[wp-edu] Advocacy

Joel Goodman joel.goodman at greenville.edu
Thu Nov 6 14:43:30 GMT 2008


The best part about this, I think, is that you can use the money you're saving from licensing to put back into development and getting exactly what you want. Whether that's increased training/classes/books/conferences for your permanent staff or hiring an outside developer/usability specialist, you have resources to get it done.

Joel Goodman
Web Content Coordinator
Greenville College
315 E College Ave.
Greenville, IL 62246
TEL/618.664.6515
WEB/www.greenville.edu
EMAIL/joel.goodman at greenville.edu

Futuristic ● Strategic ● Responsibility ● Restorative ● Competition


-----Original Message-----
From: wp-edu-bounces at lists.automattic.com [mailto:wp-edu-bounces at lists.automattic.com] On Behalf Of Chris Hajer
Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2008 2:29 AM
To: wp-edu at lists.automattic.com
Subject: Re: [wp-edu] Advocacy

James,

I understand completely the point you're making.  There is a cost to
getting anything up and running and keeping it there, proprietary,
closed, open, whatever (operating systems, CMS, desktop apps, etc.)
But the fact remains that WordPress IS free to start with, freely
available, and there is no ongoing licensing fee.  That's a huge
departure from what a lot of municipalities and schools are used to.
It is normal for a consultant to come in with a proposal, and right
off the top is software licensing..  It's expected, it's normal, it's
what the administrators are used to dealing with.  None of that makes
it right, but it is one of the things you come up against, oddly
enough.

The other philosophical change for schools is changing from a desktop
app publishing mentality to a web-based, modern CMS publishing
mentality.  I mentioned previously iWeb from Apple, and I have seen
Dreamweaver, HomeSite, Microsoft Front Page and Publisher and probably
others, all in use on the desktop.  That's another hurdle.  Once the
foot is in the door with a modern CMS like WordPress, we need to
change behaviour again.

I think it's great that we are even having this discussion in the first place.

Cheers,
Chris Hajer


On Wed, Nov 5, 2008 at 10:40 PM, James Groom <jimgroom at gmail.com> wrote:
> I think the point that WordPress is free isn't exactly true, all
> software (whether open source or proprietary) comes at a cost.
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