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November 30, 2009 2:23 PM PST

Open source: No vow of poverty (or get-rich-quick scheme)

by Matt Asay
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With open-source software businesses, you have two options. Actually, three, but the third belongs to Red Hat, and it applies to roughly no one else.

The first option is to sell support for open-source software. This option is generally advocated by those who have never grown a business beyond $10 million. It's a terrible model unless your only aspiration in life is to run a services company.

Hence, the support model might be good for Accenture or systems integrator, if they want to take on the burden of support, but it's a poor model for Red Hat, MindTouch, Microsoft, or other software company.

The second option is to contribute heavily to open source but not build your revenue model around monetizing that software directly. This is what the New York Times points to in its Sunday expose of allegedly fizzling open-source business models.

Open source can drive adoption like little else. It's not, however, necessarily a great driver of revenue. For that, you need to be selling something beyond the source code, and that "something" is often going to be proprietary, be it hardware, software, or a service.

Proprietary search revenue funds a lot of open-source development at Google.

Google is the master of this model. It gets roundly criticized for its half-open, half-closed open-source efforts, but the reality is that Google's products--Chrome OS, Android, etc.--are open enough to facilitate adoption without giving away the keys to the car, which drives wherever Google wants it to go.

That's the way successful companies are run: they take ownership of what they ship. They are influenced by but not controlled by the mystical whims of The Community.

Even Red Hat, which piggybacks on a lot of Linux kernel development, increasingly includes more home-grown software in its distribution and takes great pains to certify its Red Hat Enterprise Linux will work in the most demanding environments before putting its brand on the label.

Some, including me, have wrongly concluded that Red Hat's business model would apply to other product markets beyond the operating system. It doesn't. It only applies where the moving parts in the product are complex, multitudinous, and frequently changing.

For everything else, there's Option 1 (if you want a business that doesn't scale well or possibly at all) or Option 2 (which is really no different from the old proprietary model except that it effectively uses open-source complements to lower engineering costs and possibly sales/marketing costs).

Even Option 2 won't work if you under-invest in marketing and development, as Symbian is learning to its hurt. It turns out that there is no free lunch, even in the land of free software. It always takes work. And money. Lots of both, actually.

Matt Asay brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to The Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. Matt is chief operating officer at Canonical, the company behind the Ubuntu Linux operating system. Prior to Canonical, Matt was general manager of the Americas division and vice president of business development at Alfresco, an open-source applications company. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. You can follow Matt on Twitter @mjasay.
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by t8 November 30, 2009 3:52 PM PST
Open Source software is like the creatures in Pac Man. They eat everything up and you need to stay ahead (innovate) otherwise you get eaten. Open Source drives innovation not just for open source, but proprietary stuff too. When free catches up to proprietary in features, the choice people have is free versus paid. Proprietary needs to justify charging by being ahead and that is not always easy to do. Open Source products that are as good as or better than proprietary tends to take huge market share. Examples include: Apache, Firefox, Linux, Wikipedia, Joomla, Web Kit, etc.
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by MadLyb November 30, 2009 4:18 PM PST
The interesting thing is this revelation is *exactly* what was stated during the early (and heady) days of the Open Source movement. The only big win from Open Source is to get the large software companies to rethink the development/delivery process and make stronger efforts to include the community directly in the effort...and creating at least the impression of competition with the proprietary products. <br /> <br />On another note, most of the site seems to be placed behind a new comment system that requires me to login into another social network before commenting. I get the premise, but in the process you are killing off an existing community and that is truly sad.
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by rich.sands November 30, 2009 4:51 PM PST
I sometimes don't agree with you, Matt, but this post is exactly right on the money, so to speak. Open source is a driver of platform adoption. You monetize the platform some other way, however - that is the secret to successful business models. Trying to monetize the platform directly often requires actions that harm adoption. I think there actually are 3 choices: 1) get broad adoption but don't make money - works for non-profit foundations but nobody else. 2) get a little adoption, and make a little money - that is your support model or the "open core" model, and 3) make (potentially) a mega-pile of money by driving huge adoption tied to monetizing SOMETHING ELSE. Option 3 requires extremely good strategy, brilliant execution, and a ton of dumb luck. A few famous brands have that combination. Everyone else starves. Nobody said this is easy.<br /><br /> -- rms
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by Matt Asay November 30, 2009 5:08 PM PST
Rich, awesome comment. I agree with your categories
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by Orion Blastar November 30, 2009 5:12 PM PST
Option 4 is the Apple or *BSD Unix open source business model.<br /><br />You create a no-frills limited version aka Darwin and the MACH kernel, and contribute back to the FreeBSD, MACH, and BSD Unix source code trees source code from your Darwin and MACH modifications and additions.<br /><br />You create a commercial version aka Mac OSX that sells for a price per seat, and bundle it with a hardware sale, make the EULA for Mac OSX so that only Apple logo computers are licensed to run it. Make Mac OSX closed source, but open up part of it for developers and share the undocumented API calls with big software companies who signed a NDA not to reveal those undocumented API calls.<br /><br />You then create a third version, Mac OSX Server, that only runs on Apple logo Blade servers and Macintosh Pro systems. This is for businesses that want a server for your number 2 product.<br /><br />Red Hat has Fedora for the free OS, and Red Hat Enterprise for the commercial OS, but unlike Apple they don't bundle the hardware and limit it to only Red Hat logo systems.<br /><br />Now Option 5 is the Mozilla.org Foundation in which it asks for donations from the public ala a PBS or NPR model, and IBM, Novell, Red Hat ect are partners with them and contribute source code as well.<br /><br />Option 6 is to tell merchandise like Tux dolls (Tux is the Linux mascot and a Penguin), Tux t-shirts, Tux mouse pads, etc. You can sell anything with the open source logo or mascot on it, T-shirts, Polo shirts, towels, mouse pads, coffee cups, golf balls, etc. But this option won't earn a lot of money like option 1 or option 2 would, but at least some FOSS companies are trying to use it.<br /><br />Option 7 is to sell Google Adsense or some other type of advertising on the open source product's web site. Then hope that advertising brings in the money and hope that Firefox users won't use Adblock Plus or other web browser don't have ad blocking software installed on them. This option doesn't work either.
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by runT1ME November 30, 2009 5:59 PM PST
Matt, what about JBoss? They sold subscriptions, and they aren't an Operating System.<br /><br />Sure now they are part of Redhat, but I see no reason they couldn't be selling their product just as well if they were independant. <br /><br />Thoughts?
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by ashimmy December 1, 2009 6:06 AM PST
Matt - An old dog can learn new tricks! I agree with your post entirely. Nothing is ever easy and no one said it was though. Also after chasing the next 100 million plus revenue company for years, what is wrong with a smaller company that you own a large chunk of doing 7 or 8 million dollars a year very profitably? My new mantra is keep it small and take it all! I have written more on this at my blog at http://www.ashimmy.com/2009/12/you-can-teach-an-old-dog-new-tricks-about-open-source.html<br /><br />Happy Holidays Matt!
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by linkux December 1, 2009 7:57 AM PST
Oh Matt you're so level-headed.
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About The Open Road

Matt Asay brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to The Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. Matt is chief operating officer at Canonical, the company behind the Ubuntu Linux operating system. Prior to Canonical, Matt was general manager of the Americas division and vice president of business development at Alfresco, an open-source applications company. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. You can follow Matt on Twitter @mjasay.

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