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John's Call to Action


John makes a call to action by providing a set of slides to encourage all community participants to drive visibility for the the Yellowverse in their presentation.  This strikes me as extremely important, particularly for IBM to do.  Product ecologies must be cultivated outside themselves to grow.  At the moment, we are far too insular.

John also mentions my observation to him that was inspired by Carl Tyler's comments on his blog.  Allow me to elaborate...

If we take as an assumption the figures from IBM about user population and number of orgs using Notes/Domino, there are about 100 million active users and about 45,000 organizations with Domino deployed.  If we compare this to the number of participants in certain areas of the Yellowverse, we can see some interesting representations crop up.  Let's start with something as simple as the number of active bloggers tracked on Planetlotus.org: 266.  If this user population is representative even of the world of Lotus professionals, then each blogger represents about 170 Lotus customers.  If we extrapolate that to users, each blogger represents 375,000 users - or basically a customer set the size of IBM itself.

Of course, these numbers are obviously an exaggeration, but look at how they pan out for other groups, too.
Ideajam.net registrations
1500
Each vote at ideajam.net could be representative of 30 organizations or over 66,000 users.
Bleedyellow.com registrations
2450
Even discounting IBM membership, Bleedyellow users cover about 2100 organizations, or just under 5% of the overall user base.
OpenNTF.org registrations
50000
There are more users registered at OpenNTF.org than there are companies actively using Domino.
Lotususergroup.org registrations
10000
(Estimated) I don't know how many unique companies are members, but LUG.org could easily represent over 10% of the user base, certainly enough to be a statistically relevant sampling ground.
Lotusphere attendees
8000
Only IBM could tell us the number of unique orgs represented at Lotusphere, but a fair guess is probably in the area of 3000-4000.  Which translates to Lotusphere being attended by < 10% of the corporate user base.


What about levels of two-way participation?  Lotususergroup.org claims 10000 members, but their online forums rarely break into double-digit post counts on a given topic.  If a blog post doesn't appear on edbill.com, it frequently doesn't get more than 5 or 10 responses (a notable exception is birthday/anniversary announcements.)  I regularly have blog posts that get over a hundred click-throughs from PL, but only have 5 or 6 comments left on them.  Where is the collaboration in our collaborative community?

OpenNTF.org is another, albeit specialized, example.  50,000 user registrations, something in the neighborhood of 100,000 downloads, and guess how many unique code contributors in the history of the site?  650.  650 is a LOT of contributors, honestly -- personally I think that makes OpenNTF.org the largest Domino ISV group in the world -- but it still means that only about 1 in 70 Domino shops have made a code contribution to OpenNTF.org.

What does all this mean?  Well, there are a couple of ways to look at it...

1) If the online Yellowverse is a good sample of the general user base, then a fairly small number of voices represents a whole bunch of actual customers.

2) Whether the current Yellowverse is a good sample or not, it's still too small.  We need a much broader level of participation to grow the ecology.  Most importantly, we need to get away from providing value to Lotus professionals and start creating more value for every day users.  Alan's site with handy tips for Notes is the sort of thing that we should all be delivering more broadly (particularly in light of new capabilities like widgets and LiveText!)

3) We should try to keep our levels of participation between each other higher.  When we read good posts or good contributions, many of us have a tendency to drop to twitter, IM or email to offer feedback to the author.  Don't.  Get it in the comments and use Trackbacks, because it's the only way we're get better saturation on search engines.

4) Absolutely everyone should help up the level of visibility of all aspects of the Yellowverse.  John's slides are great for sales or LCTY presentations, but they're also useful even for in-house communication.  If you're pitching or defending Lotus technologies inside your organization, make sure you highlight the depth of the community as an asset for the platform.  It's one thing to hear that Domino has a lot of ISV support as a platform -- it's quite another to be able to browse a list of free, open source packages for the platform and to ask one of the authors for support over an IM session during your presentation.

What other ideas do you have to increasing visibility and leveraging the passionate Yellow community to create more value for customers?

Comments

1 - Where is the Lotus Evangelist team? Some person or group of people who not only have an online presence but are actively working with development groups within companies. Yes we heard it's coming but sjeez.... where is it?

2 - Since I've took the time to read the excellent post you've just sumbited, it's hard not leaving any feedback. It is good to see most people feel concerned by all that cold wind sent by Apple on IBM\Lotus.

We all love the platforms IBM\Lotus have build and all the benefits we get from it as clients, consultant, ISV, etc. But that said, I think that relations between IBM\Lotus vs its partner must change.

We're a small IBM business partner and are most often in big organization who use IBM\Lotus products. Since we are the primary contact to these organization, IBM\Lotus Reps should be working with us instead against. I don't put all the blame on IBM, but I think they could initiate this turn-a-round.

3 - Nice post, numbers of course lie and deceive but you may be on to something.
For sure, the best route is to help the end users and move forward.

Would be nice to see some more internal IBM people blog or reply outside with assistance sometimes, but these guys are busy and so not that surprising.


4 - Hey Nathan. Consider also the large number of people that seem to use the IBM Notes developer forums. That is one Notes community that seems to have a very high penetration. I am sure if we were able to a get a link to IdeaJam (and others) placed onto these forum pages we would see these communities expand significantly.

5 - @1 - Excellent question; Where IS the Lotus evangelism team? Alan and Ed are great, but Adobe and Microsoft have dedicated, full-time staff designated as product evangelists. It really does make a difference.

6 - @4 Great idea!

7 - @4,

Other than Alan and Ed's blogs Lotus.com properties have never really promoted community sites such as BleedYellow, IdeaJam, OpenNTF etc.

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