Netlify CMS is an open source Git-based CMS for static site generators. it runs 100% in a browser.
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Plone
Score 10.0 out of 10
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Plone is a free and open source content management system built on top of the Zope application server. Plone can be used for any kind of website, including blogs, internet sites, webshops, and internal websites.
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Pricing
Netlify CMS
Plone
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Netlify CMS
Plone
Free Trial
No
No
Free/Freemium Version
Yes
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
Netlify CMS
Plone
Features
Netlify CMS
Plone
Platform & Infrastructure
Comparison of Platform & Infrastructure features of Product A and Product B
Netlify CMS
6.0
1 Ratings
25% below category average
Plone
10.0
5 Ratings
26% above category average
API
6.01 Ratings
10.05 Ratings
Internationalization / multi-language
00 Ratings
10.05 Ratings
Web Content Creation
Comparison of Web Content Creation features of Product A and Product B
Netlify CMS
6.1
1 Ratings
24% below category average
Plone
9.4
6 Ratings
19% above category average
WYSIWYG editor
9.01 Ratings
10.06 Ratings
Code quality / cleanliness
9.01 Ratings
10.05 Ratings
Admin section
7.01 Ratings
10.05 Ratings
Page templates
3.01 Ratings
10.05 Ratings
Library of website themes
1.01 Ratings
5.05 Ratings
Mobile optimization / responsive design
5.01 Ratings
10.05 Ratings
Publishing workflow
9.01 Ratings
10.05 Ratings
Form generator
00 Ratings
10.05 Ratings
Web Content Management
Comparison of Web Content Management features of Product A and Product B
Netlify CMS
4.3
1 Ratings
53% below category average
Plone
9.4
5 Ratings
23% above category average
Content taxonomy
7.01 Ratings
10.05 Ratings
Availability / breadth of extensions
2.01 Ratings
8.05 Ratings
Community / comment management
4.01 Ratings
9.05 Ratings
SEO support
00 Ratings
10.04 Ratings
Bulk management
00 Ratings
10.05 Ratings
Security
Comparison of Security features of Product A and Product B
Netlify CMS is well suited when you have very less frequent updates to your content, maybe once a day and very few people need to access your data. You can connect it to Netlify, GitHub, or any platform and have multiple people access it and do as many updates as you wish, but the process is not well-defined and you need to build your own system for that. It is well suited for projects you need to pull off with very low cost, it is essentially free as the software is open source and free to use, and all you need to do is set up your schema correctly and find a deployment pipeline where you can build your static site/API to redeploy whenever the content changes. I personally used a GitHub Login -> Netlify CMS -> next app consumer of content -> GitHub pipelines to run next SSG -> GitHub Pages to deploy the built static site. It might not be appropriate for large teams where users themselves need no-code tools to modify the schema of the content.
The larger your organization, the more appropriate Plone will be. This is not to say that Plone is a worse choice for small websites, only that the minimum investment for a Plone site is certainly higher than for other platforms. If you already use Plone for your site and are looking for a redesign or an overhaul, I would only advise switching to a different platform such as WordPress or Drupal if your organization is downsizing. For any other situation, Plone is the natural choice for your growth.
Plone is a folder-based system, organising content in a similar way desktop-users are doing for the last two decades. No need to teach non-tech customers some relational-database like paradigm for content management.
Plone is secure. It is the most secure CMS you can get your hands on.
Plone is flexible, and makes fast development easy.
Not everything is configurable or editable by Plone, and when you need to adjust or add custom pieces in, you need to deal with Zope. Zope has an ugly, confusing and difficult UI and structure as a backend.
Using 3rd party products is difficult to do - there are a few different ways to get them installed, all of which take a bit of luck to get right.
Building custom products for Plone is not fun. You've got to deal with an archaic framework to tie in that is not well documented (there is documentation about many things, but not great documentation and there are a lot of holes in the documentation).
Compared to the amount of Plone sites, users and customizations we have in our organization, the amount of support requests and training needed is really small.
The new user interface in Plone 6 is even better, it is super fast, has lots of different blocks for enhancing the page, has flexible layout system and is easy to extend with more features.
Our Plone sites are very robust. We have critical systems on Plone and we have been running sites on Plone for over 20 years with very little unexpected downtime.
Plone is very intensive in its operations, and if not configured well it can be slow. However it is designed and built with speed in mind and with proper use of coding, templates and caching can perform extremely well under high loads. It is capable of scaling to very high load availability environments with no specific coding requirements.
We really can't compare it to full-fledged CMS software, like WordPress, which has a lot of community and support with widgets, plugins, and whatnot. It's not built for that, but you can compare it to Contentful, Ghost, Strapi, etc., which provide similar functionality to a headless CMS with custom schema options, but even among them, it still lacks a lot of functionality, ease of use, and support. But Netlify CMS pros would be of the opinion that compared to other platforms where most schemas need to use their own tools and frameworks, it's very cost-effective. Something new called TinaCMS has come up to compete with Netlify CMS by covering most of its shortcomings, but it's something new being built by the same team that built Forestry CMS and comes with many modern features, yet currently only supports NextJS SSG.
Drupal: Plone is cheaper, so with Drupal is more complex to reach the required ROI. However, Drupal has a lower learning curve WordPress: For our necessities it has a more expensive learning curve than plone. Joomla, is easier to use. However, it have some issues on security and web content where Plone is much better
The impact Plone has had at the University of Oshkosh is as follows: this software allows student workers to learn about IT departments and CMS's in a user-friendly way. It gives many students great jobs that look great on their resumes.
Since there are great training manuals for Plone, there is increased employee efficient in the workplace. Training doesn't take long, and if there's ever a question, the Plone manual is a great tool to refer to.
If an employee using Plone quits, its easy to find someone to replace them with quick training and great resources.