More Google – The Tao of Open

Published on 23 December 2009 by Rich in Business Strategy

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More Google – The Tao of Open

Google is an irresistable topic for me. They’re so big, and so influential, that everything they do gets endlessly scrutinized for strategic insight, good and bad. So forgive me for YAGP – Yet Another Google Post – this time about their recent public policy statement by Jonathan Rosenberg, Senior Vice President, Product Management on “The meaning of open”. Google does a lot of good stuff – I’m not bashing them. But I still wish Google was more comfortable with the truth about why they do all that good stuff. Their stated reasons reflect the conventional FOSS wisdom:

“To understand our position in more detail, it helps to start with the assertion that open systems win. [...] They are competitive and far more dynamic. In an open system, a competitive advantage doesn’t derive from locking in customers, but rather from understanding the fast-moving system better than anyone else and using that knowledge to generate better, more innovative products.”

This sounds great, doesn’t it? But the premise, that competitive, dynamic markets generate more profit, is inherently untrue. Competition and rapid change sap profitability. It costs a lot more money to win when lock-in is impossible. When all you’ve got to beat your competitors is brains and hard work, you have to continuously invest big money just in staying ahead.

Gartner’s Brian Prentice offers a pointed analysis of Rosenberg’s article, in which he sums up the revenue picture quite well:

“The truth is that closed systems still win. Open systems, practically speaking, are basically good for making others lose.”

True, but also misses the key point. Google is not trying to crush their competition in search advertising: they already have.  Their biggest problem isn’t competition, it is market saturation. The market for search advertising can only grow as fast as the demand for searching, which in turn grows along with the use of the Internet, and Google’s ability to index ever more of the Net. Another way to put this, is that Google’s addressable market is driven by adoption of the Internet itself.

“Open” is an incredibly important strategy for Google, because it drives greater adoption of the Internet. The money quote from Rosenberg:

“Our commitment to open systems is not altruistic. Rather it’s good business, since an open Internet creates a steady stream of innovations that attracts users and usage and grows the entire industry.”

Bingo. Google understands the adoption-led business strategy better than any other enterprise today. With their enormous scale and technological might, they relentlessly develop new, seminal Internet infrastructure that digitizes and shares more and more of the world’s information. And then they open that infrastructure. Remember: they don’t sell maps, books, document storage, music, collaboration, or mobile phones (yet). They sell search advertising. The more adoption of the Internet for accessing all of these newly digitized artifacts, the more and better targeted search advertising they can sell. They don’t sell the things they open, they sell something else that scales with adoption of the open stuff. That is the genius of Google’s business model.

Google doesn’t do “open” to compete. They do “open” to drive adoption. But if you sell something that Google offers for free, tough luck! It sure feels like competition! Google Docs feels like competition to Microsoft. Android feels like competition to Symbian and Palm. Chrome feels like competition to Mozilla, and Google is Mozilla’s biggest benefactor!

Rosenberg says that “An open Internet transforms lives globally. It has the potential to deliver the world’s information  to the palm of every person and to give everyone the power of freedom of expression.” He is absolutely right. But Google doesn’t do “open” because it is some benevolent force for the good of humanity. But if closed and bare-knuckled competitive warfare would drive more adoption of the Internet and thus more search advertising, Google would be doing that instead.

Another quote from Google’s article:

“We can do these things because they are information problems and we have the computer scientists, technology, and computational power to solve them. When we do, we make numerous platforms – video, maps, mobile, PCs, voice, enterprise – better, more competitive, and more innovative.”

Why won’t Google, in the spirit of transparency, tell the truth, which would read something like this (my words, not theirs):

We do these things because we need more and more of the world using the Internet in new and different ways, so we can sell more ads and continue to grow. We’re genuinely gratified that doing so makes numerous platforms – video, maps, mobile, PCs, voice, enterprise – better and more innovative. We’re not trying to compete in these areas but the effect of our adoption-led strategy is to make it very hard for others to make money doing these things. Still, it is fortunate for both end-users and for us that Google’s search ad prosperity is driven by Internet adoption. We reap great rewards for delivering awesome technology and information to the world, for free!

Those are my words, not Jonathan Rosenberg’s. But really, wouldn’t a transparent explanation of their business model be a better message?

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You’re Not Gonna Make A Zillion $ – Deal With It!

Free-MarginMatt Asay interviewed Jim Zemlin, the head of the Linux Foundation a few days ago for his ZDNet blog series. Lots of interesting insights from the chief Linux cat herder, but perhaps the most striking quote for me was this one:

“We have to get over this idea that open-source software will produce companies that look just like their proprietary counterparts. I owe much of my career to venture capitalists, but if they are expecting the same returns from the proprietary software portfolio’s that they had in the 1990s they are crazy.”

Exactly true I think. Chris Anderson’s “Free – The Future of a Radical Price“, posits that you can make plenty of dough pricing your digital assets at zero. Much of the pointed criticism of his book point out the brutal truth: there aren’t many examples of this working, outside of a few well-known famous examples that are very hard to copy.

The software industry is fast consolidating, commoditizing, and morphing into a mature industry with low margins and competition based on partnerships, product line extensions, and marketing, rather than technology and innovation. Software is no different than any other industry in that regard. It is an inexorable fact of life, driven by the structure of the world economy and the nature of technology diffusion. But FOSS accelerates and institutionalizes this rapid maturation. Free, the price, is a direct consequence of Free, the licensing  paradigm. This fact should change our expectations, shouldn’t it? Has it changed yours? Or do you think there is plenty of room left to monetize innovation and technology in the wide world of software?

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Do You Have Good Karma?

