Commercialization of PHP Software

I’ve just published an article that explains how a PHP-based product can gain a good position in the market and be made appealing to customers by using marketing communication. The focus is on products licensed under an Open Source license. Yet, most of the recommendations also apply to proprietary offerings.

The article has initially been published in German by PHPmagazin. It has now been translated to English and is available on the Initmarketing website: Commercialization of PHP Software.

Self-hosting Launchpad? Dream on…

Canonical recently announced that it open sourced Launchpad, its web-based project management and collaboration platform. This news came out while we were conducting an evaluation of Open Source collaboration platforms for a client. The client’s intent is to host a collaboration platform for its developer community. The evaluation was done based on feature sets, and was drafted before Launchpad’s source code was released. Launchpad turned out to be the slightly better choice and once it became available, we tried to install it.

Unfortunately, we began to realize that Launchpad isn’t designed or intended to be used as a self-hosting site due to the following reasons:

  • There are no release packages. You checkout the development code via a Bazaar repository and then compile it. Depending on the state of the last checkin, the code might even not compile sometimes. It took us two tries to get the installation done.
  • The working installation is meant for local use only and it’s not trivial to get it running under a normal, fully-qualified domain name.
  • Even if we had figured out how to make Launchpad serve properly via HTTP to the general public, we would have faced a maintenance nightmare by doing QA and release management ourselves.
  • Let’s not forget the fact that Canonical requires you to not use the trademark “Launchpad” and to replace all the graphic icons.

It is not without irony that an Open Source marketing agency was blinded by the fuzzy PR parlance of Canonical. Luckily, the source code always tells the truth.

After we had discussed the issue on the launchpad-dev mailing list, Canonical today added the following line to the Launchpad Development Wiki, which makes it pretty clear:

Note that our focus is on getting Launchpad to build easily so more people can participate in Launchpad development. Running a stable production instance would be ”much” harder than running a single-developer test instance, and we don’t recommend it. Unlike many open source projects, we’re not seeking to maximize the number of installations; our goal is to improve the instance we’re already running at Launchpad.net.

Obviously, Canonical really doesn’t have to worry that by open sourcing Launchpad, they licensed away their business model.

Our client has opted for FusionForge. It’s a great alternative, works out of the box, is easy to install and includes all the basic features. It runs on top of Ubuntu 9.04, an Open Source operating system backed by Canonical, which, ironically, has some proper release management 🙂

Top Commercial Reasons Why Open Source Communities Matter

I’ve yesterday had a conversation with the CEO of an Open Source company who sounded rather frustrated when I discussed the importance of nurturing Open Source communities. He said:

People seem to think they have a right to free software and free support. It is not about free speech. It’s all about free beer!

I don’t think this blanket judgment is true. There have always been freeriders in Open Source communities, but the overall benefits of an Open Source community to an Open Source business always outweigh the community loss imposed by freeriders.

Here are the top commercial reasons why Open Source software vendors should invest in community development:

  1. Better sales lead generation: A growing Open Source community translates into a growing sales pipeline if done well, i.e. OSS vendors can monetize a part of the community user base and convert them to commercial users.
  2. More effective sales: Community-driven sales requires less effort compared to a direct sales approach, because potential buyers have already evaluated the Open Source product and contact sales only when they are ready for a purchase.
  3. Raise visibility: A vibrant Open Source community fosters branding and word-of-mouth marketing.
  4. Build a Brand Community: Open Source brands grow and thrive around real value created by a community of engaged, informed participants. A healthy community adds tremendous value to almost any activity a company engages in.
  5. Larger install base: The goal is to build the corporate brand as well as product and service quality by creating a larger install base.
  6. Cost-effective marketing: The larger and the more active an Open Source community, the more it helps to spread the word and the less investment in marketing is needed to achieve the same level of visibility.
  7. Higher credibility: A growing Open Source community helps companies to be perceived as a true Open Source vendor by journalists, analysts and potential customers. A critical mass of community members also indicates how well a product solves a problem and that there is actual demand.
  8. Cost-efficient and competitive business: Commercial Open Source offers the best cost-benefit ratio for enterprise customers due to cost savings, innovation and investment protection enabled by a vivid Open Source ecosystem that contributes bug fixes, new features and more.
  9. Investment protection: Reduce client risk by broadening the base of product-related skills.
  10. Test and develop new markets: Open Source offers companies and organizations a highly cost-effective route into international markets. Through community development tactics, OSS vendors can test and develop new markets and communities with little upfront investment.
  11. Externalize 1st Level Support: Enable community to help themselves share information, to reduce support burden for the OSS vendor on basic issues.
  12. Technology and thought leadership: Community development will help to establish an OSS product as a technology leader in the space by attracting external developers. Based on that, OSS vendors can through appropriate communications also become a thought leader.

