Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Fri, 10 Apr 1998 22:31:10 -0700
From:      "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
To:        Frank Pawlak <fpawlak@execpc.com>
Cc:        danj@3skel.com, jmb@FreeBSD.ORG, toor@dyson.iquest.net, brett@lariat.org, mike@smith.net.au, dshanes@personalogic.com, hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Promoting FreeBSD - the user's piece of the action.
Message-ID:  <12686.892272670@time.cdrom.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Fri, 10 Apr 1998 18:53:04 CDT." <199804102353.SAA06404@darkstar.connect.com> 

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
[ Resubjected but left in -hackers with followup set since people seem
  to just NOT want to have this conversation in -chat and so be it;
  I shall not attempt to hold back the tide. :-) ]

> 1)  A marketing and business plan needs to be developed, objectives and
> target markets clearly documented.  FreeBSD strengths clearly delineated

I'm all for it, but keep in mind the fact that without volunteer labor
to make all these wonderful things actually HAPPEN, it'll be no more
successful than any of our previous attempts at serious marketing.  A
lot of the usual voiced indignation and discussion but no actual press
releases written, no articles in the magazines, no books, no public
speaking engagements, in short - no significant action.

Ask yourselves all for a moment just how you think that Linux's own PR
machine got to be such a monster - is it Linus being an engaging
speaker and spending 350 days out of the year on the road, pounding
the pulpit?  No.  Linus isn't a bad speaker, in fact, but he's too
busy taking care of his family to go on any road tours and it's not
really due to his efforts that Linux is as successful as it is today
anyway.  Linux is wildly successful because it managed to attract,
early on, a hoard of camp followers who didn't hack the sources but
did hack text and produced reams of freely republishable text which
bootstrapped an entire book industry.  They published articles in
magazines and wrote letters to the editor.  THEY did the big PR push
behind the operating system and, as far as I can see, the developers
were left to do what they do best - develop software.

I've seen a lot of good ideas in this thread, please don't get me
wrong, but what I've also seen is a disturbing number of posts which
essentially say "Rah rah!  Yes!  Get organized at the top and do a
bunch of stuff and FreeBSD will win!  Here's a list of things I think
you guys should do ..."

While I do appreciate the ideas, the above approach *seriously* misses
the point, the point being that if you wait for the core team to
aggressively market this OS then you're going to wait a long time and
miss any number of valuable opportunities in the process.  More to the
point, you'll fail.  I'm sorry, but it's an indisputable fact that the
core team doesn't have any real marketing folks on it at the moment,
nor do we know of any serious marketing folks who are genuinely
willing and able to lead any one-man cavalry charges, so for the time
being what FreeBSD's users all really REALLY need to do is to stop
waiting for someone from the top to "tell them what to do" and just
start doing it themselves!  That's exactly what's been going on in the
Linux camp all this time, by the way.  People haven't been asking
Linus Torvalds to put together a marketing plan for them before doing
anything, they've just gone right on ahead and done whatever seemed
obvious in the way of marketing/evangelism, and it's WORKING.

I'm sorry for the use of caps, but this really is a serious problem.
Our users have, by and large, COMPLETELY MISSED the entire concept of
what marketing a free operating system is all about.  Perhaps we've
simply been too successful at acting like a corporate entity for folks
to really make the connection that we're still free software and with
all of free software's marketing problems - the fact that everyone's
still waiting for a non-existent central marketing department to pop
up and say "here's the new ad campaign!" sort of suggests this - but
something is definitely wrong here.

In any case, we don't have a central marketing department and
demanding that we form one in order to solve this problem really does,
again, completely miss the point.  When you go to fight a war, you
don't find 5-10 guys and say "guys, the enemy is attacking with 12
divisions of armored infantry - here are some rifles, go drive them
off!"  No, you raise 12 divisions of your own among the populace and
it's the citizens who go off to fight the war on their own behalf.

Free software is no different - if you want FreeBSD to win, you need
to sit down and _invest the time_ in making tangible things happen,
like writing magazine articles or any of the other activities I've
mentioned so far.  It is with you, the user, that the war will either
be won or lost.

I'm also sorry to make it sound like I'm picking on Frank, I'm not,
I'm simply taking this response as an opportunity to make the point
that people should really stop wasting time asking for instructions on
what to do and simply start DOING something.  You don't need
instructions from me or anyone else on the core team on what to do,
you really do know already!  I've already listed dozens of good
activities and most people know instinctively what constitutes good PR
- writing books, magazine articles or press releases, giving CDs to
libraries, presenting FreeBSD in schools, telling your friends - all
the things we've covered so far.

If you're at all typical, your biggest problem is, in fact, simply
finding the time and volition to sit down and DO THE WORK.  In this, I
can only suggest simply blocking out some time and saying "OK, enough
talk - this time I'm going to WRITE the friggin' thing!" (whatever
your value for "thing" might be) or getting involved in some
collaborative effort with a friend.  Many books in print today were
only completed because several people were involved and managed to
keep one another on track - if one person had tried doing it alone,
it'd never have happened.  That's a good point to keep in mind as you
contemplate your own private PR efforts.

Last of all, please don't worry about "speaking inappropriately for
FreeBSD" - just take the initiative!  I've had more than one person
contact me to say "I would have spoken about it at FooLISA but I
didn't want to speak for you guys."  Erm..  That's another case of
seriously missing the point - FreeBSD belongs to all of you, we in
core being merely its current custodians, and you need not fear that
you'll be taking some sort of liberties by extolling the virtues of
YOUR operating system!  Somebody in -core might send you a nasty-gram
if your arguments consist of nothing more than "Linux sucks!  Run
FreeBSD dammit!" but it's still your right to evangelise however you
see fit, albeit hopefully with a modicum of style, and take up the
fight on your own.  Don't wait for us!  As the Nike commercial says:
Just Do It. :-)

					Jordan

To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?12686.892272670>