24 Jun 2020

Upgrading to Drupal 9 update

Now is the best time to start preparing for Drupal 9 whether you are on Drupal 7 or 8 - or even on another platform entirely.

Are you thinking TLDR? OK, the summary is;

Drupal 7 end-of-life on Nov 28, 2022

As this article explains: Previously, Drupal 7's end-of-life was scheduled for November 2021. Given the impact of COVID-19 on budgets and businesses, the Drupal community are extending the end of life until November 28, 2022. The Drupal Security Team will continue to follow the Security Team processes for Drupal 7 core and contributed projects.

Drupal 8 end-of-life on Nov 2, 2021

Drupal 8 will still be end-of-life on November 2, 2021, due to Symfony 3's end of life. However, since the upgrade path from Drupal 8 to Drupal 9 is much easier, the Drupal community doesn't anticipate the same impact on end-users.

Drupal 9 was officially released Jun 3, 2020

Drupal 9 was officially be released on the 3rd of June 2020, giving Drupal 7 and Drupal 8 users little over two years to upgrade to Drupal 9 when they reach end-of-life in November 2022.

What is Drupal 9?

As you can imagine, we’re really excited about Drupal 9 here at Catch, so we’ve had a think and put together our recommendations on what you should be thinking about how to prepare your websites for Drupal 9, (and, spoiler alert, why you should make the move to Drupal 8 now).

Essentially it’s intended to be the same as Drupal 8.9, but with deprecated code removed, so if your website has been maintained correctly upgrading will be super straightforward. 

This means that Drupal 9 ships with all of the awesome new functionality that was added in Drupal 8, such as Media, Configuration Management, Migration, Multilingual, Workflows and an API-first architecture.

It also means that, unlike previous upgrades, you won’t have to wait long for the community modules to be updated - early adoption won’t be punished. As far back as April 2019, 44% of the 7,000 modules available for Drupal 8 have been confirmed as ready for Drupal 9.

But what does all this mean? 

First and foremost, it means the community are ready and raring to go and your upgrade from Drupal 8 to Drupal 9 will be a breeze compared to any previous platform upgrades you may have undergone  Secondarily, with this new, clearer upgrade pathway established, when Drupal 10 comes out, the upgrade from Drupal 9 to Drupal 10 will be just as simple.

“Great, but I’m still on Drupal 7”

You may have kept Drupal 7 as your trusted CMS for many years - possibly even since it was initially released back in 2011. Migrating websites is a large task so we totally understand why you have held onto it for so long.

With Drupal 7 reaching end-of-life November 2022 (and yes, two years counts as soon!) now is the best time to migrate to a new version of Drupal. You’ll have lots of things to consider, one of the biggest being should you move to Drupal 8 now, or wait until Drupal 9 is released?

We strongly recommend starting the migration process sooner rather than later with a move to Drupal 8, the main reason being that migrating to a new platform takes a lot of planning, and if you’re also looking for a new digital partner the procurement process can be a long and gruelling one.

Our Immersion process is designed to help you discover just what it is you - and more importantly, your users - need from your digital platform. We work collaboratively with you to establish both business and user goals, requirements and content needs, creating prototypes to help solve tricky user experience conundrums and build-out and complex technical integrations you may need. With the hard work out of the way, migrating to Drupal 9 will be a breeze!

Get in touch to chat to us about migrating to Drupal 8 - we’d love to be a part of your journey.

“I’ve already made the jump to Drupal 8, what do I do now?”

We’ve been using Drupal 8 at Catch since before its full release in December 2015 so our clients have been feeling the benefits of Drupal 8 for almost five years already.

As well as some amazing performance improvements to serve your website to your users quicker, new functionality was added to Drupal 8 which you and your users have been getting the most of, we’ve put together some of our favourites.

  • Multilingual out of the box - previously you needed to use many modules to reliably be able to translate your website, with Drupal 8 it’s available out of the box
  • Configuration Management - This has been added to Drupal to make keeping environments in sync much easier. Gone are the days of ‘but it worked on this environment’, only to find out someone had missed a step
  • Migration - good news if you’re looking to migrate to Drupal 8 before upgrading to Drupal 9. Migration is available out of the box and is simpler to configure and ever before
  • Workflows - can be customised to manage your content authoring process, or even for the flow that a product has to go through from purchase to shipping
  • API-first architecture - Create your content once and use it across your website and apps
  • Media - fed up with uploading the same image twice? Drupal 8 comes with Media library for you to re-use your images and other media across your website

As Drupal 8 will also become end-of-life in November 2021, there is over a year to get ready but we are starting the process of making sure our clients websites will be ready for Drupal 9 now by auditing the code to make sure the code we have used hasn’t been deprecated since we implemented it. We recommend you do the same.

Already on Drupal 8 but not sure if you’re ready for Drupal 9? We can help! Get in touch to talk to us about auditing your current site to make sure you’re Drupal 9 ready!