2nd IKS Workshop: The Web 3.0 and Open Source Semantic Search

Rome is a great city and it will host a bunch of great people (including me 🙂 ) at November 12-13. This is when the second IKS Project workshop will take place. The goal of this workshop is to start working on an Open Source software stack that allows other Open Source projects and software vendors to leverage semantic search technologies.

IKS is an EU-funded project with an overall budget of 8.5 million Euros. The first workshop back in May saw two dozen of bright Open Source CMS minds discussing a semantic stack in general. This time, it will also make sense for non-CMS-related Open Source projects and vendors to join.

There will be interesting presentations from some key figures at the second workshop in Rome, such as Peter Mika of Yahoo! Research talking about “The Role of Semantics in Search”.

If you’re up to joining the Open Source Web 3.0 train, then hurry up, because the October 22nd deadline for registering for the 2nd IKS workshop on semantic search is approaching quickly. See you there!

At the Edge of Open Source Communities and Companies

Matt Aslett has made his stance on a discussion that started on Twitter about Open Source vendors giving away control to their community with the goal of better monetization. I concur with Savio Rodriguez’s doubts, but I believe that it is an issue worth while to be discussed, because it basically questions of the open core business model favored by investors.

As you might expect, let me take a look at it from the marketing perspective.

What I see in markets where plenty of open source offerings exist with a multitude of business models (e.g. in the CMS space), is that there is growing pressure on vendor-driven models to adopt more of the benefits of the community-driven model and vice versa.

There are various business tools that allow OSS vendors and their investors to test how much they will actually benefit from gradually moving control to the community. Switching to a more permissive license might be the last step.

For example, OSS vendors can increasingly include community members in discussing and executing the marketing strategy. Furthermore, a vendor could initialize a community board where the vendor discusses release cycles and development issues with community members. Both efforts could later lead towards a community-owned association that holds the trademark and decides upon the development roadmap.

On the other hand, community-driven OSS projects sometimes envy OSS vendors, especially when it comes to the ability of rolling out a focused marketing. I’ve heard from a hand full of board members of OSS associations that they’d love to a) actually have a marketing budget and b) have control over that budget without the need for lengthy discussions to reach consensus among the community. Things might perhaps be moving towards some light vendor-style structures here, given that OSS projects need to increasingly compete with OSS vendors. In the end, it’s all about OSS projects becoming more professional.

The Real Unique Buying Proposition of Open Source Software

Matt Asay urges Open Source software vendors to rethink their marketing stance:

Open-source advocates for years have waved the banners of “freedom” and “no vendor lock-in” to sell the value of open source. It hasn’t worked. Chief information officers don’t buy vague concepts. They buy high-quality software at a compelling price. To better market open-source software to the world, open-source advocates need to match their message to what CIOs actually want to buy.

He furthermore argues that customers don’t care about “no lock-in” as a key reason to buy Open Source and states:

The reality is that open-source vendors should be pitching real value to real customers.

The question of what is reality and what is real is of course a philosophic one. In marketing, we need to be very pragmatic because it is all about the customer and the money, right? Matt’s blog posts sound pragmatic, nevertheless they are too narrow for my taste – perhaps due to his (welcome) intention to get the discussion going. Let my try to offer a broader perspective:

Real freedom

In general, I do agree with Matt that “freedom” might not be the most important Unique Buying Proposition (UBP) to first-time commercial users, but this is not where your marketing should stop. In fact, it seems that the longer someone uses FOSS, the more important the “freedom” aspects become — namely open standards, vendor independence (aka no lock-in), and the free and open source software philosophy.

This means that when pitching an Open Source product or solution, be it by the vendor or partners, “freedom” is nothing you should highlight directly. Instead, mention tangible business benefits such as saving licensing costs, greater flexibility and ability to integrate with third-party software, etc. Free Software advocates might argue that such business benefits simply translate the freedom aspect for CIOs – which makes a lot of sense to me.

Looking at the complete business ecosystem of an Open Source vendor (and not just the sales relationships), tells you that freedom is important for success. For example, every OSS vendor loves to argue that their software is so much more stable than proprietary software due to a large community using and testing it. Freedom is essentially also behind Marten Mickos’ main argument to the EU commission to approve the Oracel/Sun deal:

[…] the vast and free installed base of MySQL is using it of their own free choice, unencumbered by the vendor and under no obligation or restraint.

