Meet the new members of the Jama community.

Jama’s “You try. We give.” program.  Meet the Kiva loan recipients.

- Tiv Socheat - mother of 2 and chicken farmer in Cambodia
- Elida Angelica Ruiz Cardenas - mother and fish retailer in Peru
- Eliseo Canales - pineapple and dragon fruit farmer in Nicaragua
- Rosemary Rushagara - mother of 4, caretaker of orphaned kids from HIV and store owner in Tanzania
- Nguyen Thi Ngat -daycare provider and educator in Vietnam

"You try. We give." program

and several others…

Who are they? They aren’t customers, employees or partners. They are the first of the Kiva.org loan recipients that we’ve sponsored through our “You try. We give.” program.

What started out as a small idea during a team meeting in February has blossomed into an ongoing program that reflects our corporate values and commitment to giving back on behalf of our customers, partners and other members of our community. For every customer that trials Contour, our collaborative requirements management software, we set aside marketing dollars to donate for loans that help Kiva.org recipients improve their own communities.

We chose Kiva.org because they embody a few fundamental principles that we share:

1. a belief that the entrepreneurial spirit lives in everyone
2. thousands of micro-actions that create a cumulative macro-effect
3. taking a collaborative, Web-based approach to solving a problem
4. an open, global community of people working together for greater success

View our lender page on Kiva: http://kiva.org/lender/jamasoftware

We’re still a young company with limited funds, so as we grow, this program will grow too. We look forward to introducing the new Kiva recipients each quarter. Thanks for showing your support by evaluating Contour and enabling us to help more companies succeed with requirements management.

Welcome Stratos Global!

We are extremely excited to welcome Stratos Global, the worldwide leader in truly global communications to the Contour family.

Stratos offers a full range of worldwide products and services from Inmarsat, Iridium and others; end-to-end microwave and VSAT solutions; as well as MarineSat/LandSat services to global organizations who need reliable voice, data and IP communications for mission-critical applications. Don’t know what that means? Either did I before I met the folks at Stratos. Think of it this way, whether you are surfing the web for updates on Hurricane Bertha from the 500 miles off the Florida Keys, or calling your family from the top of Everest, chances are you are using telecommunication products and services from Stratos Global.

With more than a century of service and over 20,000 customers, Stratos is doing things right. And we like partnering with customers that do things right.

Welcome Stratos Global!

Welcome Cadria!

How do you cut through the thousands of messages your audience receives and get yourself noticed? This question is indeed dear to our hearts and one that Cadria is hoping you’ll ask. Although Cadria is not a typical customer for Jama, the meat of how they’re using Contour is really much the same. Marketing agencies like Cadria are experts in creating that certain thing that resonates with your audience.

Managing the complexity, keeping alignment and consistency, and delivering within scope are all things that demand a disciplined process……which demands a tool to manage that process.

I think this statement from Cadria says a mouthful: “Your customers have unprecedented control over how they receive and interact with information and ideas - which means if you give them what they’re looking for when they’re looking for it, you can build deeper, more lasting relationships with them. We understand that to break through the clutter and reach your audience, you need a clear strategy that unites business objectives with an engaging customer experience.” I was employed by WebTrends for 6 years which happens to be one of Cadria’s partners. So it’s not a surprise to me that Contour is a great fit for marketers that go through this process with their clients.

Welcome to our rapidly growing community Cadria!

Welcome SMART Technologies

Canada strikes again!  Now here’s a cool company that is not only incredibly innovative but they also have something very critical - and that is culture.

Every day, organizations around the world are adopting new ways of working and learning together. Successful collaboration and learning requires clear communication of ideas, goals and strategies, whether to others in the same room or across distances. Tools that enable this kind of communication ultimately expand the potential of what students, business people and others can achieve.

SMART Technologies is both the industry pioneer and market-segment leader in easy-to-use interactive whiteboards and other group collaboration tools. Using SMART products, groups can access and share the information they need to meet, teach, train and present regardless of distance. 

Working with SMART Technologies is a perfect fit for Jama because they understand so well how powerful the marriage between innovation and collaboration is.  They are also huge believers in education and community.  Two things that are often undervalued in today’s world.  We are excited to have SMART join the Jama community and they will be a fun company to watch over time as they continue to deliver on their mission.

Here’s a warm Welcome SMART Technologies!

No PhD in pricing required…please!

I just read this CNET blog post by Matt Asay appropriately named CIOs sick of enterprise software pricing” which was his commentary on a report Forrester Research recently published on enterprise software pricing & licensing. The short version can be summed up in one quote from the report, “software licensing and pricing continues to be marred by complexity, soaring maintenance costs, and a lack of flexibility and alignment with business goals.”

The example he gave was that Microsoft’s pricing book is over 100 pages long. Ouch!

It solidified for me that we try to maintain in our pricing strategy and overall company philosophy: keep it simple.  Which I will freely admit is easier said than done.  We just lived through this process internally when we revamped our pricing packages for 2008.  What started as a 2-hour meeting turned into a 3-week project over the holidays to get it right.  The lesson we learned is not to tie yourself in knots over every possible scenario, which I’m sure the bigger you get and the broader your product portfolio and customerbase, the greater the challenge.

