Site icon RunSignup Blog

Founders Corner – Open

Founder's Corner

Today’s topic on Founders Corner is about having an Open strategy to technology and business. Like other topics, this is one of the foundational elements of our strategy at RunSignup. In fact, one of the reasons I wanted to create the company was the closed business and technology approach registration vendors were taking – and to a large extent still are. Our open approach has been a pretty big reason for our success, so let me give some background and details on our open approach.

Open Influences

There are several primary influences to the idea of being open. Like many, I was influenced originally by my parents to culturally tell the truth and to be open and trusting of others. This concept of open really clicked for me in the 1990’s with Open Source.

Open Source started as a way to develop software, where anyone else can see the actual source code to a program, and then use that software however they wanted. The concept was popular years before that with UNIX (Linux is the primary derivative of that today and drives most of the Internet). The 90’s saw the emergence of the Web and the Apache Software Foundation – with the Apache webserver and a number of other great projects. Java was another key technology that had an open source foundation that spurred many related projects.

There were a couple of key observations that I learned from this:

I’ve worked with a number of open source pioneers, and have been a part of a number of successful open source based companies. JBoss was the first open source company I worked at starting in 2002. We were able to grow from 6 people to over 200 people and Red Hat acquired us for $350M by 2006. There is no way we could have grown so fast without an open source foundation. Most recently, I have been a part of CloudBees, which is the company behind the Jenkins open source project. Jenkins runs on literally millions of servers across the globe, and CloudBees now has over 500 people. Again, there is no way we could have had that success without an open source based strategy.

Open Concepts for RunSignup

Things have changed since the 90’s, and our customers aren’t really interested in the source code. But there were a number of concepts we embraced:

All of these open elements help to create an open community that is much larger than our company and employees. Our customers and partners can also are ambassadors that help to continue to expand the community, which in turn help provide the resources to continue to expand what we can offer customers. By being so open, we build trust and strong relationships that help us all.

Exit mobile version