YOUR FEEDBACK
Rapid Module Development for DotNetNuke
MICHEAL SMITH wrote: GO TO THE LINK, U HAVE EVERYTHING U WANT THERE. MICHEAL...
SOA World Conference
Virtualization Conference
$50 Savings Expire May 23, 2008... – Register Today!


2007 West
GOLD SPONSORS:
Active Endpoints
Your SOA Needs BPEL for Orchestration
BEA
Virtualized SOA: Adaptive Infrastructure for Demanding Applications
Nexaweb
Overcoming Bandwidth Challenges with Nexaweb
TIBCO
What is Service Virtualization?
SILVER SPONSORS:
WSO2
Using Web Services Technologies and FOSS Solutions
Click For 2007 East
Event Webcasts

2008 East
PLATINUM SPONSORS:
Appcelerator
Think Fast: Accelerate AJAX Development with Appcelerator
GOLD SPONSORS:
DreamFace Interactive
The Ultimate Framework for Creating Personalized Web 2.0 Mashups
ICEsoft
AJAX and Social Computing for the Enterprise
Kaazing
Enterprise Comet: Real–Time, Real–Time, or Real–Time Web 2.0?
Nexaweb
Now Playing: Desktop Apps in the Browser!
Sun
jMaki as an AJAX Mashup Framework
POWER PANELS:
The Business Value
of RIAs
What Lies Beyond AJAX?
KEYNOTES:
Douglas Crockford
Can We Fix the Web?
Anthony Franco
2008: The Year of the RIA
Click For 2007 Event Webcasts
SYS-CON.TV
TOP LINKS YOU MUST CLICK ON


Make Markets Not War
A simple marketing model for open source - Part Two

Digg This!

Page 1 of 2   next page »

This is the second part of my two-part series on open source market strategies and implementations. I previously outlined the 10 strategy rules for open source marketing and emphasized building new markets, differentiating, contributing, pricing and innovating, and the customer relationship.

As I mentioned in part one, a year ago I wrote "Howells' 10 Rules for Open Source Marketing." Here we're looking at where Alfresco is a year later in its marketing approach. Many of our open source peers are adopting the same principles, and I believe this evolution of open source and the realizations we've experienced can be used by emerging open source entrepreneurs and commercial open source companies still looking for the best model for their particular business.

Implementing a Marketing Strategy for the Open Source Consumer
Implementation Rule 1 - Get consumerized. You can't beat a gorilla by being a dinosaur
.
We used to talk about "Gorillas" like Siebel and Peoplesoft but now even being a gorilla isn't enough. Today there are mega-gorillas like Oracle, Microsoft, IBM, and SAP. All others are caught in a no-mans land and vulnerable to open source. Mega-gorillas will be generic and sell everything.

IT procurement has undergone a consumerization process where users go through:
•  Discovery
•  Research
•  Try/Download
•  Join a Community
•  Buy - Support, Training, Consulting
•  Process - The software is discovered through the Web, Sourceforge, blogs, keyword search, forums, RSS, podcasts, webinars, trials, downloads, traditional media, and word-of-mouth. Don't think you're big enough to play against the mega-gorillas on their turf by micromarketing. You need to get consumerized.

Implementation Rule 2 - Discovery - Consumer convenience means at their desktop.
Consumers evaluate when it suits them using source they trust. That means they read and listen, most often from their desktop. They don't want a face-to-face hard sell. This means the discovery phase is critical to get above the noise of the crowd. We've found search engines, blogs, and traditional PR to be the most effective channels. This has a number of impacts on what you do and don't do and how you measure success. Open source marketing must also be open and trust-based not big budget-based. Users don't trust ads. We don't advertise or use paid-for AdWords. In that game the gorillas can just outspend you. Your advantage is credibility and trust - use it wisely.

PR is traditionally measured by press coverage. Open source is a rapid consumer-driven closed loop. So it's easy to measure the impact of PR through:
•  Traditional coverage
•  Blog coverage
•  Alexa
•  Hits on your website (we've seen massive 300% spikes in traffic)
•  Downloads
•  Trials

There's an interesting story about how one customer chose us. They searched for "open source documentum" on Google and found Alfresco.

Implementation Rule 3 - Research & Try - Don't sell to me. I can make up my own mind.
Consumers don't want a face-to-face hard sell from an enterprise salesman to demystify complex space and complex product. Users want easy access to all the information they need to make a decision. This doesn't mean a face-to-face roadmap presentation after a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) has been signed. Users want to be able to join a community for either information or code that includes access to a demo, a trial, a download, a roadmap, the documentation, and technical tips. This is all that's required for a consumer-driven, self-service decision where the consumer independently qualifies himself as opposed to the salesman.

