Community Summit
“The Open Source Software Value Chain”
Paris Open Source Summit 2016
November 16-17
Our Speakers Today Simon Phipps, Public Software
Gaël Blondelle, Eclipse
Deborah Bryant, Red Hat
Sophie Gautier, LibreOffice
Jean Baptiste Kempf, VideoLabs
Frederic Aatz, Microsoft
Karen Sandler, Software Freedom
Conservancy
Cedric Thomas (OW2)
Questions
What are the specifics of the OSS production line?
What are its key constituents?
Are open source communities only about technology and ethics
or are they also market players?
What are the different aspects of communities engagement with
market forces?
How do they, or can they ensure they deliver market-ready
software?
What is “market-readiness”?
Is “OSS product” an oxymoron?
What are the specifics of open source product marketing?
What are the best practices that ensure OSS market adoption?
What end-users should know in order to define C-level open
source strategies?
What are the dirty little secrets of the open source software
production line?
The Value Chain
https://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C3%A6rdik%C3%A6de
The Open Source Value Chain
https://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C3%A6rdik%C3%A6de
Contributors
Distrib. Vendors
Open Source Orgs.
Fiduciaries
Users
Systems Integrators
Why this is relevant “Open source software has won”
Enters the conventional manager
Commercial benchmark
New reference point for OSS
Market readiness matters
https://www.wired.com/2016/08/open-source-won-now/
http://www.zdnet.com/article/linux-and-open-source-have-won-get-over-it/
https://www.oreilly.com/ideas/open-source-won-so-whats-next
Nov 16, 2016 72016, Cedric Thomas
Project categories
Code to product
Supporting the value chain
OSS projects and
the value chain
Nov 16, 2016 82016, Cedric Thomas
Community projects
Nov 16, 2016 92016, Cedric Thomas
Enterprise projects
Nov 16, 2016 102016, Cedric Thomas
Collaborative projects
Nov 16, 2016 112016, Cedric Thomas
Software is Code
Nov 16, 2016 122016, Cedric Thomas
What is a Software Product?
Developer Customer
* When you want to sell it or do business with it, then it becomes a product
Nov 16, 2016 132016, Cedric Thomas
What makes a Software Product?
Developer Customer
Documentation
Upgrades
Roadmap Training Etc.
Pricing Contracts Support Expertise
Packaging
* It's not just code anymore, it's the whole value proposition
142016, Cedric Thomas
Research &
Development
Code
POCs
Use-cases
Demonstrators
Documentation
Roadmap
Upgrades
Bug-fixing
Training
Support
Packaging
Casestudies
Collateral
Pricing
Contracts
Earlyadopters
Etc.
Predictability
Quality
Trust
Without the code, the rest does not exist,but
it's the rest that gives market value to the
code
Delivery
Challenge
What creates value?
Market Value
152016, Cedric Thomas
Research &
Development
Code
POCs
Use-cases
Demonstrators
Documentation
Roadmap
Upgrades
Bug-fixing
Training
Support
Packaging
Casestudies
Collateral
Pricing
Contracts
Earlyadopters
Etc.
Predictability
Quality
Trust
OW2 is an ecosystem platform that helps
create value with open source projects
Delivery
Challenge
Market Value
Who creates value?
The ecosystem
Contributors
Distrib. Vendors
Open Source Orgs.
Fiduciary Services Users
Systems Integrators
162016, Cedric Thomas
Research &
Development
Code
POCs
Use-cases
Demonstrators
Documentation
Roadmap
Upgrades
Bug-fixing
Training
Support
Packaging
Casestudies
Collateral
Pricing
Contracts
Earlyadopters
Etc.
Predictability
Quality
Trust
OW2 is an ecosystem platform that helps
create value with open source projects
Delivery
ChallengeCollaborative Development Technical Resources
Governance, Projects, Initiatives, Quality Program
Communication, Outreach, Marketplace
OSCAR
Market Value
Supporting value creation
172016, Cedric Thomas
Code in the value chain
Ecosystems delivery
Open source governance
IT industry support
The Lessons
182016, Cedric Thomas
Code is only a fraction of
the software value chain
It's the whole value chain that
creates market-ready offerings.
Users want a full business proposal,
not just bare code.
Decision-makers expect market-
ready offerings.
i.e. code complemented by:
packaging, services, training,
maintenance, support, etc.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ford_assembly_line_-_1913.jpg
192016, Cedric Thomas
Collaborative
development does not
deliver market-ready
offerings.
Ecosystems are expected to deliver
agreed-upon technologies,
roadmaps, reference
implementations, POCs and
components.
Open source developers natural
bias is to concentrate on core code
functionalities.
Code is the soul of free and open
source projects.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eiffel_Tower
202016, Cedric Thomas
Successful collaborative
projects implement
flawless open source
governance.
