Kit vs RankMath
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Kit wires its email core into the creator tool stack — and now into AI agents.
Kit is positioning itself as the integration hub for creator-economy workflows. The big shift this cycle is the Kit MCP beta: paid customers can now manage and analyze their email marketing from Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, or any MCP client. Alongside that, the Kit App Store has been the dominant story for months — Shopify (free-plan eligible), Kajabi, Manychat, Pexels, Beamly, Webhook trigger — each extending the data graph Kit can act on. Smaller releases focus on operational maturity: searchable Rules, searchable Visual Automations, typo-correcting forms.
Two threads merge: Kit becomes the connector between creator tools (apps), and Kit becomes addressable from creators' AI assistants (MCP). The combined move means a creator can be in Claude or ChatGPT, ask for a segment of buyers who haven't opened recent emails, and have Kit execute — without opening Kit's UI. The product is quietly redrawing itself as infrastructure rather than destination.
Expect Kit MCP to graduate to GA and pick up more agent-callable surface — generating broadcasts and sequences end-to-end from prompts, not just analytics queries. The App Store should keep landing creator-platform integrations (Patreon, Substack, Beehiiv import) as the integration-hub bet fills out.
AI tooling becomes the product; Content AI ditches credits for per-feature monthly limits.
RankMath's recent releases are dominated by AI feature distribution and reach. v3.0.112 replaced the shared Content AI credit pool with per-feature monthly limits — a substantive shift in how users hit (and don't hit) the AI ceiling. AI Link Genius, introduced in v3.0.108, has gained UI polish and broader role access in each release since. Non-AI work this window is maintenance-grade: Schema fixes, Keyword Map edge cases, multisite migration foreign-key cleanup.
The product center of gravity has clearly shifted from traditional SEO heuristics to AI tooling, and the team is steadily lowering the activation friction around it — role permissions, monthly limits, UI cleanup. Each release threads a small unlock for AI users alongside a routine fix pass. The non-AI surface is being kept alive rather than extended.
Expect the feature-based usage model to extend beyond Content AI into Link Genius or whatever AI surface ships next, and continued role-gating that funnels AI capability into team-tier upgrades.
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