Six Ways to Monetize Your Mashup Development Skills
Note: In June 2007,
we introduced readers to a new open source software (OSS)
firm—Apatar—
that debuted at Red Herring East, which is a traditional venue to get a
company story in front of movers and shakers in the venture capital
world. Apatar brought to market what it calls “Enterprise
Data Mashups,” which are data integration software tools. The
development model is OSS. The company is interested in getting its
community to extend the product but also lets it play with the core
code. What Apatar wants most from its community is to add to the
already over 300 pre-existing metadata maps and mashups it has in its
library. The Apatar distribution model includes a free download of a
desktop application and a software as a service (SaaS) offering. The
target market is the millions of data integration projects that never
get done because the return on investment is too low (or negative)
using more traditional extract/transform/load and integration software.
In this guest editorial, Alex Khizhnyak—Chief Apatar
Evangelist and Chairman of Belarus Java User Group—tells
ebizQ readers how to get started in the mash-up business.
Despite what many people tend to think, mashups are not just grabbing
someone’s Web content. A well-made mashup is actually a brand
new information resource, which is unique, genuine, and represents a
greater value than its single components. If the mashup fails to meet
the above-mentioned conditions, one can write it off as a dustbin full
of informational garbage. Users are willing to pay only for those
mashups that are of some value either for business or fun. In other
words, the resource is worth considering when the idea of a certain
mashup, the idea to combine these very components, makes sense. Nobody
is interested in a mashup that transforms a number of useful Web sites
into a huge useless mess.
You may ask why business users, together with venture capitalists,
should consider mashups and invest their efforts into studying this
phenomenon. The answer is behind the numbers. According to McKinsey
& Company, the global management consulting agency, 21 percent
of organizations are planning to use mashup applications as part of
their IT infrastructure (2007). That means every fifth company in the
world is going to adopt business mashups in the near future. And
it’s a big deal, isn’t it?