Open source governance best
practices help build sustainable
communities.
Code complementers more likely to
contribute to trustworthy OSS
projects.
Non-Profit open source
organizations provide neutral support
and sustainability.
https://pixabay.com/en/hammer-court-judge-justice-law-1707729/
212016, Cedric Thomas
Successful open source
projects are supported
by IT companies.
Corporate support ensures
roadmap consistency and long-term
sustainability.
Corporate support develops
industry-grade distributions and
market-ready offerings.
Corporate support helps grow
market outreach, sign-up early
adopters and provide use cases for
mainstream market.
222016, Cedric Thomas
Beyond Enterprise Software
An Ecosystem Platform
The 1% Industry?
Fostering the Open
Source Model
232016, Cedric Thomas
Beyond Enterprise
Software
The pervasiveness of the open
source model
Propagated with the software
defined everything paradigm
Open source in the Data Center
Open source in Scientific
Computing
Open source in
Telecommunications → 5G
Open source in IoT
242016, Cedric Thomas
Dependencies and exit
costs influence the game
Software: agile, volatile, with low
exit cost and quick ROI cycle (low
dependencies)
Telecommunication: runs on long
incubation and ROI cycles with high
investments and high exit costs (high
dependencies)
IoT:
Tangible assets, manufacturing,
inventory and provisioning
contingencies
Increasingly programmable (i.e.
software defined)
252016, Cedric Thomas
Professional Ecosystem
Platforms
Provide support to open source
ecosystems
Technical infrastructure:
Development and Quality tools
Transparent governance: Brand
and IP protection, Fiduciary services
Market outreach: Brand and Event
management, Marketplace
Independent and non-profit
OW2 is an ecosystem platform
Marketing and Communication Services
Community Services
Technical Infrastructure Services
Users Producers
Use/Integrate
ContributeFeedback
Re-use
262016, Cedric Thomas
The 1% Industry? Multi-ecosystem players
Dominant positions in several
ecosystems
IBM, Intel, HP, Huawei, etc.
Single-ecosystem players
Significant investment and
commitment in selected ecosystem
Rackspace in OpenStack, Bosch in
Eclipse
Niche players
Contributors (sometimes,
temporarily key) and followers in
single-ecosystem strategies
Mirantis, Docker, Obeo, etc.
27
www.ow2.org
For more details please contact Cedric Thomas, OW2 CEO, cedric.thomas@ow2.org
And now let's talk
Q&A
Disagreements
Complements
Feedback
etc.
Thank You

POSS2016Nov16-The Open Source Software Value Chain

  • 1.
    Community Summit “The OpenSource Software Value Chain” Paris Open Source Summit 2016 November 16-17
  • 2.
    Our Speakers TodaySimon Phipps, Public Software Gaël Blondelle, Eclipse Deborah Bryant, Red Hat Sophie Gautier, LibreOffice Jean Baptiste Kempf, VideoLabs Frederic Aatz, Microsoft Karen Sandler, Software Freedom Conservancy Cedric Thomas (OW2)
  • 3.
    Questions What are thespecifics of the OSS production line? What are its key constituents? Are open source communities only about technology and ethics or are they also market players? What are the different aspects of communities engagement with market forces? How do they, or can they ensure they deliver market-ready software? What is “market-readiness”? Is “OSS product” an oxymoron? What are the specifics of open source product marketing? What are the best practices that ensure OSS market adoption? What end-users should know in order to define C-level open source strategies? What are the dirty little secrets of the open source software production line?
  • 4.
  • 5.
    The Open SourceValue Chain https://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C3%A6rdik%C3%A6de Contributors Distrib. Vendors Open Source Orgs. Fiduciaries Users Systems Integrators
  • 6.
    Why this isrelevant “Open source software has won” Enters the conventional manager Commercial benchmark New reference point for OSS Market readiness matters https://www.wired.com/2016/08/open-source-won-now/ http://www.zdnet.com/article/linux-and-open-source-have-won-get-over-it/ https://www.oreilly.com/ideas/open-source-won-so-whats-next
  • 7.
    Nov 16, 201672016, Cedric Thomas Project categories Code to product Supporting the value chain OSS projects and the value chain
  • 8.
    Nov 16, 201682016, Cedric Thomas Community projects
  • 9.
    Nov 16, 201692016, Cedric Thomas Enterprise projects
  • 10.
    Nov 16, 2016102016, Cedric Thomas Collaborative projects
  • 11.
    Nov 16, 2016112016, Cedric Thomas Software is Code
  • 12.
    Nov 16, 2016122016, Cedric Thomas What is a Software Product? Developer Customer * When you want to sell it or do business with it, then it becomes a product
  • 13.
