| You are saying that monetizing software is not particularly different than other things. I"m saying one difference is that lots of other things have a bigger market in which to operate. It is easier in a big market to get a small slice of the pie and be okay.
(it may not be easy to get the slice, but once you do, it's enough). In developer tools, getting that small slice will still not be enough to be okay. In other words, it is different from other fields - you say "there is an endless supply of businesses/orgs for which for which it is almost an insurmountable obstacle to get them to acknowledge something that they could be doing to better serve their own self-interests and then get their approval to take appropriate action." That's true, but in other fields, to have a viable business, you don't have to get as many of these folks + whoever is left, to be successful enough. In developer tools, you do, because the overall market is worth a lot less, and so are individual customers. |
(I had a whole paragraph about how selling developer tooling to developers is hard, but that doesn't account for all software markets. I took it out, because it made the post too long and was already belaboring a point that was out of scope. I maintain that there are circumstances where selling software to SMBs is way easier than what's on the other side of the fence. Consider: developing a payments app for coin-operated laundromats that allows them to issue credits for people who want to pay with a card instead of quarters vs the business comprising the laundromat itself. The laundromat has geographical constraints that just don't apply to the app developer—who can sell as many copies as they're able to to anyone pretty much anywhere. They can also rip out a huge chunk and repurpose it for a different type of payments app that has nothing to do with laundromats—and the app can be shitty, like most enterprise software, because the laundromat owner is not the user and is only thinking about the fact that the app enables something now that was not possible before. In contrast, the laundromat itself is affected by not just whether there are enough people in the city to carry the business forward, but the specific location within the city where the laundromat is placed.)