What this tells an Open Source advocate or sales person is that the CIO-centric business benefits on your product brochure are just as important as good technical documentation for developers that allows to grow a community.

Real regions

The type of engagement varies depending on the region you plan to market and sell to. For example, Open source adoption seems to be driven by commercial engagements in Northern Europe, while Southern and Eastern Europe is characterized by community-driven engagements. In Spain and Italy, users expect free software to be available for free. Clearly, this does not mean that freedom is the main UBP in Spain and Italy, as long as you don’t look at it from the cost perspective. What it actually means is that the partner sales channel is of strategic importance to Open Source vendors in these regions. Partners in Spain and Italy might not mention freedom directly to their potential customers, but they will strongly insist on it when the vendor wants them to sign a costly partner agreement.

What this tells an Open Source advocate or sales person is that different regions require different go-to-market strategies. The cost argument is not always the same one for every region and the freedom argument might just be waiting around the corner, especially when it comes to growing a partner network.

Real propositions

There is not the one and only real UBP. There are several. Each of them have different importance in different regions, let alone the fact that small businesses have different expectations than large corporations.

Most important to Open Source advocates it that there are communication and sales processes in Open Source Marketing that one should take care of. Open Source lead generation begins very early (Twitter, Weblog, etc.) and does not end once you closed a deal. It’s a continuous process. When a customer bought your cost argument, you’d better make sure that this customer can also experience the freedom of using your product. Open up endless opportunities through third-party extensions, technical tutorials and so on. This is how you retain customers in Open Source. It only works if you have built-in freedom into your business ecosystem.

A Primer on Europe for US-Based Open Source Communities and Vendors

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Wazi just published an article I wrote, comparing Europe and the US, which hopefully allows Open Source vendors based in the US to better understand the European market.

The article is based on the research I did for the talk I presented at this year’s OSBC. The part I personally find most interesting is:

It’s worth noting here the German study revealed that saving on licensing costs is more important to those adopting open source software for the first time. The longer someone uses FOSS, the more important the freedomÂť aspects become namely open standards, vendor independence, and the free and open source software philosophy. Hence, open source vendors need to approach potential customers in Europe differently depending on how open source savvy these potentials are.

That same study actually revealed a high level of satisfaction of users of Free and Open Source Software.

I’d like to thank the InitMarketing team for their valuable input while researching the topic and writing the article!

Now, enjoy reading my article over at Wazi: A Primer on Europe for US-Based Open Source Communities and Vendors

Effective Open Source Communications: The Bubble-up Approach

Open Source companies have various internet-based channels at hand to reach their community and prospective customers. The following approach has proven to be effective in reaching the various target audiences within and outside of an Open Source ecosystem.

The basic idea is to let information flow freely inside and across various communication channels so that information pieces can “bubble up” and be compiled into more comprehensive and valuable sources of information that serve a business purpose.

For example, a forum discussion could form the basis for a technical article that is supposed to be published by a magazine with the goal to attract new software developers to the community. In this case, the outlined information value chain serves the purpose of community development. The nice thing about it is, that the article author will save time when writing the tutorial, because the discussion that happened in the forum already allows him to understand all relevant aspects of the topic and might also provide useful information, links to other resources, etc.

To achieve far reaching and successful marcom, Open Source companies should set up or become active on all relevant channels.

It is first of all important that communication actually happens and of less importance that it happens in the right channels. For example, if Open Source vendors think of providing a public Wiki to the community, quickly fears of a chaotic information overload come up. In fact, I have never seen hoards of community members occupy a very young Wiki. The truth is that you will have enough time to restructure content as you see fit.

Of course, you should make sure that the Wiki has a basic structure right from the start so that it becomes clear what kind of information it will provide. Additionally, it should already be populated with important content such as information where to find mailing lists, forums, Weblogs, etc. Especially when it comes to discussion channels such as mailing lists and forums, they should only be established if you are sure that they will be used actively. Otherwise, your community will appear as if it were inactive, which again alienates new potential community members.

To avoid dead communication channels, I recommend to deliberately leave pain points for a growing community. For example, don’t set up a forum in a non-English language unless there are community members who ask for it. If you then set up a dedicated forum for them, they will appreciate that you listen to your community.

Bubble-up Communications

Above diagram gives a good idea of the most important communication channels that all make up for the best media mix to enhance the visiblity of your Open Source offerings.

