Four updates shipped in June. Here's what changed — and what it unlocks for your workflow.
TL;DR: June 2026 Update - Stack Your Servers — Multiple MCP servers now connect simultaneously in one session, so cross-tool workflows happen in a single conversation.
- WordPress, Full Site — Pages, block templates, and block patterns join posts, giving AI full control over your client's WordPress site.
- Your Analytics, In Plain English — GA4 brings ten actions covering traffic, conversions, demographics, and more into the same workflow as your other tools.
- Microsoft Clarity's behavior analytics — scroll depth, rage clicks, dead clicks, session patterns — now queryable from your AI client, broken down by device, country, browser, and more.
✨ What's New 🚀
Stack Your Servers: Multiple MCP Connections in One Session
MCP Express lets you bundle tools into servers however you want — WordPress, GA4, your database, all in one server if that's how you've set it up. That hasn't changed.
What was limited until now: only one server could be connected to your AI at a time. If you had a production server and a staging server, you were picking one per session and manually switching when you needed the other.
That changes this month. MCP Express now supports multiple servers connected simultaneously in a single AI session.
The production and staging example is the clearest way to see why this matters. Both servers connected at once mean you can pull data from production, test changes against staging, and compare results — in one conversation, without disconnecting and reconnecting between each step.
The same logic applies anywhere you've split your setup across servers. Two servers are now as usable as one.
✨ Integrations 🚀
WordPress Goes Full Site
The original WordPress integration covered posts — create, update, publish, delete. Good for editorial workflows, not much else.
June expands this into full site management.
Pages: List, get by slug, create, update, publish, or delete any WordPress page. Landing pages, service pages, about pages — all accessible now, not just blog content.
Block Templates: List, get, create, and update the templates that control site-wide layout. If you're managing a Full Site Editing build, you can now touch the structure itself, not just the content inside it.
Block Patterns: List, create, and update reusable block patterns — headers, CTAs, feature sections, whatever your client's site uses repeatedly.
For people managing WordPress for clients, this is a real scope expansion. You're no longer limited to editorial content. You can handle the structure, the layout, and the copy in one workflow instead of bouncing between WP Admin tabs.
A concrete example: a client wants a new landing page for a campaign. Previously that meant logging into WP Admin, building it manually, publishing it, then separately updating any posts pointing to it. Now you can create the page, update relevant posts, and adjust block patterns — one session, no tab-switching.
GA4: Ten Actions, Full Picture
Google Analytics is now available as an MCP server in MCP Express, with 10 actions covering the metrics you actually report on:
- Get Active Users — sessions, active users, and new users by date range
- Get Top Pages — page views, average session duration, and bounce rate
- Get Traffic Sources — sessions and conversions by channel, source, and medium
- Get Realtime Users — who's on the site right now, by country, device, and screen name
- Get Top Events — most-triggered events with count and per-user breakdown
- Get User Demographics — active users segmented by country, city, or language
- Get Device Breakdown — sessions split by device category and OS
- Get Landing Pages — top landing pages by sessions with engagement metrics
- Get Conversions — conversion counts and rates by event name
- Compare Date Ranges — side-by-side comparison of two periods
That last one is worth calling out specifically. Monthly reporting for clients is one of those tasks that's straightforward but eats time — pull the data, format it, write the summary, send it. Compare Date Ranges lets you run the month-over-month comparison and turn it into a client-ready writeup in the same session.
For anyone doing SEO, content, or marketing work, this closes the loop between publishing and measuring. You're not just pushing content through WordPress — you can see what's working and act on it without leaving your workflow.
Clarity: Ask Your Behavior Data a Question
Microsoft Clarity is also live this month, with one action worth understanding properly.
Query Analytics Dashboard retrieves aggregated Clarity metrics for the last 1, 2, or 3 days, with optional dimensions to slice the data however you need. You can break results down by up to three dimensions at once — Browser, Device, Country, OS, Source, Medium, Campaign, Channel, or URL.
The distinction from GA4 matters. GA4 tells you how many people visited a page and where they came from. Clarity tells you what they did when they got there — scroll depth, rage clicks, dead clicks, session patterns.
Together, the two integrations give you the full picture. A page with strong traffic but a high bounce rate in GA4 gets a lot more interesting when Clarity shows users rage-clicking a broken CTA above the fold. That's a different fix than "the content isn't relevant" — and now you can diagnose it without leaving your workflow.
What It All Looks Like Together
Multi-server support means everything above doesn't just add up — it compounds.
Here's a workflow that's now possible in a single session:
- Pull top landing pages from GA4 — spot which one has the highest bounce rate
- Run a Clarity query on that page — find out users are rage-clicking a broken button
- Fetch the page content via WordPress
- Fix the CTA, update the page, publish it
That used to mean four tabs, multiple logins, and a fair amount of context-switching. Now it's one conversation.
✨ What's Next For July 🚀
Two things coming in July worth knowing about.
Sevdesk is joining the integrations lineup — bringing accounting and invoicing into the same AI workflow as your other tools. More details when it ships.
Server Blueprints adds more control to how servers are shared across teams and clients.
The typical setup today: a developer configures an MCP server — connects the tools, sets up the integrations, gets everything running. They share that server with teammates or clients so others can use it too. The problem is that everyone using that server is running it under the developer's credentials. It works, but it's not how it should be — each person should be operating under their own.
In July, when sharing a server, the recipient gets the full server configuration — all the tools, all the settings — and connects to it using their own credentials. The setup is done for them. The credentials are theirs.
It's a cleaner handoff, especially when onboarding new team members or setting up a client on a shared workflow.
Tell us what to build next
We're adding integrations every month based on what freelancers actually need. If there's a tool you rely on that isn't here yet,
drop us a line.
Try It
All four updates are live. If you're already on MCP Express, head to your dashboard, connect the GA4, Clarity, and WordPress servers, and enable the actions you want to expose.
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