Four features, one ambition: manage everything from one place.

The fleet update system was the missing quadrant. Provision a site — done. Configure it — done. Monitor its health — done. But when WordPress plugins needed updating across ten sites, you were back in SSH terminals, one site at a time, running wp plugin update --all and hoping nothing broke. Now the fleet management tool dispatches WP-CLI commands through the Forge API's command execution endpoint. Select sites, pick update scope — plugins, themes, core — execute. Results stream back per-site. The entire update cycle for ten sites happens from one screen in under a minute.

Google Ads campaign management moved into the client profile. Active campaigns, spend, impressions, clicks, conversions — visible alongside website health data. This matters because the question clients actually ask is "why did my leads drop?" The answer might be ad spend. It might be a broken contact form. It might be a site that's been down for six hours. When marketing performance and infrastructure health live in the same view, the diagnosis happens in one place instead of three browser tabs.

Multi-workspace support means the platform can serve more than one organizational unit. Each workspace gets its own Forge servers, sites, and configuration. Different teams or business units manage their infrastructure independently. Scheduled task management and a plugin installer live within the workspace context — scoped to what that workspace controls, invisible to everyone else.

And the tenant cards shifted from a grid layout to rows. Denser information, better scanning, consistent with the dashboard's data-first design language. A grid looks nice in a screenshot. Rows work better when you're scanning twenty clients for the one with a red indicator.