We modeled our pricing after a couple of companies we admire – Jive Software (makers of collaboration software) and Atlassian (makers of JIRA). As an example, Jive’s product ClearSpace competes with Microsoft. Now, compare Jive’s pricing page with Microsoft’s 100 page (plus) price book and tell me who do you think will be the easier company to deal with?

While I’m sure most customers are getting tired of complicated pricing – we see it in licensing modDongle Keyels as well.  We’ve had customers get ecstatic simply because our product isn’t “node locked” (tied to the MAC ID of the computer), or doesn’t require a “dongle key” or connect to a license server at startup to be allocated a key.  Who wants to deal with all that?  How many people even know what a dongle key is, and why should they?  You can laugh, but these models that were prevalent during the 80’s and 90’s are still around. It’s like selling someone a beta max player today for home movies and charging them a ton to service it and pinging them extra for every time their friends come over to watch a movie on it (oh, you want to share it with others, oh well that will cost you more).

As we continue to grow, I’m constantly buying new services, software and products for our company and when I’m on the buying side, I’m instantly reminded just how frustrating it can be when things aren’t outlined clearly to me as a customer. Is our pricing model perfect, no. But I will say we’re open to suggestions and are committed to being as open, progressive and fair with our pricing as possible. It’s what we’d want if we were the customer.

The fabric of an innovative company - what’s it take?

What makes a company a great innovator? Is it based on quantifiable measures such as # of patents? # of awards? revenue growth? Or is it fundamentally something less quantifiable and more qualitative, - something you see reflected in the DNA of a company’s culture, the vision of its leadership and the attitudes and passion of its staff?

As a growing start-up ourselves, it’s something we think about each day in how we shape the direction of our company, create our products, and make every day decisions.

There’s a great article that Fast Company wrote profiling W.L. Gore and Associates (the maker of Gore-Tex fabric that as Oregonians we all know very well, and thousands of other products). The article details a few characteristics that we admire and wanted to share here (perfect reading for a Friday afternoon).

Link to article: http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/89/open_gore.html

Even though the article was written in 2004, it’s still incredibly relevant to all the talk and attention you see surrounding “innovation” in today’s business world. Some of these principles seem simple, but it’s amazingly difficult and still rare to see the level of trust, patience and commitment it takes from a company’s leaders to allow for the risk taking, lack of hierarchy and allowed time for breakthrough ideas to fail many times before materializing into commercial success.

That balance between “how do we focus on our short-terms revenue goals” and “how do we allow people to dream up crazy, seemingly completely unrelated products like guitar strings, dental floss and water-proof fabric within the same company”? It’s this balance that takes “innovation” from just a hyper-buzzword to everyday reality for companies like Gore. And, to see that their founder, Bill Gore, and his family had this vision back in the late 50’s is pretty amazing. He didn’t rely on the latest business strategy book du jour, he just based it on a simple premise he observed of how companies operated in crisis, when the rules get thrown out and they take risks. So, why wait for the crisis, just operate that way every day.

Read the article and get inspired. We’ll continue to look for and share articles and examples we come across that make us stop and think. If you have one, please share it with us here or in our Jama Backstage community forum: http://www.jamabackstage.com

Welcome Bycast, Inc.

O Canada!
Our home and native land!
True patriot love in all thy sons command.
With glowing hearts we see thee rise,
The True North strong and free!
From far and wide, O Canada,
We stand on guard for thee.
God keep our land glorious and free!
O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.
O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.
Canada

I’m sorry - but I felt the urge to salute our brothers to the north. I’m not certain what’s going on in Canada right now -perhaps the exchange rate - but Contour is striking a major chord up there. As Mike mentioned in previous blog entries, we have customers all around the globe now and its fitting that we are getting such traction up in Canada. We love those guys! I mean seriously - think of the nicest person you’ve ever met in your life and I bet that guy was a Canadian. I mean who doesn’t like the Canadians anyways? All right, I’m done with my rant.

I know a cool company up in British Columbia that thinks Contour is a pretty darn good fit for their development efforts. Bycast is the leading provider of grid powered storage management software that simplifies the management of massive fixed-content storage systems. Bycast software protects data and simplifies the toughest challenges associated with the management of storage systems. Bycast software enables organizations to optimize their storage infrastructure and ensures the integrity and availability of their valuable data assets. This also enables the formation of regional archives that can scale to petabytes of data across hundreds of sites.

We are happy to have Bycast join our rapidly growing community and look forward to a long, successful relationship. Eh!

Welcome W.M. Keck

If you ever make it to the the Big Island of Hawaii you’ll notice two rather large volcanoes that cover the landscape. One in particular is pretty hard to miss since its usually belching molten lava into the air. The other lesser known volcano, Mauna Kea, is quieter indeed - but that doesn’t mean its any less exciting. On the contrary.

