After the previous three articles about
very basic previous ideas to take in consideration before designing
an engagement program for organizations, we need to think about what
are going to be the concepts to base our program on.
To have a better chance to succeed, we
have to build our program on our strengths and not on our weaknesses.
In order to identify those strengths, I've made a simple SWOT
diagram.
This entry will describe the major
opportunities and threats I see that might affect to our plan of
building new ecosystems with organizations.
Opportunities
- Free Software culture expansion.
- Desktop – web relation.
- Free Software business models success.
- KDE has millions of users.
- KDE cross platform strategy.
- Software everywhere.
- Increasing market pressure over Universities to include free software topics.
- Free Software seen as strategical for by many countries.
Free Software culture expansion: more
and more organizations are interested in crowd sourcing techniques
and in collaboration processes like the ones we use for software
development. Movements like Open Data, Open Gov. Free Culture,
copy-left, Free hardware, etc. are strongly related to the free
software culture. Some of those movements are interesting for many
organizations. A community project like KDE can expand his influence
to other areas.
Desktop – web relation: interaction
between the desktop and the web, along with the irruption of small
devices, can allow us to expand our influence to the web world, where
many organizations are extremely interested.
Free Software business models success:
more and more organizations, specially companies, are developing free
software business models where upstream collaboration is seen as a
good value.
KDE has millions of users: KDE have
millions of users so we are a good target for organizations that
wants to reach them.
KDE cross platform strategy: KDE is a
multiplatform and multidevice project. There is a shiny future ahead
of us if we keep pushing in the current direction.
Software everywhere: software is
becoming strategical in many industries. Free Software is becoming
popular is most of them. KDE has more and more open markets every
year.
Increasing market pressure over
Universities to include free software topics: since free software is
getting popular in IT industry, the pressure over Universities and
other Education organizations is much bigger than in the past. This
mean that the cost for KDE to find potential contributors will
decrease.
Free Software seen as strategical for
by many countries: more and more countries are defining national IT
strategies around free software due to political, social and economic
reasons. This will open us new markets.
Threats
- Classic Free Software threats like software patents, closed formats, etc.
- Key players without a clear and stable strategy.
- Increasing our relations scope.
- Management.
- Resource dimensioning.
Classic Free Software threats like
software patents, closed formats, etc: KDE and any action we take
toward building new ecosystems with different types of organizations
are permanently threatened by them.
Key players without a clear and stable
strategy: because of different reasons, many stakeholders that
traditionally or lately have been supporting KDE, change their
strategy often. Although KDE has proven in the past to be good at
isolating the impact produced by them, tensions might increase in the
future.
Increasing our relations scope: KDE has
been very successful at attracting technical contributors and other
non-profits related with free software. It is not clear that we can
extend that success to other type of organizations.
Management: KDE will face some
management challenges in the near future due, among other factors, to
the growth rate it is experimenting. Increasing the ecosystem to
other type of organizations will stress even more the actual
management resources.
Resource dimensioning: overload takes
any organization through many non desired consequences like quality
decrease, internal tensions, expenses, management inefficiencies,
etc. Like in any community project, properly resource dimensioning
and control is specially difficult, since our community is formed
mostly by volunteers.
Isolation from the free
software-business relation: KDE, like other free software communities
haven't been in the past very interested in the business side of free
software. We are more technical focused. The increasing economic
success of free software will force us to put energy into this area
to avoid isolation.
Yes, there are probably many more, but
I hope most of them are somehow included in these ones. Otherwise,
feel free to add more through comments to this blog post.
1 comment:
Could you add same whitespaces between words?
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