I'll be teaching my half-day tutorial, "Personal Time Management: The Basics for Sysadmins That Are Overloaded" at Usenix LISA 2017.
Info and registration details: https://www.usenix.org/conference/lisa17
I'll be teaching my half-day tutorial, "Personal Time Management: The Basics for Sysadmins That Are Overloaded" at Usenix LISA 2017.
Info and registration details: https://www.usenix.org/conference/lisa17
Save this date!
January 18-19, 2018 will be the next DevOpsDays NYC!
Save this date!
Sadly there won't be a 2017 conference, but the 2018 conference is just around the corner.
See you there!
(I've intentionally delayed posting this so that it wasn't clear which conference I'm talking about.)
So... I'm at a conference. I take a break from the talks to walk around the vendor show. While most of the booths are selling products I'm not interested in, I suddenly find myself in front of VENDOR-A (name changed to protect them). VENDOR-A makes a product that has both open source and commercial editions, a common business model. Since the company I work for is a happy user of their open source version, I decide to ask about the commercial version. Maybe there's some benefit to be had.
The salesperson turned red in the face and became very indignant.
What?
What did I do wrong?
I'm totally confused.
Not wanting to cause a scene, I politely ended the conversation and walked away. Jerk.
Well, maybe not "jerk". Maybe he just hadn't eaten lunch and was hangry, or maybe he was having a bad day. Or maybe his mom's name is "open source" and he thought I was insulting her. I have no idea.
I was trying to be as polite as possible. It was a "take my money!" situation and the salesperson blew it.
Anyway... I had plenty more to see in the vendor show so I kept walking.
So... then I saw VENDOR-B. VENDOR-B (again, not their actual name) is another vendor who's open source product we're very happy with. Let's try the same thing.
"Yes, yes, thank you. I'm a big fan of your product already. You don't need to convince me. However, we use the open source version now. What benefits would I gain from the commercial version?"
Again this salesperson also turned red in the face and got vitriolic. I, again, stand there totally confused.
So, again, I politely ended the conversation and walked away.
I assure you, reader, that I didn't phrase it as, "This is stupid. Why would I pay?" or anything close to that. Quite the opposite, actually.
The worst answer I was expecting was, "it is the same but you get world-class support". Why I may disagree with their self-appraisal of how good their support is, at least it would have been an answer. However, both companies exceeded expectations and took my question as an insult.
I don't think either of these salespeople understand what business they are in.
Let me explain to you the economic model of commercial and open source software.
With commercial software, you sell to someone that isn't using your product. You have to convince them that they have a need, what your product does, that your product fills their need, and that they should buy the product. That's the traditional selling model.
Open source software is sold differently. The person already is using the product. They already know how awesome it is. They already know it fulfills their need. The salesperson merely has to convince them that there would be added benefits to paying for it.
Think about how radical this is! The customer is already happy and you, the salesperson, have the opportunity to make them even more happier. There's no need to grandstand (or lie) about what the product can and can't do, because the customer already uses it. This is a much more transparent and cooperative arrangement. It is better for the customer and you.
This also means that your ability to sell the product is as wide as the existing community. The bigger the community, the more selling opportunities. Having good community liaisons, advocates, etc. grows that base. Hosting a conference grows that base. These things aren't just good for your community, but they are good for your salespeople because they increase the pool of potential new paying customers.
A salesperson that meets someone who uses the free/community/open source edition should be super excited at the opportunity to speak with a committed user who can be turned into a paying customer.
The reaction I got from those salespeople says to me that they didn't understand this.
What business did they think they are in?
I'll be the speaker at the Monday, Oct 2, 2017 NYC DevOps meetup. I'll be presenting a talk about the DNSControl project, which permits "DNS as code" simplicity to your DNS operations.
For complete information visit the meetup.com page: https://www.meetup.com/nycdevops/events/243369226/