On Wed, Oct 21, 2015 at 7:12 AM, Matthew Miller <mattdm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > In which Matthew Goes to Training > --------------------------------- > > Like many of you, I come from a mostly-technical career background, and > ain't got one of them there fancy big city business degrees. But, I know > there's a real actual discipline in all this stuff, and I try to pick up > things that I think will be useful for Fedora. Last week, I went to > training which in part described a model for the overall endeavor of > marketing tech products, and I think there might be some ideas we can > benefit from. > > The model itself is the proprietary product of the training company, and > some of it, of course, isn't really relevant ("Setting prices!"), so what > follows isn't a copy of the training materials, but kind of a > generalization of some of the concepts I took away. > > Basically, there's a whole bunch of activities under the general heading > "Marketing", and they can be mapped on one axis from conceptual to more > technical, and on another axis from strategic to... you know, actually > doing stuff. Something like this: > > > A Model of Marketing > -------------------- > > > Finding Defining /----------\ Marketing Plan > User Problems Our Market |Conceptual| > \-----v----/ Getting New Users > Identify Product | > Strengths Portfolio | User Keeping Existing Users > | Personas > "Why/why not Business | > Fedora?" Plan | Measuring Program > /---------\ | Effectiveness /--------\ > |Strategic >-----------------------+------------------------< Tactical| > \---------/ Requirements | Finding References \--------/ > Product | & Testimonials > Assess Roadmap Use Cases | Collateral > Competition | Finding Leads > Project | "Sales" Events > Assess Our Here Status | Launch Plan Training > Own Tech Is Literally A /----^----\ Demos > Box That Just |Technical| Show Leadership > Says Innovation \---------/ Through Blogs & Speaking > > > Punchline > --------- > > The core takeaway — and, basically, this is Spoiler Alert for the > training — is that the essential activity of Marketing is _finding > problems in the market_ and helping the organization create and > distribute solutions to them. Muhaha! Strategic marketing. The thing I used to do for a job before I started working at Red Hat. (Err, the first time I worked at Red Hat, I guess I can now say.) > > > Current Fedora Marketing > ------------------------ > > I think it's fair to say that right now, Fedora Marketing, together with > Fedora Ambassadors, is very focused on the bottom right quadrant. More > technical, more tactical. Specifically, we work on trumpeting new > releases and the launch plan (Go/No-Go meeting), we work on collateral > (brochures, websites, swag), we do events. And, Marketing/CommOps is > planning to do demo material and provide better event support for > Ambassadors. > > And the Magazine fits pretty nicely here, too — there's a whole category > basically about demonstrating your organization's leadership in an area, > and that's blogs and press outreach and speaking at conferences and > social media and so on. > > > Who Does the Rest? > ------------------ > > The training presented several concepts for how this landscape might be > divided among different parts of an organization. One would be to have > someone focus on the strategic side and someone else on the tactical; > another is to divide top and bottom. And then they had another chart > which has the left side split top and bottom and the right side as a > third bigger oval. This last, most complicated one I think matches most > closely what we already have in Fedora — > > a. I think, for the most part, the Fedora Council and FESCo have worked > on that top-left quadrant — at least, in defining the Cloud, Server, > Workstation portfolio and the target markets for this, and I hope in > identifying strengths. > > b. And, reasonably well, the the bottom-left corresponds to the Cloud, > Server, Workstation edition Working Groups. > > c. And then, the right side basically falls under Fedora Marketing and > Ambassadors. > > > However... > ---------- > > As noted above, Marketing and Ambassadors are really focused on the > "below the line" activites on the right side. That leaves a big weak area > in the more conceptual but action-oriented side. This is a big hole, and > it seems like improving this could make a difference. > > > But, Bigger Picture Problem! > ---------------------------- > > Refer back up to the punchline, and notice something I left out — > identifying user problems that we want to target. This is something we > did in very broad strokes with the three editions, but which we aren't so > great at doing continually. > > I'm working on the Fedora 23 release annoucement right now, and this > really hit home. Rather than going out, finding things our users are > having trouble with, and coming back with "There! We fixed it for you!", > we're working on "The widget set number has been incremented. There are > fewer bugs in most of the things, while others have new bugs. Some of the > parts have been moved to better places." > > Now, some of that is just the nature of open source — it's not like we > have a management team that can tell everyone what they ought to be > working on. But, as a project, we certainly have the ability to look at > what we can _find_ in the world of open source, figure out what we need > to do to connect it together, and thereby solve actual user problems. If > we had a bigger emphasis on doing this systematically, the marketing > _materials_ would basically write themselves. > > > Call for Help > ------------- > > At Flock this year, Joe Brockmeier suggested that Improved Marketing > might make a good 12-18 month Fedora Objective. I've been reflecting on > that for a while, and, given the kick from the above, I'm thinking that > it's a good idea. But, going back to my first line here, it'd be most > awesome if we had the objective captained by someone with an actual > background in this area. Someone for whom all of this is _obvious > 101-level stuff_, not new material. Maybe that's already someone here. > Maybe it's someone you know. What do you think? Ohhhh, maybe I shouldn't have said that first line up there. :D But: I will point at these ... half-decade old blog posts! http://robyn.io/2010/01/29/trac-strategic-planning-and-a-book-club/ (The strategic planning paragraph is the useful thing.) And some other old thoughts related to way-back-when discussions about target audience, possibly related: http://robyn.io/2010/01/24/an-overdue-post-on-fedoras-target-audience/ (Note: Some other dude had responses to that, here -- https://gregdekspeaks.wordpress.com/2010/01/27/fedoras-goals/ ) ...and while I am not volunteering -- I will be happy to share mucho advice to anyone who should kindly volunteer to take the above on. :) Because, as Greg pointed out way back when, it's nice to see new blood driving discussion. :) -robyn > > > -- > Matthew Miller > <mattdm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Fedora Project Leader > _______________________________________________ > council-discuss mailing list > council-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct > https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/council-discuss > > The Fedora Project's mission is to lead the advancement of free and > open source software and content as a collaborative community. _______________________________________________ council-discuss mailing list council-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/council-discuss The Fedora Project's mission is to lead the advancement of free and open source software and content as a collaborative community.