Implementation rule 4 - People like to talk but not face-to-face.
When an enterprise consumer has decides to go further with enterprise software he wants to talk to a human being not an e-store. This means he will e-mail and ask to be contacted. Salespeople are very important - but over e-mail, the phone, and GoToMeeting - not flying round to big customer meetings.

Implementation Rule 5 - The open source machine and the dinosaur.
Open source is a new world with discontinuity in the business model, marketing model, and product development model. This means that you need a new "open source machine" to cope with the number of people downloading your software, asking questions, accessing your website, accessing demonstrations, trying the product, discussing it in forums, updating the wiki. This is massive compared to a traditional software start-up. The extended infrastructure has to be able to support contributions, bug reports, and fixes from other individuals and companies, take feedback from forums and surveys, and support hundreds of thousands people downloading your software. Amid this, you have to be able to identify those who want to buy support, patches, and updates for a mission-critical environment and those who want to use open source as part of the community. Open source companies have to be masters of the whole open source software value chain to support the massive growth potential.

What's critical is that a new model and new machine is required to support the new price point. The enterprise dinosaurs can't compete with this. Even when they win business it's often at a loss since they have an old model and an old high-cost enterprise sales machine. Over time this becomes unsustainable. Typical short-term tactics are:
•  Give the software away
•  Bundle multiple pieces of software together to reduce the sales costs
•  Stop investing in innovation

In all cases the customer loses and pays in another way - there's no free beer.



Page 1 of 2   next page »

About Ian Howells
Dr. Ian Howells is chief marketing officer of Alfresco and has more than 20 years of enterprise software marketing experience in the fields of content management, service-oriented architectures, and relational database systems. Ian earned a PhD in distributed databases from University College Cardiff. He has long been on the forefront of technology and marketing, holding early positions at Ingres, Documentum and SeeBeyond. You can read Howell's thoughts on open source marketing at http://blogs.alfresco.com/ianh

ENTERPRISE OPEN SOURCE MAGAZINE LATEST STORIES . . .
IBM, Microsoft & Google Eras of Computing
By now it is conventional wisdom to say that there was an IBM Era of computing, then a Microsoft Era, and now we are in the Google Era. In this post, I will explain why Microsoft was not the 'next IBM' and why Google is not the 'next Microsoft' - there are significant qualitative diffe
3rd International Virtualization Conference & Expo: Themes & Topics
From Application Virtualization to Xen, a round-up of the virtualization themes & topics being discussed in NYC June 23-24, 2008 by the world-class speaker faculty at the 3rd International Virtualization Conference & Expo being held by SYS-CON Events in The Roosevelt Hotel, in midtown
Open-Xchange to Deliver Collaboration Solution Integrated With Parallels Virtualization
Open-Xchange and Parallels are integrating Open-Xchange open source email and collaboration software with Parallels technology to deliver a cost-effective, enterprise-class alternative to commercial email and collaboration products at a competitive price. The products, which will be fu
JavaOne 2008: Uncommon Java Bugs
Any large Java source base can have insidious and subtle bugs. Every experienced Java programmer knows that finding and fixing these bugs can be difficult and costly. Fortunately, there are a large number of free open source Java tools available that can be used to find and fix defects
Application Security for Open Source - The New Frontier
Hybrid applications made up of proprietary, open source and third-party components are the result of today's fast-paced and complex software development landscape. Applications developed within the last five years - whether internal or external - are at least 50% open source software (
Open Source Penetration and Use in SOA Deployments
Open source has made significant inroads into middleware deployments in the enterprise. More and more, open source is being used to deliver the benefits of SOA and open source to the enterprise. There are many custom Enterprise Service Bus deployments waiting to be upgraded to a simple
SUBSCRIBE TO THE WORLD'S MOST POWERFUL NEWSLETTERS
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR RSS FEEDS & GET YOUR SYS-CON NEWS LIVE!
Click to Add our RSS Feeds to the Service of Your Choice:
Google Reader or Homepage Add to My Yahoo! Subscribe with Bloglines Subscribe in NewsGator Online
myFeedster Add to My AOL Subscribe in Rojo Add 'Hugg' to Newsburst from CNET News.com Kinja Digest View Additional SYS-CON Feeds
Publish Your Article! Please send it to editorial(at)sys-con.com!

Advertise on this site! Contact advertising(at)sys-con.com! 201 802-3021

SYS-CON FEATURED WHITEPAPERS

ADS BY GOOGLE