Thursday, July 30, 2009

Judgement Day for Commercial Open Source ... How Did I Miss It?

In a recent Business Week online article, Peter Yared, founder and CEO of San Francisco startup Transpond, describes "The Failure of Commercial Open Source Software". While Yared makes a case that the commercial open source software business hasn't lived up to the hype that it will "change the world," he reaches too far in declaring its failure. A more appropriate conclusion would be to recognize that commercial open source only recently reached broad acceptance as a business strategy and is on a strong growth trajectory. We must measure its success in that context.

Yared's arguments are diverse, but they fail to account for important indicators of open source success:

1. Minimal number of liquidity events for open source businesses. As identified by one of the commenters, several prominent examples of open source liquidation events are missing from Yared's list, including Zimbra, Trolltech and Sleepycat. In addition, the article uses 2003 as a benchmark year, allowing only 6 years to measure exit success. According to a September 2008 MoneyTree Report by PricewaterhouseCoopers and the National Venture Capital Association, the average seed-financing to exit life cycle of a venture-backed company is 8.6 years. As a result, any conclusions about the success or failure of open source businesses, many of which were started within the last 6 years, are premature at best.

2. Continued success of proprietary vendors. Not only is this irrelevant to measurement of open source success, but it fails to acknowledge the growing role of open source in proprietary companies. Companies like IBM, Microsoft, Adobe and Oracle, are milking revenue from their established proprietary business models while they also distribute open source software to generate revenue, influence development communities and drive broader adoption. In addition, measuring open source displacement of proprietary software misses the point, particularly in the short 6 year time frame here. Open source targets adoption opportunities through grass roots growth, which takes longer (but is less expensive) than the hard-hitting direct sales approach of proprietary companies.

3. Success is limited to commodity businesses; Enterprises are not likely to add open source businesses to their lists of approved vendors. These assertions fail to take into account the growing reach of open source throughout the software industry. While it is true that many of the more successful open source companies to date have been in the infrastructure and commodity business, we are beginning to see significant adoption of enterprise and end user open source applications (such as Alfresco, SugarCRM and others). Matt Asay further amplifies the limitations of Yared's assertion by identifying SpringSource as an example of an open source company that innovates and targets enterprise-friendly software development, which is outside the category of traditional commodity software.

4. Cost savings of open source are overstated. This contradicts the conventional wisdom that cost savings is one of the primary reasons companies adopt open source. In an April 2009 Forrester report, 75% of survey respondents said "Reduced IT costs" are critical or very important in their decision to use open source software. In addition, a panel of venture capitalists at OSCON proposed that open source companies can typically save up to 30% in sales and marketing costs as compared to proprietary companies, which leads to quicker profitability, quicker exits and happier investors. Even so, the article is likely correct with respect to mature open source businesses. In two March 2009 Open Sources blog posts, Savio Rodrigues compares the income statement of Red Hat to those of Microsoft and Tibco. In both cases, he concludes it is unlikely that mature open source vendors will be more capital efficient than commercial vendors.

5. SaaS will overtake open source. The general trend away from installed software applications to SaaS and cloud systems is undeniable. As Matt Asay explained on his Open Road blog in May, cloud computing is the natural conclusion of open source, because cloud computing is the ultimate expression of the open source principle that services, rather than the software supported by such services, are the most valuable component of a product offering. But SaaS and cloud business models are having significant growing pains of their own. Customers are concerned about the portability of data, freedom from vendor lock-in, security and standardization and other matters that must be resolved before achieving broader commercial acceptance. (It's a bit ironic that open source software might actually be the best way to address these concerns.) SaaS and cloud businesses appear to be subject to at least the same level of skepticism as open source. As a result, it seems unlikely that SaaS and cloud business models will replace the open source software business in the near future.

6. Open source benefits do not lead to monetary gain. Yared observes that his company uses open source but typically does not pay for it other than contributing code back to projects. This is a common practice and it implies an impending failure of commercial open source. Yared concludes that these factors do "not mean every successful open source project can sustain a commercial company, especially when they are delivering complicated applications rather than simple plumbing." No doubt this is true, but it is also true of proprietary business models and does not lead to the conclusion that commercial open source has failed.

It is fair to question when open source will become as reliable an investment as other technology businesses. In this regard, Yared's article raises some important points for discussion. However, rumors of the failure of open source business models are greatly exaggerated, and any pronouncement on the success or failure of open source is premature.

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