Lynn...... Say WHAT?
Are you saying no such market exists? That would seem to me to be a strange conclusion to be drawn by someone who has such major influence over the marketing of a product that certainly can't be seen as appealing *primarily* to serious professional programmers who have corporate checklists and academic training influences to consider when choosing a tool. I don't know who buys Rev. But based on participation on this list and on the improve list, I'd have to say it *feels* like a far greater percentage of people for whom programming is not a full-time occupation, most of whom are developing software for themselves or their work groups or friends. The hobbyist/inventive user market may be harder to find or pin down because of its lack of verticality (verticalness?) but I don't think that makes them a "bunch of unrelated target customers that only superficially look similar." I'll be damned surprised if that market isn't the vast majority of the current user base of Revolution. On 3/28/06, Lynn Fredricks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > There is no hobbyist/inventive user from a software marketing perspective > - > that is a "D) none of the above" designation to try to define a bunch of > unrelated target customers that only superficially look similar. > > > -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Dan Shafer, Information Product Consultant and Author http://www.shafermedia.com Get my book, "Revolution: Software at the Speed of Thought" >From http://www.shafermediastore.com/tech_main.html _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
