Making rev share & partnerships work between marketers and developerss

Marketers are also in love with computers and they work really hard to up-sell and generate sales for the products.
 


I'm a programmer and if a customer told me hey I want X feature why wouldn't I add it? Only an extremely narcissistic person would say "It's perfect, because I wrote it and you're stupid if you can't see that.".

It's never that black and white though. When you have hundreds or thousands of people using your software, each with their own ideas / needs, many of who love giving feedback, you have to say no sometimes. Don't get me wrong, feedback is amazing, and is what turns a good software product into a great one, without question.

However, you can't just add every feature requested, or else you end up with a bloated piece of junk with a huge learning curve that nobody wants to use. You have to find that fine line between functionality and user-friendliness.
 
Thanks for the input lwbco.

QFT
but the quality of code, the quality of this commodity people here seem so pleased to underpay for, is a lurking factor in the long-term-sustainability of any project.
talking about mcdonalds code like it does the same job as homecooked steakandpotatoes code. i'll be personally performing your colonoscopies someday soon, i can already tell you it's not pretty.
 
deleted, didn't feel like getting funky on wf today, i have other shit to do. you can leave those quotes up ;)
 
I'm glad I got to read it before you retracted. It was an honest view that hit on just about everything I had inquired. Again, thank you
 
It's never that black and white though. When you have hundreds or thousands of people using your software, each with their own ideas / needs, many of who love giving feedback, you have to say no sometimes. Don't get me wrong, feedback is amazing, and is what turns a good software product into a great one, without question.

However, you can't just add every feature requested, or else you end up with a bloated piece of junk with a huge learning curve that nobody wants to use. You have to find that fine line between functionality and user-friendliness.

Of course you can't make everyone happy and you have to prioritize what you're able to do, but I was really referring to wayn3s comment.

Turns out customers think feature X blows hard, but theyd love to have feature Y instead. Now your developer goes mental because customers are "stupid" and "just dont get how beautiful the product is". He wont make the necessary changes and doesnt allow you to hire someone else.
 
You can find good programmers at $15/hr and up. Great programmers at $25/hr and up.

You cannot find good marketers that value their time anywhere near $25/hr. There is a reason for this.

I'd love to see some code from your "great" developer at $25/hour.

A software developer is the same spectrum as say an architect. There's architects struggling to pay the $300/month rent, and there's architects raking in millions, designing the latest skyscraper or tourist resort. That same spectrum applies to software development.
 
I know developers who charge $25 an hour. I know developers who charge $160 an hour. And I know developers who work for the man making $16 an hour.

It really boils down to experience and self worth.
 
* If your developer doesn't make most of his money from developing, then he's probably not the right guy for the developer job.

* If your developer doesn't have any of his past projects in production, then he's probably not the right guy for your developer job.

* If your developer has more time on open source contributions than commercial products in the last 3 months, he's probably not the right guy for the developer job.

* If your developer misses a deadline and doesn't contact you within 24 hours, he is not the right guy for the developer job.

* If your developer drinks or does drugs a lot, he is probably not the right guy for your developer job. Sober people always produce better code. ALWAYS.
 
what it comes down to is that you should pick your partners wisely. if theres this great programmer who is also a great guy and a killer sales person who understands business way better than you do, youd shoot yourself in the foot if you wouldnt partner with him.
...snip
Soooo...
If I am all this, why should I partner with an asshole marketer who thinks he us the best thing since sliced bread and programmers are shit?

::emp::
 
Soooo...
If I am all this, why should I partner with an asshole marketer who thinks he us the best thing since sliced bread and programmers are shit?

