First on market (was RE: radical revamping of techpubs)
John Hedtke
john at hedtke.com
Fri Oct 19 09:30:49 PDT 2007
Despite the incredible pressure that people feel to be the first on
the market with the latest release, I think history shows that it is
almost NEVER the first product to market that has long-term success,
at least in high-tech. The IBM PC was not the first to market by a
number of years. Microsoft hasn't ever gotten there first with
anything that comes to mind. VisiCalc. WordStar. Doc-to-Help was,
I think, on the market before Robohelp, yet they got outmarketed
ultimately. VHS vs. Beta: Beta was, and is, a better overall format
but VHS outmarketed Beta and >poof< no more Beta. And so on. It
could be argued that what tends to work is the products that watched
what the first product did and then didn't make the same mistakes or
at least capitalized on marketing. There are exceptions to
this--Visio comes to mind--where something is so truly innovative as
to be unique, but these are rare and stellar examples. For the most
part, the first product to cross the finish line is guaranteed to
~not~ survive the test of time.
Even on a short-term basis, pushing a product out the door to meet an
arbitrary schedule gets you what you deserve. Who here is fool
enough to install the .0 version of anything from, say, Microsoft or
Adobe? And who, having done that, got away with it with their
computing skin intact? Robert Cringely was nice enough to quote me
in his column a couple months ago: "At Microsoft, quality is job
SP1," but this is an aphorism you could apply to a lot of companies,
not just the folks in Redmond. They all feel the same pressures and
make the same mistakes.
If I knew that a company was actively taking a few extra months to
plan things and deliver me a bug-free product, I'd be very impressed
and would consider that heavily when shopping for something.
Yours truly,
John Hedtke
Author/Consultant/Contract Writer
www.hedtke.com <-- website
541-685-5000 (office landline)
541-554-2189 (cell)
john at hedtke.com (primary email)
johnhedtke at aol.com (secondary email)
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