The summit of Mauna Kea is home to the world’s largest optical and infrared telescopes. Each stands EIGHT STORIES TALL and weighs 300 tons, yet operates with nanometer precision. At the heart of each Telescope is a revolutionary primary mirror. Ten meters in diameter, the mirror is composed of 36 hexagonal segments that work in concert as a single piece of reflective glass.

Made possible through grants totaling more than $140 million from the W. M. Keck Foundation, the Observatory is operated by the California Association for Research in Astronomy (CARA), whose Board of Directors includes representatives from the California Institute of Technology and the University of California. In 1996, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) joined as a partner in the Observatory. The Keck I telescope began science observations in May 1993; Keck II began in October 1996.

Its exciting for us a Jama to be connected to yet another great team with an incredible application - working in an incredible place. If you get a moment, you should visit www.keckobservatory.org and check out some breath taking images from the summit. Its really quite something.

As I look out my window on this dreary January day in Portland,W.M. Keck Observatory I can only hope that my boss puts me on a plane to go visit our newest customer in paradise. Welcome W.M. Keck!

Welcome Blackwell Book Services

It’s cool when a customer finds your product by an organic web search, decides to purchase, and they turn out to be in your same neighborhood. This is what happened when Blackwell Book Services made the executive decision to improve the way they manage project data and collaboration. It just so turns out that the Jama Software headquarters is just up the road from the gang at Blackwell.

Since 1879 Blackwell has been supplying libraries with the finest books and most comprehensive bibliographic support. Now Blackwell serves libraries all over the world, with headquarters in the U.K., U.S. and Australia. Their mission says it all: Be the partner of choice in building great library collections. Provide innovative solutions to the challenges created by the rapidly changing ways information is published, distributed, and accessed.

Another fun group of people for us to share ideas with, get to know better, and provide a solution that’s inline with their big picture.

Welcome aboard Blackwell!

2008 Outlook - 2 Predictions for the New Year.

Happy New Year! Welcome back to work. By now, the presents are all unwrapped, the tree is on the curb to be recycled, the holiday cookies have all been eaten, and your wrists are sore from playing Guitar Hero III on your nephew’s new Wii for 2 straight days over the holiday break. You’re back now at your office sharing stories of epic skiing and bowl game highlights with your colleagues at the water cooler. It’s that time to set a few new year’s resolutions (half of which you’ll break by end of the week). And, it’s time to look ahead to what’s in store for 2008.

From from our collective conversations with customers, partners and peers (and, of course our own perspectives), we see 2 trends this year worth highlighting here. Yes, we’ll focus on just 2, not everything requires a top 10 list. We like to keep things simple. So, here we go:

1. From buzzwords to reality - the emergence of innovation management.

If 2007 was anything it was the year of buzzwords. And, the kingpin of them - Web 2.0 - spawned many offspring last year. It seemed everything was 2.0-ified: ALM 2.0, PLM 2.0, Project Management 2.0, Innovation 2.0 and on and on and on. Where 2007 was the year of the next big thing, we believe 2008 will be the year of action. The mantra being, Enough talk, let’s get things done.

Specifically, we see 2008 being the year that 3 highly talked about strategic initiatives will converge and materialize into real value for many companies. The big 3 being: Innovation, Collaboration and Community. When integrated, they shape the emerging category of Innovation Management. So what’s new here?

Innovation is a major strategic initiative for over 70% of enterprise organizations and has been a leading cover story over the last few years, BUT success rates are still low for the majority of efforts. Data shows that spending more in R&D isn’t a silver bullet. So, what is? Is it process? Is it people? Is it technology? That’s where collaboration and community come in. These concepts aren’t new either, but where things have recently changed and continue to move is the scale at which collaboration and community are being leveraged within the innovation process to increase success and get closer to what customers really want. The community, or simply put the group of people influencing innovation decisions, is growing to include not only your talented employees and business partners, but now also customers, potential customers, industry influencer’s and many other external audiences with ideas, voices and blogs. And, as you embrace greater collaboration with your ever-growing community, the front-end of the innovation funnel explodes open, and with that, a new challenge emerges: How do you manage all of these ideas? How do you capitalize on them within your product planning and development efforts in an automated way? And very tangibly in era of simply getting things done and done successfully, how do you translate them to specific requirements that will satisfy customer needs and make up the next generation of your products or services? The simplest way to summarize it is - if innovation is the primary goal or what, then collaboration is the how and community is the “who”. And, they work hand-in-hand together to raise success rates. That’s innovation management.

2. Bigger isn’t better - the explosive growth of light-weight, Web-based apps to manage core business processes.

This trend has been underway for a few years, and we see it only accelerating in 2008. It’s a trend sweeping across many technology categories that fuel core business processes, such as ERP, CRM, ALM, PLM and the things close to home for Jama like innovation and requirements management.

OUT are big, bulky, expensive, proprietary suites of applications to manage core business processes.

IN are light-weight, open, flexible, Web-based applications that bring people together, eliminate overhead, integrate well with other tools and make it easier to get things done.

Granted, we’re biased here because this is how we build our tools, such as Contour, but there’s a reason for that. We want to get things done right and help our customers do the same.

Welcome to 2008. Have a great year.