Cameron,

Well stated.

As an organisation that is implementing Open Source spatial, we are looking to 
applications that have graduated from OSGeo Incubation as an indication of 
quality.

If this is not the case, as has been indicated in this thread, then IMHO, we as 
OSGeo need to devise an approach that will allow organisations to select 
quality applications for deployment.

The last thing that anyone wants is for a major player to implement a poor 
quality application and have problems with the bad publicity that would follow.

We cannot expect that knowledgeable OS Spatial people will always be doing 
product selection. This is often a function assigned to an IT group through 
Enterprise IT Governance processes. The people doing the selection, may or may 
not have appropriate skills and experience.

Bruce




On 9/06/10 8:24 AM, "Cameron Shorter" <cameron.shor...@gmail.com> wrote:

Michael,
Your comments have been good in that they have made me think deeper
about what OSGeo stands for and then how we market that. Successful
product companies first find out what the market wants, the build a
marketing message, then build the product to fit the market. Developing
a shiny product then discovering no-one wants it is a sad but common story.

In our case, we have created a brand called "OSGeo Incubation". What
does that mean? Why is it valuable? How can we get that message across
to our target market of GIS users who are interested in Open Source but
don't know what OSGeo is?

If OSGeo Incubation doesn't represent quality or maturity (which is what
the market are looking for) then what is the point of spending years of
volunteer time going through incubation?

I'm afraid that "OSGeo Project" is not a compelling sales message to our
target market, unless we can tie the message to quality or maturity (or
another word with similar meaning).

Unless we can provide such positive marketing, I expect that we will
have spin off projects or organisations "defect" from OSGeo create their
own marketing message. (I wouldn't be surprise if OpenGeo had similar
thoughts before they created and then marketed the OpenGeo suite.)

Marketing like everything else has positives and negatives.
Positives:
+ Lots of users which draws in money and developers and we all make
money and thrive

Negatives:
- We need to distill our messages down into marketing sound bytes and
generalised rating systems and the like

- We need to be honest in describing ours and others projects because
that is what the market wants to hear before they will spend money on us


