building an open source consulting company

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Lessons learned from a successful open source consulting company. This talk is geared towards the open source developer who is considering starting his/her own business, and the entrepreneur who wants to grow the business by leveraging open source development methodologies.

TRANSCRIPT

Building an open sourceconsulting company

Nate Aunewww.jazkarta.com

Open Source Bridge ConferencePortland, ORJune 17, 2009

1

/me

• First experience with Linux in 1994

• Founded Jazkarta in 2004 in Boston

• Now 3 full-time staff and 10 subcontractors

• Specialize in Plone and Python

2

Topics for exploration

• Marketing

• Pricing

• Contracts

• Project Management

• Services

• Recruiting

• Finances

• Open Source citizen

• your topics?

3

Marketing

4

Marketing & getting work

• Speaking

• Blogging

• Sponsoring

• User group / consultants group

• Networking

5

Pricing

6

Pricing / rates

• How much do you want to make?

• What are your costs?

• What will the market bear?

7

$100,000 / yr$100,000/yr % 50 wks/yr % 20 hrs/wk

=

$100/hr

8

Costs of doing business(overhead)

• Self-employment tax

• Legal fees

• Accounting / bookkeeping

• Office space

• Hardware

• Subcontractors

• Telephone

9

Market rates

• What are your competitors charging?

• How much will your customers pay?

• How does the economy affect your bill rate?

10

When to raise rates?

• When your customers don't blink an eye when you tell them your rate

• When you have more work than you can handle

• When you have an in-demand skill

11

Contracts

12

Contracts

• Get legal advice - don't do it by yourself

• Optional scope contracts

• Tools: EchoSign for digital signatures

13

Traditional vs. Timeboxed

Optional scope contracts:

14

Project management

15

Project management

• Agile is aligned with open source development

• 2 week iterations

• 3 person teams (PM, dev, design)

• Tools: ClueMapper, Google Docs, Dropbox

16

Resource planning

17

Global Team

18

Global team strategies

• Group team members in same or close timezones

• Make sure everyone is on IRC and uses it

• Set up a mailing list for each new project

• Skype calls every week to touch base

• Issue tracker (ClueMapper/Trac)

• Version control (Subversion/Bazaar)

19

Pros/cons of subcontractors

• Pros

• Only pay them when you have work

• Can find top talent, specialists

• Cons

• More expensive

• Can be difficult to retain if not enough work

20

Services

21

Services

• Development

• Training

• Support

• HostingRecurring revenue

22

Training

• Private onsite training

• Public training

• Training as part of a conference

• Online training

23

Support

• Open source = no guarantees

• Retainer = insurance policy

• Keeps the conversation going

• Upsell support before the project is complete

24

Hosting

• Easier to support if on servers you control

• Distribute benefits across all customers

• Upselling opportunities

• Steady source of recurring revenue

25

Recruiting

26

Recruiting

• Read blogs

• Attend sprints

• Elastic staff

• User groups

• Internships

27

Finances

28

Finances

• Get a good bookkeeper

• Seek next project while still on first project

• Find sponsors to fund open source dev

• Tools: Quickbooks

29

Open source citizen

30

Open source citizen

• writing documentation

• contributing code

• serving on board

• sponsoring sprints

• organizing user group

31

Thanks! Questions?32

Stay in touch

• Email: natea (at) jazkarta (dot) com

• Twitter: twitter.com/natea

• Blog: blog.jazkarta.com

• IRC: irc.freenode.net/natea

33

Books & Resources

• e-Myth Revisited by Michael Gerber

• Manage It! by Johanna Rothman

• Ship It! by Richardson/Gwaltney

• Art of Agile Development by Shore & Walden

• Making Things Happen by Scott Berkun

• Computer Consultant's Guide by Janet Ruhl

34

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