[Zope] A Tale from IBM land...

Garry Steedman gs@styrax.com
Mon, 25 Jun 2001 11:48:11 +0000


Oliver,

not a bad idea, i would be interested!

cheers,

Garry

On 24 Jun 2001, at 12:32, Oliver Bleutgen wrote:

From:           	Oliver Bleutgen <myzope@gmx.net>
Send reply to:  	Oliver Bleutgen <myzope@gmx.net>
To:             	zope@zope.org
Subject:        	Re: [Zope] A Tale from IBM land...
Date sent:      	Sun, 24 Jun 2001 12:32:40 +0200

> > Chris Withers wrote:
> >> For example, if they sell a "solution" that envolves IBM hardware,
> >> M$ and IBM licenses (say 40% total value) and then their
> >> consultancy for development and customisation (ie 60%), they're
> >> only actually adding 60% value to the relationship.
> >>[..]
> > This is unfortunately also a two-way street.  Often companies *dont
> > want* to offer 100% of the value.  People feel comfortable buying
> > things
> >>from companies that sell MS or IBM, becuase they perceive that MS or
> >>IBM
> > will be around for a while, and "nobody ever got fired for buying
> > [insert solution here]".  The 60% company can go away and they won't
> > be out of business.  Thus that 40% is very important to them.
> 
> And I guess that 10-20% of that 40% are again invested for marketing
> from companies like IBM or MS. So the VAR knows he doesn't really lose
> all the money he pays for the software, instead it's used to generate
> marketing pressure and other goodies (take Chris' "IBM certified for
> e-Business" example). They get nice developer conventions and other
> things, all of that is done to suggest a spirit of success and to show
> a common goal. All in all it might not be _that_ easy to persuade VARs
> to use OSS.
> 
> > The customer doesn't realize:
> 
> >  1) That open source makes that argument largely irrelevant.
> >     But we don't really have the marketing muscle to fight this
> >     battle, at least where it needs to be fought.
> 
> >  2) That there are hundreds of consultants familiar with
> >  Zope/[insert
> >     other open source solution here] that can take over that 100%
> >     when the one who sold it to you goes out of business.  This is
> >     also a marketing problem.
> 
> These two point are IMO only sufficient to get a tie in 
> the battle zope vs [proprietary offering from MS/IBM] - if any,
> because for every zope consultant there are 100 (or 1000)
> notes/asp etc. consultants.
> 
> 
> > Grassroots, "line-level" employee support is most of the support
> > that open source has got, and that's its marketing engine.  The
> > engine has been incredibly successful.  More successful than anyone
> > could have hoped.  But it's still a fact that people don't like to
> > buy something they haven't seen on TV...
> 
> > Think of a high-level executive making a decision about buying a
> > content management system like a foreigner on a business trip in a
> > strange land.  Everyone is bugging him to eat at their restaurant. 
> > He recognizes none of the names of these restaurants, and doesn't
> > really even understand what kind of food each restaurant is selling.
> >  But then he sees the McDonald's "golden arches" (MS/IBM).. and he
> > knows that.  He knows McDonalds isn't the best food, but it's a safe
> > bet in a foreign country when all he wants to do is eat and move on.
> 
> > You need to understand this mentality to successfully sell open
> > source software to the OSS-unaware.  You need to produce the
> > soundbite version of what a particular solution can do for the
> > company, and don't get religious about it, just compare the features
> > and the prices of the "McDonalds" solution to the OSS solution, and
> > let the folks come to their own conclusions.
> 
> 
> I think one has to differ the types of potential clients, and
> they are not always recognizable by the size of their company.
> 
> 1. Nearly no technical knowledge, don't know words like 
> "application server", know names like IBM or Microsoft, but
> only MS is more familiar because they use their desktop OS
> and office applications. 
> Their motivation is to either
> a) Get their first web-presence
> b) Revamp their existing (static) web-presence because they
> think its to ugly and/or they want to get new functionality
> like putting in content by themselves.
> 
> 2. Some IT knowledge, they have already a web-presence but
> got burned (their agency charges the big bucks for just
> changing telephone numbers), and are critical because of that.
> 
> 3. Good IT knowledge, are able to do a lot by themselves,
> often just lack the time or design capabilities to
> do their own web presence.
> 
> 
> Only types 2 and 3 will question the choice of the
> underlying plattform. And it's often not the decision
>  makers who will do that, but the IT personnel.
> And it helps a lot to first try to gain ground with
> the decision makers, because an open minded (because
> his boss told him to be open minded) IT expert
> can really be persuaded to see zope's strength.
> 
> This gets me to the point of my drivel:
> 
> What do others think of the idea of a glossy
> brochure (like 4 pages) which can be used as
> a handout about zope for decision makers?
> Nothing academic, just pure marketing speak.
> Heavy on buzzwords, short on (technical) information, 
> but nice to look at.
> It should be downloadable from zope.org as a photoshop
> document, with layers etc. fully intact.
> Perhaps with some blank space (one page), so that
> everyone could include company specific information, 
> perhaps not.
> Then everyone who wants to could just use that to
> produce zope-specific marketing material.
> Mind you, I don't want to say that DC should produce
> that, I guess more people in this list have graphic
> designers in their company.
> 
> cheers,
> oliver
> 
> 
> 
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+-------------------------------------------+
  Garry Steedman      mailto:gs@styrax.com  
  Styrax Associates  http://www.styrax.com/ 

  "The Good Man has no shape."            
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