On 08/06/10 09:17, Michael P. Gerlek wrote:
> Since this is an OSGeo-based CD, presumably with the OSGeo logo all over it 
> in various places, I'd suggest there are only three kinds of projects:
>
>   - those which are "Approved by OSGeo"
>   - those which are "Undergoing OSGeo Approval"
>   - everything else
>
> With two simple logos you can indicate projects of the first two categories; 
> I don't think much explanation should be required up front, especially if one 
> avoids jargon words like "graduated" and "incubation".
>
> -mpg
>
>
> From: discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org 
> [mailto:discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Cameron Shorter
> Sent: Monday, June 07, 2010 3:57 PM
> To: discuss@lists.osgeo.org
> Subject: Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] 5 Star OSGeo project maturity rating
>
> There have been some passionate views against rating projects.
>
> Maybe I should start by explaining the drivers which led to the proposal for 
> a 5 star rating.
>
> Previously only OSGeo graduated and incubation projects were promoted by 
> OSGeo at conferences and the like, however, with the OSGeo LiveDVD, we are 
> packaging and hence promoting many non-graduated projects. How do we credit 
> that a project has gone through the extensive graduation process in our 
> marketing material in a manner that will be understood by the target audience?
>
> Unfortunately, putting "OSGeo Graduated" against a project is meaningless 
> because the target audience usually hasn't heard of OSGeo and is even less 
> likely to know what "Graduated" means.
>
> We could write a paragrah explaining what OSGeo and Graduation are on each 
> Project Overview flier, but that wastes valuable marketing real-estate.
>
> Note: I'm basing our target audience on the typical profile of people who 
> drop by the OSGeo booth at conferences. They pick up a LiveDVD and fliers 
> which have "Open Source" on the cover. They are typically GIS users, have 
> heard of Open Source and want to know what Open Source packages are available 
> to replace their existing XXXX, but usually haven't heard of OSGeo and almost 
> certainly don't know about the graduation process. They want to know about 
> the best 2 or 3 packakges they should consider, and they definitely don't 
> want to have to trawl through 350 software packages on http://freegis.org . 
> They spend 5 to 20 minutes talking at the OSGeo stand, then walk onto the 
> other 50 exhibition booths at the conference.
> Visitors to the OSGeo website are probably similar in profile, but we don't 
> get such a good opportunity to meet them face to face as we do at conferences.
>
> So the challenge is:
> * How do we credit OSGeo Graduated projects in a manner understandable to GIS 
> users new to Open Source?
> * How can we credit other stable Open Source projects, while still 
> acknowledging the extra kudos of passing graduation?
> * How can we provide this message distinctly on marketing material so that it 
> doesn't waste valuable marketing real-estate?
>
>
> On 08/06/10 02:30, Michael P. Gerlek wrote:
> [foolishly stepping in where I should fear to tread.]
> This has been asked for before, but historically some projects have not step 
> up to the plate for providing such materials - for a variety of reasons, some 
> good and some not so good.
> OSGeo should simply put a link to the project's "marketing" section, and if 
> the project owners provide content on the other end, then good - if not, then 
> so be it.
> I'm all about providing quality user experiences, but anything more than that 
> is likely not worth the effort required.  Our users are, for the most part, a 
> very savvy and discriminating bunch.  And for apps that are explicitly 
> targeting users outside of the normal open source types, it should be up to 
> them to provide the "marketing" materials they deem appropriate.
> -mpg
>
> From: discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org 
> [mailto:discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Bob Basques
> Sent: Monday, June 07, 2010 9:24 AM
> To: OSGeo Discussions
> Subject: Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] 5 Star OSGeo project maturity rating
>
> All,
>
> Did anyone else hear that thunder in the distance?  :c)
>
> That's what I've been trying to say, let the projects handle this sort of 
> thing themselves, but OSGEO CAN (and SHOULD in my mind) coordinate a 
> standardized look and feel to such things.
>
> bobb
>
>
>
>
>>>> Howard Butler<hobu....@gmail.com>  wrote:
>>>>
> On Jun 7, 2010, at 11:03 AM, Bob Basques wrote:
>
>
>> Wouldn't it seem prudent to classify the projects before trying to compare 
>> them?
>>
> /me screams into a room that no one can hear.  Stop it!
>
> This whole exercise is quite frankly, masturbatory, and does nothing to help 
> the projects who would be rated, provides very little to those "users" of 
> said ratings, and calls into question our credibility by having the arrogance 
> to rate *our own* projects in any way.  OSGeo is doing enough by providing 
> visibility for the projects, and it is up to them to pull them in as users 
> with the quality of their software, the quality of their documentation, and 
> the quality of their community.  A silly sticker by us or anyone else isn't 
> going to sway that process in any way.
>
> It would be more valuable to collate a series of "elevator pitch"-type 
> material from each project who wishes to participate to make their case to 
> the envisioned users of this rating.  Projects who do not participate in this 
> for whatever reason implicitly make a statement about their quality. That's 
> going to be far more useful to both the projects and the users than an 
> elongating graphic.
>
> Howard_______________________________________________
> Discuss mailing list
> Discuss@lists.osgeo.org
> http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Discuss mailing list
> Discuss@lists.osgeo.org
> http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
>
>
>
>
>


--
Cameron Shorter
Geospatial Director
Tel: +61 (0)2 8570 5050
Mob: +61 (0)419 142 254

Think Globally, Fix Locally
Geospatial Solutions enhanced with Open Standards and Open Source
http://www.lisasoft.com

_______________________________________________
Discuss mailing list
Discuss@lists.osgeo.org
http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss

_______________________________________________
Discuss mailing list
Discuss@lists.osgeo.org
http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss

Reply via email to