  • Twitter is today’s premier channel for teaser-style communication that creates incentives for the readership to learn more about you.
  • Forums and/or mailing lists are a must-have from a community building and customer relations perspective.
  • Weblogs are a perfect mean to achieve technical and business-oriented thought leadership.
  • A Wiki is a great tool for collecting all relevant information at one place with full flexibility of gradually modifying and extending the information base. A Wiki is somewhere in between the ad hoc style of conversation through Twitter, forums, mailinglists and a rather editorial process that a newsletter or book requires.
  • Newsletters seem outfashioned in today’s world of social media marketing, where it’s more about pull information (RSS) vs. push information (newsletter subscription). The great thing about newsletters is, that they require someone sits down and collects all information important to your developer or business community of let’s say the past 4 weeks. A newsletter makes sure that everyone within your company and community has the same basic knowledge of what’s going on.
  • Presentations of technical or business talks also collect various information pieces and present them to a live audience at events.
  • Articles, Screencasts, and marketing collateral can be produced much more easily if there is already a multitude of existing information, e.g. in a newsletter, Wiki, Weblog, etc. A newsletter for example might even trigger the idea to write a case study about a new customer reference that has been mentioned in the newsletter or to create a screencast about a nifty new feature that was mentioned there.
  • Public and Analyst Relations are much more effective if you have further information that you can provide to journalists and analysts. It also makes it easier for your PR/AR agency to write press releases if they have something they can research. It’s also very handy to be able to harvest and reference related resources such as Weblog entries, Screencasts, and more when building landing pages for a campaign.
  • Books and documentation are hard to write, because they require a lot of effort. Again, they become much easier to create once there is already valuable information, such as various articles that have previously been written for magazines and can now be reused and modify for e.g. a technical book. Books and technical manuals represent the most comprehensive type of information to offer for example to those who intend to thoroughly learn about developing with an Open Source software.

An Open Source organization’s marketing and communications very much benefits from uncontroled conversations happening within the related Open Source community. If a vendor tried to manipulate communications within “his” community, he would suffer from higher marketing costs, because the free flow of information that comes at no cost will dry up.

In a nutshell, Open Source communications should take care of the following points:

  1. Make and let communication happen.
  2. Avoid dead communication channels.
  3. Don’t control, don’t manipulate.
  4. Harvest and refine information pieces.
  5. Deliberately leave pain points for the community to remedy.

Interview with Jeff Whatcott, former VP Marketing, Acquia

I interviewed Jeff Whatcott about marketing Drupal and Acquia at Gilbane Boston conference. He was then VP Marketing, Acquia and recently moved to work in the same role at Brightcove.

Jeff is probably one of the brightest software marketing experts out there and in this interview, he shares some valuable insights. Most notably, he explains how Acquia offers extended functionality in the cloud for Drupal and builds a business around this combination of Open Source and SaaS that also leverages network effects. In a way, this could make Acquia the Google of the Drupal community.

http://blip.tv/play/gu9H680DAA%2Em4v

As with all InitMarketing.tv videos, you can

Get a Dose of Semantics: Open Source Contributors Wanted for EU Project

The EU-funded IKS Project invites FOSS companies and projects to take part in building a software stack for knowledge management that is Open Source.

IKS is funded with 6.5 million Euros by the European Union and 2 million Euros are being invested by the consortium partners which makes up for an overall budget of 8.5 millions. The project will run for 4 years.

Financial support is available for 50 yet to be selected companies/organizations who agree to evaluate the IKS software stack as early adopters as well as 100 individuals who are members of a related FOSS project and who would like to actively engage in IKS project development. The budget for contributors to IKS is meant to alleviate the entry hurdles, e.g. for travel and accommodation for attending the IKS workshop end of May.

The premier focus of IKS is on FOSS content management systems and how they can make use of the to-be-developed IKS technology to let content objects behave the way they are supposed to across varying applications. Additionally, IKS also aims at cooperating with FOSS projects helping to implement semantics-aware software.

Wernher Behrendt, one of the initiators of IKS, exemplifies the project’s vision as follows:

Think of a task that has been defined in a project management software. Ideally, the project management software allows you to edit the task as you would expect it, for example, you can extend the ending date in case the work will take longer. Now, what happens if you want to transfer your work plan to the Web content management system that powers your Web site to display it to the public?

You will most likely create a screenshot of the work plan in the project management software, upload the screenshot in your WCMS and include it on a Web page. In between, you have lost all information about what a task is and how another application should treat it in case you want to edit it within the imported work plan.

This is where IKS comes to the rescue, because its software stack will not only provide a layer that takes care of metadata information (e.g. Ontologies, RDF, …), but will also be able to deal with information on how to process a content object across different applications.

If you’d like to join, IKS provides further information on its Web site and how to get in contact with them. Contribute to IKS as a…