::emp::

Cant you answer that question yourself? You obviously shouldnt. I dont get this obsession with marketing anyway. There are about a million marketing degrees a year world wide. marketing is easy. it doesnt do shit. the only reason people on this forum have a hard time being a "marketer" is because theyre really trying to be conmen. a more correct name for affiliate marketing would be affiliate hitting the sweet spot breaking enough laws to make a quick buck but not getting caught.

if you have a solid product, just put it on reddit. will take care of itself for the most part. or put it on pinterest. whichever platform it is that your target audience frequences. wont make you millions but who around here really makes millions? thats a pipedream which will never come true. the only person right now who really makes that much money is danke, and hes not a even the part of marketer youre trying to be. he owns the products.

the point i was originally trying to make was that a developer rarely has the capital to invest any of the funds the thread starter was talking about. for that reason only, he doesnt deserve a majority share in the company. does he need someone equally inept to partner with who claims to be a marketer? in my opinion, thats just magnificent failure waiting to happen.

affiliate marketers arent marketers. marketers are the hobos who lurk around at highly frequented public places asking stupid questions. affiliate marketers arent entrepreneurs. theyve got nothing proprietary. their biggest fear is the offer going down, and if that happens, they dont even get noticed. networks dont have technology in place that triggers some kind of signal that affiliate marketers could use to automatically suspend their campaigns. thats how highly the networks think of their marketers. theyre breadcrumbs. affiliate marketers have some vague sense of demographics. but thats not difficult to acquire information. i was a member of imgrind for a month or two, and these are probably somewhere at least reasonably high on the affiliate marketing foodchain, and what it comes down to acquiring that sophisticated affiliate marketing intelligence that only a seasoned veteran has is "oh yea you just need to test that. in general, x is slightly better than y, but just use a couple hundred bucks to acquire the data". any hobo with a couple hundred bucks can do that.

it probably serves a couple guys well, but do yourself a favor and quit calling yourself marketers. or entrepreneurs. or running a business. youre ruthless scam "artists" with no conscience. if thats the life you wanna live, i dont have a problem with that. but you should be aware of that. for your own sake. :xomunch:
 
The only reason you would wanna do equity-share is if you don't have money of your own to pay your programmers salary. If that's the case, then I would suggest splitting the profit 70/30 until the programmer's salary is paid in full, and then do a 50/50 split moving forward. Or even you 70, and programmers 30, depending on how much money your business is bringing in after the launch.

Whatever your decision is, you must have control. Unless of course, you're just scamming him to work for free.
 
if you have a solid product, just put it on reddit. will take care of itself for the most part. or put it on pinterest. whichever platform it is that your target audience frequences.

So after slamming developers, this is your big advice? Put it on reddit or pinterest? Fuck me...

If I was still contracting, you're one of those clients I would fire within 48 hours. Just refund the deposit, and tell you you're better off looking elsewhere.

You obviously have no clue what you're talking about, and have never headed up any large development projects. Because if you had, you'd be singing a different tune.
 
This is just my thought on it from some experience I've had ...

It wasn't with developers persay, but more with partners. Joint ventures.

Total worth of the project was under 50k, so I can't say I've worked on 'huge development projects' or anything of the sort.

But I always find people work better when they're properly compensated.

I strive to make the compensation equal.

50/50 split ... regardless of how much work each party has to put in.

Mainly because if you're partnering with someone, you're bringing completely different skill sets to the table.

And I feel by making a 50/50 split, you both start to focus on making the PIE bigger instead of your piece (this works if there's more people as well ofc).

That's not to say that's some sort of golden rule or something.

But I really find the best and most fruitiful relationships I've had on any joint venture projects, were an even split.

Even when I was doing 95% of the work, I was happy to give my partner his 50% cut ... why?

Because I knew without him there would be 0% of work to do. Since it was his skillset which made it possible in the first place.

It's something along the lines of inter-dependance instead of in-dependance.

But like I said before ... I never headed any huge development projects ... I'm just talking about motivating people to not just do the work, but keep on doing it and working with you to make the pie bigger.

I think part of the solution to that, is giving them equal ownership within the project, getting them past the personal problem of "whats in it for me" on the % level, and instead focusing on improving the project to generate more cash for themselves (and subsequently everyone else involved).