Archive for May, 2008

InitMarketing Customers: Day, Magnolia, OTRS, YMC, Zimory

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

Since founding InitMarketing in February, our customer base is steadily growing. Amongst others, we help the following companies with their Open Source marketing efforts:

  • Day is a leading provider of integrated content, portal and digital asset management software.
  • Magnolia is a leading commercial open-source Enterprise Content Management System based on the Java Content Repository standard (JSR-170).
  • OTRS is a leading provider of IT service management solutions that empower companies to automate their IT and align it to the needs of the business.
  • Young Media Concepts integrates ECM, CRM and BPM into a combined powerful and easy-to-use suite named Volano, based on eZ publish Open Source CMS.
  • Zimory is the first online marketplace where anyone is able to sell and buy server capacities world-wide on the internet through a web-based interface.

The kind of work we did and do for them includes marketing strategy consulting, coaching for VC pitches, website evaluation and re-launch, writing white papers and case studies, organizing event participation, executing media campaigns and more from the broad range of Open Source marketing services that InitMarketing offers.

Thanks to all our customers for trusting in us! We know that without them, we would not exist and we are wholeheartedly committed to making them successful.

Find more information about our customers at www.initmarketing.com/customers.

Learn How to Market Open Source Software at LinuxTag

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

I am happy to present again at LinuxTag in Berlin, Germany after skipping last year’s event. Come and see and hear me talk about Marketing Open Source Software in room “Berlin 2″ at Saturday, March 31st, 12:00-13:00.

If you would like to meet me in Berlin, I’ll be there Friday afternoon until Saturday afternoon - just drop me a line.

Roberto Galoppini from Italy Joins InitMarketing

Monday, May 19th, 2008

The InitMarketing team welcomes Roberto Galoppini who will join us from today. He is located in beautiful Rome, Italy and a highly valuable addition to our team.

Roberto has taken an active interest in several free/open source software organizations. He currently serves on the Advisory Board of the SourceForge Marketplace and acts as the Institutional Relationship Manager for the OpenOffice.org Italian Association. Roberto is also a technical writer for IT and computer-related magazines.

Most notably, I value Roberto’s experience as an Open Source entrepreneur which aligns nicely with the pragmatic marketing approach we pursue at InitMarketing.

Roberto regularly blogs on commercial Open Source software at http://robertogaloppini.net.

I am very much looking forward to working with Roberto!

Infusing Blogging Stimulants

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

On behalf of InitMarketing, I am currently helping a customer to provide more information about their Open Source product to their community via Weblogs.

My role is that of an external coach, who reviews blog post drafts, provides concrete and strategic advice - all of which only if the bloggers ask me for my services.

Given that bloggers are their own chief editor, it is important that they control their Weblog and that they can fully commit on what they do. Dictatorship won’t get you anywhere if you want to get your employees and partners to start blogging or to blog more or to blog more regularly. Bloggers also need to understand some of the strategic marketing communications background of blogging, because that will allow them to better attract readers.

Let me share with you some answers I provided to questions which have been asked by the customer’s bloggers during the process.

Won’t information be too scattered if we don’t blog at one place but in individual blogs on different domains?

That’s a valid concern. Here’s a marketing strategy backgrounder:

On the social software level (blogs, Wiki, etc.), the credos are:

  1. Let it happen! No matter how well crafted or condensed the information provided is, any information is better than none.2) Be personal! Credit where credits are due, e.g. a blog should be personal, a Wiki should indicate contributors, etc.
  2. Be personal! Credit where credits are due, e.g. a blog should be personal, a Wiki should indicate contributors, etc.

The social media marketing approach follows very closely the Open Source development mode, just like “release early, release often” it follows the idea of “communicate early, communicate often”. There are tools which help to provide an overview of various information resources, e.g. RSS aggregators help to show all latest posts from different blogs.

On the traditional marketing communications level, content can be re-use from blogs, Wikis, etc. to publish well crafted and designed collaterals which are in line with the main marketing message(s). Such collaterals would be the corporate website, newsletters, white papers, brochures, and so on. Traditional marketing communications is more centralized in that it is the sole responsibility of the marketing team.

How should a blog author react on a comment: By replying in a comment or by adding a new post answering the comment?

First: The fact that there are comments is great and indicates that your post is of high value.

