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Paul P Magee

Very, very interesting Sig. For me, in this similar situation, where the plan you described above is make or break is in the marketing of this platform to the hoards of unknown businesses who might use it.

Last week we were discussing getting peoples attention on the very same page - reticular activating system or simply 'pricking up of the ears' getting people to see your generic platform as the place to solve their specific problem is no easy task.

The guy who is looking for a solution to his hospital problems has "pricking up of the ears" when he hears 'Hospital Software' not 'Generic platform'

You could wave a generic platform in front of his face for a very long time and he may not see it.

Until...

You are able to communicate enough examples of your product, through enough stories / metaphors for the guy in the hospital to say - "hey, that's not far removed from the model of a hospital, I wonder if..."

I have not yet worked out what the solution is for my own software, but I am working on something in between generic and specific examples.

Not - "Software for Hospitals"
or "Software for anyone"
but "Software for organisations *like* Hospitals"

(alongside lots of other *like* examples)

Maybe this approach could also help smooth the path with investors. They get their specific examples and also a free stepping stone to unknown additional potential?

I am starting to think that sometimes we have to hide the radical idea inside a more easily digested one to move forwards. Or at least serve it alongside.

Being radical can be a huge hindrance in making progress. It's only *after* your ideas are accepted as self evident you get to bask in being called the great radical genius inventor :)


sig

Paul,

agree totally - although have this little nagging idea that there is a "fine" line to balance somewhere, lemme try some examples:

Lego: Delivers sets with instructions to build a specific model, simple too extremely complicated. When my kids were really young I saw them follow the instructions to get to finished model. But soon they ripped them apart and built freely - what I saw was a real good pedagogic system in action, learning the mechanism of the system by building something defined, but when they had that under the skin the real fun started.

Spreadsheets: When I first got my hands on Visicalc I had seen a pro forma P&L / Balance Sheet / Cash-flow output by some big bank system and rebuilt that in a snippet (no template in the spreadsheet mind you!) and never stopped since.

Accounting software: Quicken, Moneydance, Gnucash - been at'em all and never ever started with a template, saw the mere building of my accounts from bottom up as a grand opportunity to rethink / remodel.

So I wonder if not ease to "build" (as in utilise the platform) is where the total focus must be as real life presents so many ready examples anyway. I.e if the "platform" is as easy as a spreadsheet / Lego system then the urge to model something real would be enough...

Not sure though, but slightly drifting in that direction.

Paul P Magee

I suspect that there is much learning to be gained from studying the evolution of Ruby On Rails.

Observing how the various channels are adopting and marketing ROR as a tool to build better apps is sure to raise more relevant insights.

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