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3 articles tagged ‘Wants’

StoryComplete.com: Helping you re-enter the game

While playing the software game was lucrative, this blog helps software companies sidelined by innovation to re-enter the game and to win.

Playing field bench

Once upon a time it was lucrative to play the software industry game. We sold functionality at excellent margins. Annual maintenance was steady money for (rather) little work. Technology advanced at a manageable pace. The peer community dispensed recognition. Growth was steady and life was good.

But then the software game changed. In many niches FOSS has turned functionality into a commodity. SaaS upsets perpetual licensing, while annual maintenance is increasingly suspect. The community scattered as global players bought and consolidated. Innovation quickened. New business slowed.

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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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Agile storytelling: Ship new content and moves on

The waterfall model for content creation is too slow. You need an agile process to create and ship your storytelling content.

To sell a product you must know what your target audience wants, not just what they need. Wants changes; worldviews are not static. Every message and conversation with peers has an impact, moving the story along.

The software business is quickly picking up qualities of the fashion industry. Both satisfy wants, not needs. Does anyone need designer sneakers? No. Do they want them? Yes!

Worrying about the slippery slope of fashion isn’t new. Windows 3.0 lead business users to want GUIs for their apps. They didn’t need a GUI for their B2B apps, but it was obvious they wanted one. They got what they wanted.

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