessary.
Content Types... these are amazing. Whereas a more simplistic CMS like Wordpress will basically allow you to make posts and build pages, Drupal 8 gives you the ability to define different types of content that behave differently, and are served up differently in different areas of the website.
Extensibility... it scales, ohhhh does it scale. They've really figured out server-side caching, and it makes all the difference. Once a page has been cached, it's available instantly to all users worldwide; and when coupled with AWS, global redundancy and localization mean that no matter where you're accessing the site, it always loads fast and crisp.
Workflows... you have the ability to define very specific roles and/or user-based editorial workflows, allowing for as many touchpoints and reviews between content creation and publication as you'll require.
Security and new release notifications are a hassle as they happen too often
Allowing them to write PHP modules is a big advantage, but sometimes integrating them is a small challenge due to the version the developer is working on.
The time and money invested into this platform were too great to discontinue it at this point. I'm sure it will be in use for a while. We have also spent time training many employees how to use it. All of these things add up to quite an investment in the product. Lastly, it basically fulfills what we need our intranet site to do.
In comparison to other CMS alternatives out there, it is quite clean and maintainable when it comes to the small details. The general usability is great once you get to learn the details of it. The problem is that the onboarding process for new developers is a bit hard since there is no official, straight-forward documentation or video series.
Drupal itself does not tend to have bugs that cause sporadic outages. When deployed on a well-configured LAMP stack, deployment and maintenance problems are minimal, and in general no exotic tuning or configuration is required. For highest uptime, putting a caching proxy like Varnish in front of Drupal (or a CDN that supports dynamic applications).
Drupal page loads can be slow, as a great many database calls may be required to generate a page. It is highly recommended to use caching systems, both built-in and external to lessen such database loads and improve performance. I haven't had any problems with behind-the-scenes integrations with external systems.
As noted earlier, the support of the community can be rather variable, with some modules attracting more attraction and action in their issue queues, but overall, the development community for Drupal is second to none. It probably the single greatest aspect of being involved in this open-source project.
I was part of the team that conducted the training. Our training was fine, but we could have been better informed on Drupal before we started providing it. If we did not have answers to tough questions, we had more technical staff we could consult with. We did provide hands-on practice time for the learners, which I would always recommend. That is where the best learning occurred.
The on-line training was not as ideal as the face-to-face training. It was done remotely and only allowed for the trainers to present information to the learners and demonstrate the platform online. There was not a good way to allow for the learners to practice, ask questions and have them answered all in the same session.
Plan ahead as much you can. You really need to know how to build what you want with the modules available to you, or that you might need to code yourself, in order to make the best use of Drupal. I recommend you analyze the most technically difficult workflows and other aspects of your implementation, and try building some test versions of those first. Get feedback from stakeholders early and often, because you can easily find yourself in a situation where your implementation does 90% of what you want, but, due to something you didn't plan for, foresee, or know about, there's no feasible way to get past the last 10%
Drupal is community-backed making it more accessible and growing at a faster rate than Sitefinity which is a proprietary product built on .NET. Drupal is PHP-based using some but not all Symphony codebase. Updates for Drupal are frequent and so are feature adds.
Drupal is well known to be scalable, although it requires solid knowledge of MySQL best practices, caching mechanisms, and other server-level best practices. I have never personally dealt with an especially large site, so I can speak well to the issues associated with Drupal scaling.
Drupal has allowed us to build up a library of code and base sites we can reuse to save time which has increased our efficiency and thus had a positive financial impact.
Drupal has allowed us to take on projects we otherwise would not have been able to, having a further impact.
Drupal has allowed us to build great solutions for our clients which give them an excellent ROI.