@Marialena.S I can respond to your first question.
WP was born years before wix, Weebly and co.
Those website builder came to life to satisfy the “non-coders’ need to have a great site”.
WP started to loose grip cause of them, that is why it’s moving towards a block experience.
Further down you give your ideas about target. You just describe WP’s target. I do not agree with this. If we want to be different we need to cater the needs of a niche.
CP listens to business (who happen to want a no fuss, uncomplicated publishing experience, I agree) but we can’t listen to bloggers also. Bloggers aim to different things than businesses. And I don’t agree to go down the road of opposing GB. yes, CP relies on classic editor. But this is not it’s core feature. We want to stand out for performance, site speed, less bloated code, security. Not just because we have no Gutenberg inside.
Edited to add: obviously everyone can use CP, but only business users are going to find specific functions catering to their specific needs. I think however the common people will largely benefit from CP targeting businesses.
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