Hi Maurice,

I appreciate the detailed answer. It does help to know the details, and of
course, you certainly know your own business better than we do.
One thing that just seems odd, why did I never see ads for Softimage? I
understand that percentage wise, it was getting more ad dollars than
Max or Maya (which in and of itself is weird, because they seemingly don't
need advertising as much as Softimage did, but anyway).
I would expect that I am more likely to notice a Softimage ad than a Maya
user, because it already is something that I like and accept.
Maybe that assumption is incorrect, but it seems to make some sense.

I don't recall ever seeing an ad for Softimage.

Ever.

I don't doubt they existed, just that I never saw one. I have an almost
insatiable thirst for CG news/content. It has been that way for 25 years
now.
Every day (multiple times per day) I scour the internet for information on
3D, Softimage, new CG innovations, software, articles, reviews.
I read all the magazines I have time for, and even if I don't have time to
read them, I flip through all the major ones, putting aside what I want to
read later.

With all of that, I would have thought I would have seen SOME advertising
about Softimage. But I didn't!
The only things I ever saw were articles about Lagoa (not ads, but
articles), or articles about the acquisition.

Why was that (I am honestly asking, I am not being snarky)?

Also (and this has been asked so many times I feel that the answer to it is
being withheld because it includes the location of Jimmy Hoffa's corpse),
WHY WASN'T SOFTIMAGE PROMOTED ON YOUR HOMEPAGE?
Seems like free advertising might be the best advertising when you are
trying to bring up the sales numbers of a fledgling product, no?

Thank you (and Chris) for answering these questions.
We don't always like the answers you give, we may not always believe the
answers you give, but that does not mean that I don't appreciate that you
and Chris are
trying to answer them anyway.


Perry




On Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 1:07 PM, Maurice Patel
<maurice.pa...@autodesk.com>wrote:

