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Permission-based Development
“Operating systems, databases, web and application servers, dev tools all required money. To get anything done, then, developers needed someone to write checks for the tools they needed to build.”
Stephen O’Grady – New Kingmakers, O’Reilly Publications
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The Post Permission Era
Infrastructure
Proprietary Software
Banks
VCs
Companies
R&D Labs
Universities
SOA
Cloud
Open Source
Crowdfunding
Accelerators
Co-working
Maker Spaces
The Internet
APIs
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The Business Case for Events
IPO planned for 2015
Annual revenues $100m in 2014
Adding $1m in annual recurring revenue every seven days.
Participated in more than 500 developer events in 2014
560k registered developers, near 100% growth in 2014
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10 Things You Need to Do
Go to a developer event
Talk at a developer event
Host a meetup
Invite an outside speaker to talk at your internal event
Go to a hackathon
Run a hackathon
Sponsor a developer event – but make sure its craft beer
Create a budget for your developers to go to events without asking
Have a bias to saying yes – trust and responsibility count
Run Regular “Office Hours”
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Do Don’t
Be personable and (if possible) humorous
Use the slang and idioms developers use
Use pictures rather than bullet points
Try live coding, even if it’s scary
Put the spotlight on other people’s tech
Use data-driven graphs and charts
Allow for tension
Tell war stories
Tell customer stories
Describe all components and APIs.
Use slides prepared for you by Big Marketing
Use Corporate Speak
Worry about the font size
Make everything canned
Pitch your product directly
Use marketecture stack diagrams.
Smooth out every rough edge
Be afraid of discussing failure
Say “we were working with a F500 bank”
Expect people to love all your stuff
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Always have a Code of Conduct
tldr; be excellent to each other
Our conference is dedicated to providing a harassment-free conference experience for everyone, regardless of gender, age, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, body size, race, or religion (or lack thereof). We do not tolerate harassment of conference participants in any form. Sexual language and imagery is not appropriate for any conference venue, including talks, workshops, parties, Twitter and other online media. Conference participants violating these rules may be sanctioned or expelled from the conference without a refund at the discretion of the conference organizers.
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Call To Action
Working on Developer Events Guidelines for IBM – please contribute.
Questions? Thoughts? Ideas?
Join us for the open talks tomorrow at 10-12 and 3-5