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4 articles tagged ‘Living’

Video classics: Developers, developers, developers, developers

Platforms need developers to succeed, so you need stories that resonate with developer’s worldview. Stories that you live to make true.

Your stories must be true. Developers can spot lies and it’s easier than ever to spread bad news, such as on Facebook. Not to pick on Facebook, but they serve as an example of conflict between a platform vendor and developers.

Facebook is a platform for third-party applications. And not just for games; you’ll find a range of business and marketing applications as well. After all, with Facebook’s massive user base there’s money to be made.

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Dedication: Learn to say no in times of trouble

In a famine of qualified prospects, you’ll try to grab anything that appears edible. Lack of a reliable sales process is corrosive. 

When prospects are rare you’ll do everything to win. Development adds features. Marketing invents ROI justifications. Prospects are too precious to waste; you cannot risk letting even one get away. You do whatever it takes.

Lack of a shared worldview is an increasing problem as you grow. Special cases abound; exceptions appear. Everybody is paranoid about saying no.

To see how sticking to a clear understanding of your worldview changes everything, take a look at 37signals. They are a 20 person company selling web-based apps for small groups and individuals. With more than 3 million users, they are very profitable.

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Worldviews: Code generator expectations

Forcing our code generation worldview on prospects just lead to heated arguments and late nights cranking out emergency fixes.

For many years I built, sold and supported application generators that generated platform-specific code from abstract problem statements. We generated Java, C++, C, SQL, HTML, COBOL, PL/I and many other languages.

Our worldview: generated code is efficient and works. Our ideal prospects shared our worldview. While they were often experts, they had no expectations about how the generated code should look. Just that it worked and that they were more productive.

Not all prospects shared this worldview. If someone said “I would not have written the (generated) code like that” we knew there would be trouble.

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Dust off your developers: We want to peek backstage

Audiences want to go backstage, meet developers and see how they work. But watch out: if you don’t live your story you’ll get caught.

Packaging and labelling carry much of the load for physical goods storytelling. You have it easier: your marketers and software developers can work together and weave your stories right into your software.

Who those developers are, where and how they work is part of your story. Your audience wants to peek backstage, just like developers love to watch insider videos of Google’s fancy offices.

Going backstage used to be expensive. Developers visited customers on-site, or prospects visited the labs. Both were one-offs and not reusable.

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