18 Mar 2018

Women in digital

Happy International Women’s Day! We took some time out to discuss what it means to be #WomenInDigital with some of the amazing women from each of our teams:

  • Helen, Delivery Director - Client Services
  • Ligia, Strategist - Creative 
  • Gabriela, Front End Developer - Tech Development 
  • Michelle, Finance Manager - Operations

Check out our article written by Delivery Director, Helen Aquinol-Tobin - originally posted on LinkedIn "Stand with us - Women in Digital" 

Stand With Us - Women in Digital

I’m lucky enough - not to mention ridiculously proud - to work at an agency that does a pretty good job of empowering people, giving them a voice and ownership of their work without leaving anyone out in the cold. 

Women were granted the same voting rights as men in 1928, meaning this measure of equality has only been granted to 51% of the UK population for less than 2% of civilised history. It took a long time getting there.

The fight for equality at work is picking up speed - but it’s still not fast enough, particularly in the traditionally male-dominated agency world. Change is slower here, hampered by our deification of ‘ad men’ and our enshrinement of the idea that only men are technical, only men are logical.

Pushing past the pay gap issue, which has been illuminated and dissected by far better minds than mine, how do you build an atmosphere of equality in digital agencies - an industry that is still largely masculine by nature?

I’m lucky enough - not to mention ridiculously proud - to work at an agency that does a pretty good job of empowering people

Helen Aquinol-Tobin, Delivery Director

Representation matters. In my first agency there were three women, unilaterally referred to as girls (or even gals, depending on who was talking). No matter what our actual jobs were, we were expected to make the tea and take the minutes of every meeting. I remember occasions where I'd be presenting the P&L and I'd have to stop because one of the gentlemen wanted a biscuit. There were no women to look up to, only ones you could share sisterly side-eye with.

At Catch, there are women in every department. Opinionated, smart, vocal women, empowered to express their opinions and - more crucially - to act. As a member of the senior management team, I’m aware of the high level of visibility of my role. As Delivery Director I’m across all projects, present in meetings and vocal (sometimes too vocal).

I have a voice and I use it to make sure everyone else does too.

I learned just how important this was from a woman I worked for many years ago. It’s no good being granted a voice if you don’t use it to help others discover theirs. She didn't lend me her voice or her support because I was a woman, but because I deserved to be heard. I try to do the same, my sheer visibility and ability to effect change show others like me that it can be done.

Always outnumbered, never outgunned

We ensure that everyone has the appropriate facts at their disposal and the requisite tools in their arsenal to deal with any circumstance. I’ve written elsewhere about building a modular process that allows people to be flexible in their work, this is vital to ensuring everyone is on even footing.

Giving everyone the same tools and empowering them to use them as necessary mean increased levels of ownership and ensure we have an army of people willing to take the initiative, regardless of job role, level of technical knowledge, gender or anything else.

For the most part, women are still in the minority at digital agencies, meaning we have to have that much more to bring to the table when we do get the opportunity to speak. Putting our flat structure to good use, we keep everyone on equal footing and share as much information as possible, ensuring not only that everyone gets a seat at the table, but they get to eat the full meal and leave a review afterwards.

It’s ok to be smart

We don’t expect the women of Catch to be ‘good girls’. Good girls don’t express differing opinions. Good girls don’t make a lasting impression. Good girls are silent.

A smart mouth is actively encouraged - as long as it’s used judiciously and under the right circumstances. Having been hampered by my own smart mouth for the first five years of my career, I’m overcome with glee when a Catch newbie opens hers for the first time.

Everyone speaks

By promoting a democratic approach to agency life, we ensure that everyone gets their chance to be heard. This applies to everything we do, from discussing what we’re pitching for (and how and why) to how we’re going to tackle a technical challenge. We assume that everyone has something of value to add - and badger them incessantly until they realise it too! Makes for a noisy working environment, but how can you be creative without making a little noise? By not pigeonholing people based on preconceived notions of who or what they are and instead, giving them the freedom to express their opinions - regardless of role or gender - we build a better team and get to do more interesting, complex and fun work. Who wouldn't want that?

Everyone listens

Letting people know they’ve been heard is - on the face of it - the easiest thing to do and yet its the thing most people don’t bother with.

Here’s the thing: you can’t expect people to speak up or think for themselves if you don’t listen. And people who don’t get to speak for themselves don’t get to advance. Providing a safe environment where people feel heard makes for a more inclusive atmosphere, and ultimately allows people to produce better work.

Since I’m neither naive nor stupid I know that these things can be difficult to do at large agencies. The bigger you are, the harder it is to change things, particularly if you don’t already have female representation in the upper echelons of your business.

The point I’m making is that this is something that everyone is responsible for. Appointing diversity officers and token hires won’t cut it. Making people feel included, empowered and heard is everyone’s responsibility, all the time.

We’ve come a long way baby, let’s not stop.

Start a conversation

0207 494 3554
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