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Max Katz
Max Katz

Posted on • Originally published at maxkatz.org on

Developers don’t hate marketing

In September I attended Evans Data Developer Marketing Summit. During a panel one person said:

“Developers hate marketing”

I don’t agree with that.

I think developers don’t like bad marketing.

People in general don’t like bad marketing so I don’t think developers are any special here.

When someone says “developers hate marketing”, I always associate this with an old car salesperson:

old-car-salesmen
Source: https://carsalesprofessional.com/why-are-car-salesmen-so-annoying/

No one would disagree that this is bad marketing (or sales), most of us probably experienced that. These folks usually use shady tactics and push features, not solutions.

Most will agree that (most) organizations today don’t do this.

At Evans Data Developer Relations Conference in March 2019, Willie Tejada, IBM Chief Developer Advocate said this:

On marketing to developers:

It’s not true that developers don’t want to be marketed to, they are simply very very educated “consumers”.

Here is an example of buying an espresso machine (such as Nespresso)

People will spend a disproportional amount of time learning about the machine and how it works. When they go to the store to buy it, if the sales person knows less than the buyer the buyer will be frustrated. We don’t like when we go to buy something and we know more about the product than the person selling it to us.

There are many great books on marketing out there. A great book I recently read is This is Marketing by Seth Godin. Here is how the book defines marketing:

Marketing is the generous act of helping someone solve a problem. Their problem.

and this one:

Marketers offer solutions, opportunities for humans to solve their problems and move forward.

There is nothing inherently bad about marketing to developers. Companies simply need to be helping solve developer’s problems. If we do this, then we won’t need to say that developers hate marketing (hopefully).

Our goal should always be to share outcomes and results, not features. My all time favorite resource is Adam DuVander’s Share Knowledge, Not Features.

I think here is one good example of that (there are thousands more of course):

webflow-devmarketing1
Source: http://webflow.com

Webflow is a No Code platform to build websites. Above is their home page. Webflow is not telling people that they have a visual HTML editor – that’s a feature. They are telling people what problems they can solve, what is the outcome – build a better website, faster, without coding.

Whether you call it developer marketing or something else – let’s help developers solve their problems, show them solutions, outcomes and share knowledge 🙌

Top comments (2)

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fmerian profile image
flo merian • Edited

great write-up, @maxkatz!

I've been working in the dev tools space for years and co-runs a community of 1,000+ founders and dev marketers from awesome dev-first companies like Algolia, PostHog, and Supabase.

developers don't hate marketing, they hate spam (as we all, don't we?). the difference is that developers might be the most spammed audience.

in this blog post, @nickwritesit puts it very eloquently:

devtool companies don’t have to avoid marketing; they have to avoid creating spam. They need to figure out how to create campaigns that are so valuable that it doesn’t even appear to be spam.

dev marketers know how to market to developers in smarter, thoughtful ways.

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maxkatz profile image
Max Katz

Hey, @fmerian - thanks for reading and your thoughts! I agree. There is nothing wrong with marketing if it offers value. I want to provide developer education. This way, I don't need to worry about marketing.