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Software Engineer - Red Gate Software
Published
Wednesday, August 27, 2008 6:59 PM
I’ve been looking around, off and on, for a decent piece
of test management software to replace the current piece of junk software
that we use. This has involved visiting lots of ISV websites which
have, frankly, made me miserable and ill-tempered. I'm starting to think that such a wondrous piece of software doesn't exist, but along the way I have compiled this list of nine top tips to help you
people (ISVs) get it right, and which will help to persuade me to part with my cold, hard cash.
- Get
your Google search ranking sorted out. I use Google to search: I don’t use
Yahoo, or MSN LiveSearch (or whatever it’s called), or AltaVista, or that
new ex-google-employee pretender to the throne (cuil?), because it’s crap.
I probably would use cuil if the search results were better because I
quite like the idea, but for now, no. Now some of those others have quite
a lot of market share, but I use Google, which has the most, so you should
probably make sure you’re appearing towards the top of the search rankings
there. Admittedly, by the standards of many internet users I’m remarkably
patient in that I’ll go through three or four pages of search results
before I give up, however, if you don’t appear on page 1 I’m going to
assume your product isn’t great before I even visit your website. There’s
a chance you’re doing yourself a huge injustice here… although from what
I’ve seen of test management tools, and the companies that make them, I seriously
doubt it.
- For
crying out loud put some bloody screenshots of the product on your
website. Seriously. Hardly anybody does this and it baffles me. Is it
because you’re too lazy, or are the products so butt ugly that you’re
just embarrassed to subject them to the scrutiny of the world at large? I
don’t want to have to download and install your product (assuming I even
can, but I’m getting ahead of myself here) to find out what it looks like.
Get this though, I don’t expect it to be a work of art necessarily
(although pretty is nice), but I
do expect it to look professional and like it might do what I want. Screenshots aren't the whole picture, and can be misleading, but they're a helpful extra layer of filtering. I
admit that we (Red Gate) are not great at putting product screenshots on our
website—somebody even wailed on me, quite justifiably, for not posting or
linking to any screenshots in one of my previous posts, which I duly corrected. Generally we show
one or two shots, but we’ve never done the gallery thing (IMO we should). Sure there
are videos, and they do include a demo of the software, but when you’re looking to get an overview of what’s out
there in terms of a particular type of product, and you're looking at ten different companies, it’s just nice to be able
to click on a link and see a whole load of thumbnail screenshots that you
can zoom in on; much quicker than watching videos. If it’s hard to get a
glimpse of your software I’m going to assume it’s because it’s both ugly
and crappy.
- Do not make me sign up to anything, or
fill out any big forms, or ask to call me, just so's I can see a demo of
your product. All you're doing is putting up barriers that make it less
likely I’m ever going to try your product, let alone spend any money with you. Put a video, or even a
series of videos, on your website instead. If every OAP and their yappy
little highland terrier can work out how to post videos on YouTube it
ought not to be beyond the wit of a bunch of so-called software companies
to put some demo videos of their products on their websites. Come on kids,
it’s not rocket science.
- If
you do post up videos then make sure there’s actually a demo in there
somewhere, and it’s not just a Powerpoint presentation with some gormless
charisma vacuum pontificating on your philosophy of X, where X in this case
is software test management. I don’t mind a bit of background at the
beginning and a conclusion at the end, but I do expect you to get down and
dirty with the software in there.
- If
you post videos in multiple formats, make sure they all work. This is
particularly poignant when you’re looking at test management software. If
your website doesn’t work properly this does not bode well.
- It
is not the year 2002. Internet Explorer market share is not 97%. It’s
never likely to be 97% again. Nowadays, depending upon who you ask, it’s
around 80% (and that might be a bit on the high side), and there are more people
than ever on the web, so that 20% that don’t use it adds up to an awful
lot of people. Geeks, who if you market test management software are
likely a good chunk your target market, even if they have transmogrified
into managers, are over-represented in that 20%. Please make sure your website works properly in all major
browsers. And yes, I use Firefox.
- Don’t
stop me from downloading your product. I don’t mind having to fill out a really short form, or one with lots of optional fields, and I don't mind captchas, but don’t
constantly hound me afterwards, and definitely don’t make me talk to a
sales person before I can even download your software. I just don’t want
to. Not before I've even tried it. At this point I’m about a million miles away from making any kind of
purchase, and more than that, your sales pitch isn’t going to be able to
persuade me to do so anyway: if I buy anything at all it will be on the
basis of how well your software works and whether it fulfils my needs. Now
I know how this goes; you’re trying to sell to senior types, VPs and the
like, people who will never actually have to use your software. You’re probably not that interested in
lowly Project Managers and the like, and on the face of it this looks like
a good ploy. But think about it like this: as I wend my way merrily up the
corporate ladder, do you think I’m going to have more time, or less time?
Do you think I’m going to have more patience, or less patience with this
kind of guff? Exactly.
- It’s
probably better if your website doesn’t look like it was designed
somewhere behind the iron curtain, in the mid-80s. Again, a work of art
isn’t necessary, but clean and professional is. And for goodness sake,
drop the Times New Roman: it makes it look like it was designed
by my gran. Sans serif fonts are the order of the day, both cleaner
looking and easier to read. It takes about two minutes to knock up a style
sheet that will banish all traces of Times New Roman from your site
forever, which’ll be two minutes well spent believe me. And what's with all the dowdy colours? It doesn't have to look like the Merry Pranksters' schoolbus, but—I mean are you scared you'll die or something if you use a bright, cheerful colour here and there?
- Finally,
make sure your software isn’t crap. It’s so obvious, it shouldn’t even
need saying, but… well, clearly it does. I mean just look around. There’s
plenty of great software out there, but there’s also this overwhelming
torrent of gashware—not malware, I mean stuff that is actually supposed to
be useful but isn’t—that you have to wade through sometimes in
order to find it. It’s a side-effect of the low cost of failure, as pointed out by Cory Doctorow: there’s
more good stuff, but there’s also more crud, however if you actually want to
have a successful piece of software it needs to be good.
And that’s it. If you do the above there’s a chance I might
spend some money with you, and if you don’t there’s virtually no chance
whatsoever, which doesn’t bother me in the slightest, because there’s someone
out there who will be doing it and it’ll be them that gets my money and not you.
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About Bart Read
I've had a few jobs since graduating, but for the last four years I've been settled at Red Gate Software in Cambridge, UK. Over that time I've worked on a wide range of products, both as a developer and as a project manager, including 18 months on SQL Prompt; right now I'm finishing up with ANTS Profiler 4, which we think is going to be amazing - hopefully you will too.
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