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by jackbridger
1237 days ago
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I'll have a go!
DevRel is developer relations. The job involves communicating with and supporting developers.
DevRel happens at companies whose customers and/or users include developers (think Twilio, GitHub, Stripe).
It's an umbrella term and means different things to different companies.
But some examples of things they do are: giving technical talks, writing documentation & tutorials, organising developer events, recording video tutorials. It might also include things like improving the onboarding experience.
The role exists because developers working on the codebase are busy and tend not to want to spend a lot of time doing external facing work and marketing teams usually don't have the technical knowledge required.
It's been around since the 1980s in some form but has been growing steadily in the last 10 years or so. |
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Aside from giving talks and maybe event organization, the rest of those functions (docs, tutorials) already have roles.
The more naked truth is here:
> marketing teams usually don't have the technical knowledge required
DevRel is marketing that targets developers. They do all the things marketers do: drive adoption, control perception, pressure product teams in customer orgs, and drive product-market fit.
Just like marketers try to build champions in C-suites and pursestring-holders for sales to use to land and expand, devrel builds champions on dev teams in orgs where devs have more control or influence over budgets.