Good news for Mautic users who love efficiency and collaboration: Sprint 3 of the Campaign Library Phase 2 just wrapped, and it’s looking solid. If you’ve been dreaming about an easier way to find, share, and reuse campaign templates inside Mautic, this project is inching us closer to that reality.
Here’s the scoop on what went down in Sprint 3: The Marketplace now recognizes campaign templates alongside plugins and themes, meaning you won’t have to hunt around separately for campaigns. They’ve added better filtering, so digging through the available templates shouldn’t be a headache anymore. More importantly, the connection between Mautic and the Marketplace’s staging environment is live — this lays the groundwork for managing campaigns directly without jumping back and forth between platforms.
They also tightened up the reviews and ratings system to make sure feedback on templates is solid and useful. On the backend, improvements have been made to support campaign templates better, prepping the system for new features down the line. The frontend got some love too with a review of UI styling choices and setting up a framework that fits nicely with Mautic’s look and feel. So, it’s not just about functionality—expect a smoother, more integrated user experience once the next sprints come around.
What does this mean for you? If you’re currently crafting campaigns from scratch or copying bits between accounts, the Campaign Library promises a faster, more community-driven way to bootstrap and share marketing efforts. Think of it as a plug-and-play stash of smart campaign sets that anyone can contribute to or pull from.
Looking ahead, Sprint 4 will push further on backend validation, better workflows for browsing campaigns, and APIs to empower the UI development. The goal? Deliver a genuinely usable Campaign Library where you can quickly find a campaign that fits your needs, tweak it, and deploy without reinventing the wheel.
From the chatter on the forum, the community seems optimistic but also curious about how these templates will be managed at scale and how easy it will be to customize shared campaigns. The fact that this is open source means we’ll likely see plenty of iterations and community-driven improvements as it rolls out.
My take? This is one to watch if you value shaving time off campaign setup and tapping into collective marketing smarts. The Phase 2 progress shows the Mautic team isn’t just building features—they’re building infrastructure that could make sharing campaigns as commonplace as sharing plugins.
If you want to geek out on all the details or contribute your thoughts, swing by the original forum thread and get involved: