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Description

As part of his new business journey, Derrick requested that customers schedule time to talk with him about Level, a team communication and management tool he is developing. Luckily, about 40 people signed up, and he has completed 14 of these calls. What are his customers saying? They confirm main pains they feel with current tools and are very willing to share their frustrations with existing tools. Derrick has not been surprised yet about their answers.

In Ben’s world, he is spending time on slinging and reading about Haskell. He is full of questions. Both Ben and Derrick are learning a lot every day, which is fulfilling and exciting.

Today’s Topics Include:

Level will not be a project management tool, but may have some project management capabilities

Derrick’s list of initial questions for customers: What is their company and role within it; the size of their team; what tools they use and when they adopted them; and the balance between chat, email, and project management in their organization

Derrick also asks customers: Why are they interested in Level? What problems do they want it to solve? What’s working well for them with Slack, and what’s not? What aspects of Slack do they use and don’t use?

Ideas for improvement have come from Derrick’s customers

Continuous integration is the clear winner for usefulness

Gauging willingness to switch to another tool, such as Level

Customers expressed using Level on a pilot basis for specific teams or projects and in coordination with at least one other tool

Being unable to post asynchronous, long-form discussions is a pain point for some customers

Paying for a tool would not be a big deal

Derrick plans to kick off his building Level series and build mock-ups for customers to view

Positive use of minimalist user interfaces

Debating whether to offer a pre-payment option for Level

Ben uses Ansible for the deployment of Haskell code

Ben is seeking a Dev Ops person to hire - must have strong opinions and can fix stuff

SaaS Renaissance? More developers are starting SaaS companies - a trend already on the way out?

Level will be SaaS but with an open source core

Tools SaaS companies will want to have and buy

Not Built Here Syndrome: Engineers who outsource non-essential parts to someone else

Pricing Pages as a Service: Shopify’s checkout page feels natural but still represents the company

Avoid rebuilding stuff

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Links and resources:

Ben Orenstein Website; Twitter

Derrick Reimer Website

Basecamp and Getting Real

Haskell

Programming in Haskell book

C Programming Language by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie (K&R for C)

Ruby on Rails

Ansible

Drip

Salesforce

Product Hunt

GitLab and Discourse

Stripe Atlas

Andrew Culver’s Bullet Train

Adam Savage: One Day Builds

MicroConf 2018