    Nov 16, 2016132016, Cedric Thomas What makes a Software Product? Developer Customer Documentation Upgrades Roadmap Training Etc. Pricing Contracts Support Expertise Packaging * It's not just code anymore, it's the whole value proposition
  • 14.
    142016, Cedric Thomas Research& Development Code POCs Use-cases Demonstrators Documentation Roadmap Upgrades Bug-fixing Training Support Packaging Casestudies Collateral Pricing Contracts Earlyadopters Etc. Predictability Quality Trust Without the code, the rest does not exist,but it's the rest that gives market value to the code Delivery Challenge What creates value? Market Value
  • 15.
    152016, Cedric Thomas Research& Development Code POCs Use-cases Demonstrators Documentation Roadmap Upgrades Bug-fixing Training Support Packaging Casestudies Collateral Pricing Contracts Earlyadopters Etc. Predictability Quality Trust OW2 is an ecosystem platform that helps create value with open source projects Delivery Challenge Market Value Who creates value? The ecosystem Contributors Distrib. Vendors Open Source Orgs. Fiduciary Services Users Systems Integrators
  • 16.
    162016, Cedric Thomas Research& Development Code POCs Use-cases Demonstrators Documentation Roadmap Upgrades Bug-fixing Training Support Packaging Casestudies Collateral Pricing Contracts Earlyadopters Etc. Predictability Quality Trust OW2 is an ecosystem platform that helps create value with open source projects Delivery ChallengeCollaborative Development Technical Resources Governance, Projects, Initiatives, Quality Program Communication, Outreach, Marketplace OSCAR Market Value Supporting value creation
  • 17.
    172016, Cedric Thomas Codein the value chain Ecosystems delivery Open source governance IT industry support The Lessons
  • 18.
    182016, Cedric Thomas Codeis only a fraction of the software value chain It's the whole value chain that creates market-ready offerings. Users want a full business proposal, not just bare code. Decision-makers expect market- ready offerings. i.e. code complemented by: packaging, services, training, maintenance, support, etc. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ford_assembly_line_-_1913.jpg
  • 19.
    192016, Cedric Thomas Collaborative developmentdoes not deliver market-ready offerings. Ecosystems are expected to deliver agreed-upon technologies, roadmaps, reference implementations, POCs and components. Open source developers natural bias is to concentrate on core code functionalities. Code is the soul of free and open source projects. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eiffel_Tower
  • 20.
    202016, Cedric Thomas Successfulcollaborative projects implement flawless open source governance. Open source governance best practices help build sustainable communities. Code complementers more likely to contribute to trustworthy OSS projects. Non-Profit open source organizations provide neutral support and sustainability. https://pixabay.com/en/hammer-court-judge-justice-law-1707729/
  • 21.
    212016, Cedric Thomas Successfulopen source projects are supported by IT companies. Corporate support ensures roadmap consistency and long-term sustainability. Corporate support develops industry-grade distributions and market-ready offerings. Corporate support helps grow market outreach, sign-up early adopters and provide use cases for mainstream market.
  • 22.
    222016, Cedric Thomas BeyondEnterprise Software An Ecosystem Platform The 1% Industry? Fostering the Open Source Model
  • 23.
    232016, Cedric Thomas BeyondEnterprise Software The pervasiveness of the open source model Propagated with the software defined everything paradigm Open source in the Data Center Open source in Scientific Computing Open source in Telecommunications → 5G Open source in IoT
  • 24.
    242016, Cedric Thomas Dependenciesand exit costs influence the game Software: agile, volatile, with low exit cost and quick ROI cycle (low dependencies) Telecommunication: runs on long incubation and ROI cycles with high investments and high exit costs (high dependencies) IoT: Tangible assets, manufacturing, inventory and provisioning contingencies Increasingly programmable (i.e. software defined)
  • 25.
    252016, Cedric Thomas ProfessionalEcosystem Platforms Provide support to open source ecosystems Technical infrastructure: Development and Quality tools Transparent governance: Brand and IP protection, Fiduciary services Market outreach: Brand and Event management, Marketplace Independent and non-profit OW2 is an ecosystem platform Marketing and Communication Services Community Services Technical Infrastructure Services Users Producers Use/Integrate ContributeFeedback Re-use
  • 26.
    262016, Cedric Thomas The1% Industry? Multi-ecosystem players Dominant positions in several ecosystems IBM, Intel, HP, Huawei, etc. Single-ecosystem players Significant investment and commitment in selected ecosystem Rackspace in OpenStack, Bosch in Eclipse Niche players Contributors (sometimes, temporarily key) and followers in single-ecosystem strategies Mirantis, Docker, Obeo, etc.
  • 27.
    27 www.ow2.org For more detailsplease contact Cedric Thomas, OW2 CEO, cedric.thomas@ow2.org And now let's talk Q&A Disagreements Complements Feedback etc. Thank You