> Hi Perry,
>
> Softimage was marketed. It was marketed in ways that have, in most cases,
> actually proved successful for other Autodesk products but there are many
> factors at stake here. Hindsight is 20-20 but we used a model that actually
> worked extremely well for the Alias integration. We had one rapidly growing
> product (3ds max) added Maya and because of Autodesk's sales and
> distribution channel we were able to scale the Maya business dramatically
> without cannibalizing 3ds Max. Was it unreasonable not to expect the same
> results with Softimage? At the time of the acquisition all three product
> lines were growing fast and so it was assumed so - not that we did not know
> that it would not have its own set of problems - but we felt we could
> tackle them. When that did not work out we changed strategies to focus on
> Suites.
>
> Marketing is a mix of things: product, price, promotion, place. As
> mentioned above 'place' is critical. It is the means of distributing your
> product - it requires all kinds of investment to do probably including a
> lot of systems integration. We invested in making it available in every EDU
> bundle, through student downloads, Suites etc to get it into the hands of
> as many people as possible. Another is price. We kept the lower price and
> that initially was to see if this would broaden adoption - it did not. The
> third is product and the product is a great product.
>
> For promotion, we invested in integrating it into Autodesk systems and we
> actually invested more than other Autodesk products typically get given the
> revenue tier Softimage was in. What we did not do was maintain a separate
> web site for the product (we don't do that for any of our products). People
> often ask us why there were no campaigns to try and get Maya or 3ds Max
> users to switch to Softimage but the answer to that should be self-evident
> - and it was certainly never going to be a serious option for us. The main
> purpose of marketing campaigns is to generate revenue and so they tend to
>  focus on the where there is a revenue opportunity such as getting Maya or
> 3ds max users current (upgrades). Once we introduced Suites, the best
> revenue opportunity for Softimage was to get customers to upgrade to Suites
> and that was the focus.
>
> >From a business (and therefore marketing) perspective the question was
> always: could Softimage bring in net new business and how? Not how could it
> replace Maya or 3ds Max revenue. Given that it was actually cheaper,
> replacing 3ds Max or Maya would actually have meant a revenue decline not
> just a swap. Ultimately the hope was always that ICE would offer enough
> value to 3ds Max and Maya users drive Suite adoption. That was very much
> the product strategy and where the development team focused and so that is
> what we marketed. And yes I know that Softimage is more than just ICE and
> that it is a very capable all round animation solution - as did Marc Petit
> and the other execs in charge - but the strategy was to build, market and
> sell a suite of interoperable products (which we spent a lot of money
> doing). As a percentage of revenue Softimage got more investment than other
> products. In total dollar amounts a lot less (because it was a higher
> percentage of a much, much smaller base) . So whether we invested or not is
> relative to what point of view you take.
>
> Maurice Patel
> Autodesk : Tél:  514 954-7134
>
> From: softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com [mailto:
> softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com] On Behalf Of Perry Harovas
> Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2014 10:39 AM
> To: softimage@listproc.autodesk.com
> Subject: Re: An Open Letter to Carl Bass
>
> Hi Chris,
>
> My appreciation of the effort you took to write all that, and the thought
> that must have went into it is considerable.
> I truly and honestly appreciate that you did that, and I look forward
> (more than before) to your second part where you explain
> why Autodesk can't just keep Softimage around (and perhaps why doing that
> is diffeent than doing that with Toxik and MatchMover).
>
> Does this solve everything? Does this make me a renewed Autodesk customer?
> No, but your email really helped a lot with regards to understanding the
> lay of the land as it has been leading up to now.
>
> One other thing that would be helpful is:
>
> Why Softimage was not marketed. Yes, you can blame (or partially hold as
> culpable) Microsoft and Avid as to the small sales numbers for Softimage,
> but after Autodesk
> acquired it, in many ways the marketing was FURTHER reduced. This, I
> believe, leads mostly towards the mindset people have that either Autodesk
> was trying to kill it, or Autodesk didn't care if it died, or Autodesk only
> bought it for the technology and if it sold that was icing, but that it
> wasn't a goal. Those things directly come from a couple things: Lack of
> Softimage appearing on the home page, lack of advertising, lack of features
> while under Autodesk.
> I would be interested in knowing how you respond to that.
>
> Again, much appreciated, Chris.
>
> Perry
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 10:28 AM, Emilio Hernandez <emi...@e-roja.com
> <mailto:emi...@e-roja.com>> wrote:
> Thank you for taking the time to response Chris.
> This is all clear to me as I bought a couple of Digital Studio stations at
> version 2.0  while it was still Microsoft.  If it wasn't because they were
> dependable on the Intergraph video board that eventually got fried after 15
> years, and they lacked of HD support, I will still be using them.  Those
> turnkey systems were the ones that kept me out of the Inferno, Smoke, etc.
> solutions more expensive by far than the DS solution.
>
> I agree that Avid did not a lousy but a terrible job with the Softimage
> asset as they were running like headless chickens towards anywhere but
> where the useres needed, and that is when Final Cut got in.
> I understand where Autodesk is going, nothing I can do about it, even
> though I tried far beyond this list in ways that this is not the arena to
> talk about it.
> Still in your response I can't read the answer of:
> Why Autodesk is not willing to continue ship Softimage 2015, unsupported
> with an open SDK along Maya/MAX 2020?
> Maurice said because the inherent costs.  You answered because of Autodesk
> wants to focuse in developing Bifrost or whatever new technology Autodesk
> is bringing.
> What is that inherent cost?
> Thinking of some...
> 1. Packaging Softimage into the Maya/MAX download, self extract for each
> new year release.
> 2. Server space for holding a larger file.
> 3. Keep the SI online help file
> In which way Softimage will drive your development resources away from
> focusing into the new tools if there is no one that moves a single line of
> code?
> I not doing so, you started to loose clients already...
> So what is costing more?
> At this moment seeing several users of Softimage becoming ex-clients of
> Autodesk at a faster pace, even faster than I think Autodesk expected.  I
> seriously would reconsider the no Softimage policy after April 2016.
> Two years of uncertainty of what will be Autodesk decision...  It is a
> long time.  By then, I don't think that you will be able to get back what
> you are loosing now.
> But anyway, this is thing how they are now.  And that is the decision of
> Autodesk on Softimage for now.
> To bad to end in an "Only time will tell..."  statement.
> Thank you again.
>
>
>
>
>
> --
>
>
>
>
> Perry Harovas
> Animation and Visual Effects
>
> http://www.TheAfterImage.com<http://www.theafterimage.com/>
>
> -25 Years Experience
> -Member of the Visual Effects Society (VES)
>



-- 





Perry Harovas
Animation and Visual Effects

http://www.TheAfterImage.com <http://www.theafterimage.com/>

-25 Years Experience
-Member of the Visual Effects Society (VES)

Reply via email to