|
|
|
|
|
by tinco
652 days ago
|
|
It's likely not even going to be a conscious or intentional choice. At some point your enterprise customers are going to have enough bugs and feature requests to keep you busy full time, and your open source project might languish unless you make a conscious effort to dedicate a percentage of your time on it. Ironically as some companies have already started noticing, when you stop being able to market your product as open source the start of the funnel will start to dry up. The start of the funnel is often not monitored, and the sales might even continue going up as your successful open source users go to enterprise. By the time you realise the funnel has dried up it might already be too late to turn back as competitors have filled the void you left. |
|