Published on 26 October 2009 by Rich in Business Strategy, Karma

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Do You Have Good Karma?

buddha-headHuh? What does eastern religion have to do with platform adoption? Karma is the idea that what you do drives cause and effect – your deeds today determine your future. With developers, it really is the case that what goes around, comes around. What you do will shape your reputation with developers, and your reputation determines whether they use your software.

How obvious! And yet how hard to put into action. Why? Because trust is earned over time, with consistent, principled behavior that values long-term success over short-term profit. And trust is so easily trashed – one shortsighted decision, a few ill-conceived words, and you’re in the doghouse. Wreck your karma and you’ll be rebuilding that trust you so swiftly demolished, and maybe never getting it back.

I hear you saying “Yeah yeah of course! Developers trust us! We’re the good guys!” But are you? Turns out that the very things that developers look for as markers for mistrust are often the things you do to make money. And actions speak louder than words.

Remember Movable Type, the once popular blogging platform from Six Apart, Ltd.? Back in the day, MT was the bee’s knees. Six Apart had always offered a free version, allowed users to modify the code, hosted a public repository, encouraged contributions, patches, and plugins. They built a community of passionate developers and users who enthusiastically recommended MT to their friends, and helped create a groundswell of adoption. That is how it is supposed to work! Six Apart was the leader in blogging tools, launching TypePad (hosted blogging) and with leading market share in both self-hosted and hosted service blogs, because they were the good guys. Because they painstakingly had built their good karma.

Then on May 13, 2004, developers and users woke up to discover they’d been fooled. MT 3.0 was still free for one author and up to 3 blogs. More than that, and you had to pay. Whats wrong with asking for money for something valuable like blogging software? Nothing, unless you have built your large, enthusiastic developer and user base on a promise to make MT free, with source code, and then once they’ve adopted your platform you renege on that promise. MT 3.0’s passionate community felt duped. Their passion turned to scathing anger and disgust. They had trusted Six Apart, and that trust was destroyed with one ill-conceived decision, born of the need for Six Apart to monetize their hard work.

That’s bad karma.

With the 3.2 release, Six Apart restored an unlimited number of blogs for all licenses. With 3.3, MT was once again free for unlimited non-commercial use. Still not enough…. on December 12, 2007 Six Apart relicensed MT as Free Software under the GPL. But the damage was done.

Where did MT’s community go? Mostly to WordPress, which was far behind MT but rapidly caught up in features and sophistication. WordPress has been under the GPL license from day one. There are over 7000 plugins that extend it in almost any way imaginable. All plugins in their repository are GPL or compatible with GPL and open source. The WordPress community is enormous. Customizable themes can make WordPress sites look like almost anything you want (disclosure – I use WordPress for this site). WordPress is Free Software but the leading hosted WordPress service – wordpress.com – is run by Automattic, Inc., who’ve established a fast growing business built on making WordPress effortless for the non-technical blogging world. Automattic is a key contributor to the WordPress project itself which, with three releases/year is accelerating its innovative pace and developing an aura of cool as it is used by marquee Web 2.0 commentary sites like GigaOm and TechCrunch.

How is Six Apart doing now with their karma? A blog back in March 2008 by their chief evangelist, titled “A WordPress 2.5 Upgrade Guide” opens with the line:

As you might know, WordPress 2.5 is about to be released, and we wanted to encourage WordPress users to upgrade. To Movable Type.

More bait and switch. This time, baiting WordPress users trying to upgrade with an article bound to pop up in search results. That kind of bare knuckle competition may seem like business as usual but in the developer world, where cooperation and community are valued above all else, it generates more bad karma. Many comments to the post had this flavor:

Comparing your product to a competitors by putting them down is not going to hold you in good stead (as I’m sure you’ve seen by now by the posts on TechCrunch and Twitter conversations), even though you might feel the need to make direct comparisons to pull people.

Another example, this time about Six Apart’s hosted service, TypePad in a comment to Mashable’s October 2009 “Blogging Faceoff: WordPress vs. TypePad” article (in which WordPress got an overwhelming 87%, TypePad 9%, and 4% called it a tie):

My big beef with TypePad is that, when I switched to WordPress, TypePad held my graphics hostage. They would not allow me to transfer them with the other content in my blog.

More bad karma.

But what does all this have to do with adoption? Does it really make a difference? See for yourself:

TypePad vs. WordPress.com (hosted blogging)

Movable Type vs. WordPress.org (blogging platform)

Ok, visitors doesn’t equate to platform adoption. But even the most jaded metrics maven would likely conclude from these statistics that WordPress in both cloud and platform versions is trouncing Movable Type.

If you think that platform adoption is critical to your ability to make money, you ignore your karma at your peril.

Thanks to Dalibor Topić for the example idea used in this post. Now there’s a dude who really has good developer karma!

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OK, “Open Source” Isn’t a Business Model… So?

coins-question

Several great blog posts from Simon Phipps (I commented), Stephen Walli (I also commented), and Matt Aslett debate the question of whether there is such as thing as an open source business model. Everyone agrees – vehemently – that there is no such thing. But this whole debate on what you call business models involving giving away software for free misses the point.

Open source has accelerated the commoditization of software. If you’re competing with an open source code base, it won’t be easy for you to charge a license fee. You can offer commercial service and support, training, professional services, blah blah but Red Hat, the poster child for this model, reported $650M in revenue this past fiscal year. Oracle, at $23.3B revenue, is nearly 36 times larger. You can make a tidy sum with this approach but you probably aren’t going to be the next Google ($21.8B and they give their software away). Realistic expectations are in order.

It doesn’t matter what you call it. Making money giving away software isn’t easy. If it was, there would be a lot more Googles and Red Hats out there.

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