Concerning the question:

It’s hard to say where to draw a line between a comment and a new blog post. I’d say it’s worth a new blog post

  1. if you feel like you want to write one (in the end, you are the chief editor of your blog)
  2. if the new blog post is actually about a new topic and does not merely address the topic of the comment from another perspective
  3. if you do have the time to write a new blog post

Should you write a new blog post, make sure you link to the comment. Additionally, you can reply to the comment of the other blog post and there point to the new blog post, so that it becomes clear that you answered the comment in a new blog post.

How often should we blog?

There should be at least one post per week each by two persons in your team to keep and grow readership. There will be days where it will be hard to meet that requirement. Hence, if you have an idea for a new blog post, make sure you leave some time in between posts. You could already write that post (because the ideas are already spinning in your head) but not publish it yet, instead keep it as a draft. Then publish the new blog post some days later.

Speaking about Marketing Open Source Software at Webinale

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

I will be presenting at Webinale in Karlsruhe, Germany. My talk is entitled Marketing von Open-Source-Software and will take place May 28th, 15:20-16:20. Let me know if you are around at that day and I’d be happy to meet with you.

Defining the Target Audience of an Open Source Software Company

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Without understanding the target audience, Open Source businesses will not be able to effectively communicate with those who are supposed to buy their products, support, services and contribute to software development.

Ideally, the target audience has been defined in the corporate marketing strategy. Although this might seem obvious, most of the Open Source companies we work with at InitMarketing have a rather vague idea about whom they want to talk and sell to. The following reasons are typical:

  • Open Source start ups have usually only broadly defined a go-to-market strategy and target audience in their business plan, which is good enough for their VCs who are rather interested in the grand picture which allows them to assess the business potential.
  • Those Open Source companies who have in the past years organically grown their business from a one or two man show of developers to 10-30 staff members have always somehow made money with their product. They intuitively understand their target audience, but never reflected upon it to expand their business more quickly with a focused marketing strategy.
  • Even large to super-large corporations who are in the Open Source business much too often lack a good understanding of their target audience. The reason being that business decisions of top management (such as “let’s start to port our software to Linux”) are being executed with poor strategic guidelines.

The Branding and Positioning page in my Wiki provides some ideas how to address the needs of your target audience - but how to understand them? Will you have to pay expensive market analysis programs? No, you don’t, because informed intuition comes to the rescue plus the fact that Open Source allows for incremental marketing.

Geoffrey A. Moore defines informed intuition in his classic marketing book Crossing the Chasm:

The key is to understand how intuition - specifically, informed intuition - actually works. Unlike numerical analysis, it does not rely on processing a statistically significant sample of data in order to achieve a given level of confidence. Rather, it involves conclusions based on isolating a few high-quality images - really, data fragments - that it takes to be archetypes of a broader and more complex reality. [...] so in marketing can whole target-customer populations become imagined as teenyboppers, yuppies, pickups and gun racks. These are all just images - stand-ins for a greater reality - picked out from a much larger set of candidate images on the grounds that they really “click” with the sum total of an informed person’s experience.

In his book, Moore further describes how to define sample scenarios that allow to understand the user, technical buyer and economic buyer. In essence, the definition of a target audience should be able to answer this little question: Why does your product matter?

Given that many of today’s successful Open Source businesses are alternatives to closed source competitors (e.g. Linux vs. Microsoft, MySQL vs. Oracle), it is quite easy for them to imagine their target audience. Such Open Source products are being used by developers, hence it is mostly developers developing for developers. To define a target audience, such companies basically just need to look at themselves.

The higher Open Source moves up the stack, the more important it becomes for Open Source software vendors and their partner companies to focus on end user needs, a target audience very different from how software programmers think. One example would be SugarCRM who successfully communicate to sales and marketing personnel across various industries.

Due to the Open Source development mantra release early, release often, companies can adjust their understanding of the target audience gradually at minimum risk, but only if they also follow the mantra of incremental marketing: communicate often, communicate early. They will automagically learn to understand their target audience as long as they make sure that they allow for interactive external communication for example through an online forum on their website and establish good internal communication within their organization between the development, marketing and sales teams.

The combination of informed intuition and incremental marketing forms a general business advantage for Open Source companies, because it allows them to minimize the risk of being guided by prejudices when it comes to understanding the target audience.