4 October 2011

Bootstrapping 3: Building a business

By Andrew Clifford

Truly flexible software should be able to sell itself.

Creating MA2 in itself is all well and good, but there is a danger that we could polish and play with our new software for ever. We have to turn our new software into a business.

We know what we are trying to achieve with MA2. It could be used to build nearly any type of web-based solution, but marketing it as a general-purpose web tool puts it in direct competition with well-established products. We are going to focus on assessment and advisory solutions, where MA2's flexibility is particularly valuable. We see the following uses.

This is a very wide marketplace. How do we get there from where we are? How do we bootstrap our business?

Product promotion and marketing traditionally involves large budgets and networking with C-level executives. However, MA2 lets us do something different. We can use MA2 to build capabilities to help market MA2, such as demonstration products and free trials. We can develop the MA2 business in a series of phases, each one laying the foundation for the next.

In the same way that we can build the MA2 products within MA2 itself, we can build the MA2 business using MA2.

We have the outline of a plan. But "no plan survives contact with the enemy", and of course we can not let our plan get in the way of customers' requirements. Although we are just coming to the end of phase 1 we are already talking to people about phase 3 solutions. Exciting times indeed.