Issue 3 — Ghost 6.0

Creator Percolator

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Issue #3 — Ghost 6.0: Why This Quiet CMS Update Might Shake Up the Creator Stack

If the loudest platforms keep chasing “all-in-one convenience,” Ghost’s (still relatively) new 6.0 release quietly delivers something more important: ownership, open distribution, and first-party insight. Even if you’re wedded to your current platform, it’s interesting to think about how you could achieve similar capabilities on Substack or Beehiiv. I’m certainly looking at how to add versions of the key parts in PeakZebra.

Creator Tools Watch

  • Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) projects creator-economy ad spend will hit $37 billion in 2025, up sharply from prior years — showing that brands increasingly treat creator content as a core media channel rather than a niche experiment.
    • Why it matters: Greater brand investment means more monetization demand — but also more pressure for creators to build stable, scalable stacks (not piecemeal tool chains).
  • The wave of M&A in creator-economy startups is accelerating — one recent report shows that the first half of 2025 already saw ~52 creator-economy deals.
    • Why it matters: Consolidation could reshape which tools survive or dominate; for creators & agencies, this means risk (tool shutdowns) and opportunity (demand for migration or integration services).
  • Donatuz — an AI-powered monetization platform for creators — has launched, aiming to streamline and automate revenue generation for digital creators. I don’t entirely understand their AI angle and for me the big takeaway is that they take a 12% cut, which is worse even than Substack and Patreon.
    • Why it matters: As monetization becomes more automated & AI-driven, the tools you build or recommend should account for this shift — and creators must weigh convenience vs. platform risk.
  • Global interest in “creator-economy as media” is growing fast — as more brands, platforms, and investors treat creators like media companies rather than hobbyists or advertisers.
    • Why it matters: The creator economy is maturing. That means more structural complexity but also more opportunity for creators who treat their work as businesses — which aligns tightly with your own audience and agenda.

What’s New in Ghost 6.0 (and Why It Matters)

Here are the core upgrades in Ghost 6.0 — and what they mean for creators, publishers, and builders of creator stacks.

### Federated / “Social-Web” Publishing (via ActivityPub)

  • Ghost 6.0 connects your publication to the open social web: your posts (and micro-posts) can now be followed, liked, replied to, or reshared from any compatible fediverse/social-web client — Mastodon, Bluesky, Threads (depending on support), Flipboard, WordPress, and more.
  • You can publish both long-form articles and short-form “Notes,” giving you a flexible content rhythm that spans essays, dispatches, and micro-posts. Whereas Substack Notes live only inside Substack, Notes in Ghost live in other social media contexts.
  • For readers across platforms, this means distribution without gatekeepers: your domain stays your domain; your content lives under your control — but benefits from network effects across the federated web.

### Built-In, First-Party Analytics (Cookie-Free & Privacy-Conscious)

  • Ghost 6.0 brings a native analytics suite so you can see visitor traffic, newsletter performance, member growth, and engagement — all in real time, directly in Ghost’s dashboard.
  • This means fewer external dependencies: no need to hack in third-party analytics or rely on external tracking scripts for basic performance data. For creators who value control, privacy, and portability — that alone is a major win, though one long available to creators platforming on WordPress.

### Milestone: $100M Earned by Indie Publishers

  • According to Ghost, publications running on the platform have collectively earned over $100 million — a signal that this is not just a niche, nostalgic system, but a realistic foundation for real, sustainable publishing businesses.

What Ghost 6.0 Means for Creator Stacks (Your Stack Map, Revisited)

Given what we mapped in Issue #1 — that creator stacks are built on layers like publishing, monetization, distribution, analytics — Ghost 6.0 strengthens many of those layers at once. Specifically:

  • Publishing + Website Layer: Ghost remains a clean, well-designed publishing core — and with fediverse integration, it becomes a distribution hub, not just a content silo.
  • Audience Capture & Monetization: With built-in memberships, newsletters, paid content, and now stronger distribution, Ghost becomes a full-stack choice for indie publishers who care about ownership and longevity.
  • Analytics & Insight Layer: Native analytics means you reduce reliance on external trackers — which helps if you care about privacy, data control, or cross-tool portability.
  • Distribution Layer: The biggest upgrade — suddenly you’re not “just another blog,” but a node in a decentralized social web: discovery, follows, replies, reshares. That’s the theory, at least. This is another one of those instances where right-minded things are happening in the fediverse and most of the world is plowing ahead in the world of X and Instagram and Substack.

What to Watch (Next 6–12 months) — Potential Risks & What to Evaluate

Over the next few months, I recommend we watch:

  • Uptake: Are creators actually enabling ActivityPub? Will distribution on the social web (fediverse) meaningfully grow traffic?
  • Analytics usage: Will native analytics replace external tools? Will webhooks / self-host users build on top to track conversions, member growth, and external engagement?
  • Tooling for membership & products: Will Ghost expand paid content / product capabilities (bundles, digital goods, upsells) — or will creators still need external tools?
  • Stability and backward compatibility: As users upgrade, will there be backwards-compatibility issues, especially for heavy customization or headless use?

Example Ghost-powered Sites & Publications

Site / PublicationWhat they use Ghost for / Why it matters
Kickstarter (Blog / Updates section) — their “Updates/News” blogEven big platforms like Kickstarter use Ghost for structured publishing (blogging/updates), showing Ghost isn’t “just for small indie blogs.”
Cloudflare (blog.cloudflare.com)Shows that enterprise-scale tech companies choose Ghost for their blog/engineering-blog infrastructure — suggesting it scales reasonably well.
Unsplash (Unsplash Blog)A media-adjacent company with a strong content audience — indicates Ghost works for content-heavy, design-conscious sites with significant traffic.
Emojipedia (Emoji / content reference site / blog)A content-dense resource site — shows Ghost handles large archives, SEO-heavy content, and long-tail traffic well.
Independent / niche publications & newsletters listed in Ghost Explore — e.g. 404 Media, The Lever, Tangle, and others featured there**These show Ghost is being used by modern newsletters, independent publishers, and small-to-mid-size media — a good fit for creator-led projects or niche newsletters.

Enough Ghost for the moment! Next week, let’s start building some integrated stacks in earnest!