Hi, IMHO, your suggestion needs improvement: What should the Marketing Team do, even it would agree on your proposal?
The problem with your approach (and Dave's) is that your so-called target markets are NOT proper targets. Here's why. In marketing theory, you should first segment a market before you pick one or more of them as targets. A good segment is DAMAS [1]: * Differential: it must respond differently to a different marketing mix * Actionable: you must have a product/the resources for this segment * Measurable: size and purchasing power can be measured * Accessible: it must be possible to reach it efficiently * Substantial: the segment has to be large and profitable enough Some of these criteria (S, M) don't apply to GNOME because it's not a for-profit organization. Another one is rather academic by nature (D). That leaves two important ones: Any segment (and thus target) needs to be accessible and actionable. That means you need to have any idea how you can reach the people who constitute a segment, and you need to have an idea how to sell your product to them. >From this point of view, let's look at your suggestion: You say we should target "Linux distributions". It's easy to identify them: Distrowatch has a list. However, who is the decision maker for a specific Linux distribution? We all know who to call for making GNOME the default desktop for Ubuntu, but who do you call for, say, Debian? This is the first problem: Who should we talk to when we decide to target "distributions". The next step, however, is far more difficult: What arguments do you have to make distributions use GNOME by default? Whatever it is: Commercial distros may just answer: "Our clients request KDE!" Volunteer distros will probably say: "No problem but we have no man power. Provide packages and we'll include them." What are the chances to find people who'd package GNOME for certain distributions? Additionally, packages don't make GNOME the default desktop. These problems are not new, they are well known. We have the question in our Wiki for over two years now: "What leverage do we have?" and the answer didn't change much. So targeting "distributions" in such a general form is completely useless. Similar arguments hold for the other "target" you mentioned: "regular end users". Stated in such an general form, this is useless. (BTW: The usual tool for reaching millions of people is advertising.) Let's consider Dave's suggestions. He says: * for the platform, our target is ISDs * for the desktop, public administrations and distributions, and * for applications, early adopters & hobbyists. So, how do we identify "ISDs"? Where are they? How do we talk to them? And just in case, we find some: What should we tell them? We don't even have any basic support, or documentation for any library higher the GTK+ (so I read). If you look into the development section of our user forum, nearly no question is answered. Let's have a look at just one complain, I accidentally stumbled upon today [2]: "I am a commercial developer, with apps deployed in many businesses. Linux is absolutely hostile to me and my customers, because it cannot: * provide a binary install mechanism which works across all distros. * give me binary compatibility over time. * provide APIs which let me manage system needs at a high level and across all distros. * provide an identical user experience across all distros." I cannot say whether these claims are "true" in a scientific sense but it might be an example of the impression other ISDs have about GNOME (and Linux). OK, let's move on: What about "public administrations"? We may identify them. Maybe, we find the decision makers. But what should we tell them? Is there any USP that makes GNOME better then all alternatives? Dave's approach fails just like yours. Let's look at an rather artificial example to see why: Try to sell Rhythmbox to a deaf PC hobbyist. The example is covered by Dave's description but everybody sees that this will fail. We better don't generalize certain products such as Rhythmbox in a broad category such as "applications". Theoretically, you'd would need to provide segments all for each of GNOME's products (the development platform, the desktop, and each application), and determine targets for each of them. Of course, that's just the theoretical problems. Regards, Claus [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_segmentation [2] http://rudd-o.com/archives/2006/09/20/open-source-linux-and-the-importance-of-marketing-and-public-perception/ -- marketing-list mailing list marketing-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list