A
A
Anton Medvedev2012-07-05 11:23:12
CMS
Anton Medvedev, 2012-07-05 11:23:12

Is it possible to make money on another new CMS?

What do you think, is it possible to make money on creating another CMS?

What is needed for a successful system?

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

11 answer(s)
N
Nikolai Vasilchuk, 2012-07-05
@Anonym

I don't think it will pay off.

M
mithraen, 2012-07-05
@mithraen

You can, if your advertising budget is comparable to that of Google.
There are already Wordpress, Drupal, Joomla, Typo3. They are good because there is a huge community, and putting them on, I am sure that I will always find an inexpensive employee who will solve any of my problems.
By putting a closed CMS, I will have problems. Which will be expensive and gemorno to decide. Especially if few people use this closed CMS - why should I be a guinea pig for my money?
Plus, you will have to compete with Bitrix in this market. And 1C's advertising budgets are rather big.
Commercial closed CMS can now pay off only if it is SaaS.

R
Renat Ibragimov, 2012-07-05
@MpaK999

You can, you need it to be Saas and use the full power of the Google APIs like maps, translations, videos, images, Google+ and, of course, Google Apps. Well, or something similar but in the squares of Amazone.

F
freeek, 2012-07-05
@freeek

It is quite possible, especially if you can sharpen it for some specific needs. Study the market, see what is missing and go ahead! :)
And, yes, perhaps a lot will depend on the choice of language. PHP options are many. Maybe it would be interesting to make it on something actively developing at the moment? Naturally, not to the detriment of the speed of work and other important indicators.
In general, I think there is room for digging, the main thing is to dig with a twinkle in your eyes!

H
holyorb2, 2012-07-05
@holyorb2

how do you want to earn?
Drupal is a free system, but it makes very good money.
Are you going to make a closed system and make money selling it?

V
Vyacheslav Golovanov, 2012-07-05
@SLY_G

If it will be something advantageously different from the existing ones, then completely.

K
karenishe, 2012-07-05
@karenishe

In my opinion, CMS should be convenient for both a programmer and an ordinary user. Based on what opportunities (first of all, in terms of development speed) Ruby On Rails gives, I would make a CMS based on RoR, but even faster. For example, a visual interface for setting up RoR Gems.

G
Georgy Khromchenko, 2012-07-05
@Mox

I think it can, but you will have to invest heavily and look for ways to earn money not only from licensing

P
pixxxel, 2012-07-05
@pixxxel

I have earned.

C
Centrobit, 2012-07-07
@Centrobit

The question itself raises doubts about literacy in the approach.
You can make money on creation if you create to order. In other cases, you can earn money by selling a newly created CMS.
Of course, there are many ways: from advertising for free to selling licenses
. It is also not clear how much you want to earn? It also fundamentally depends on whether it is worth doing it or not, what niche to choose, and so on.
What you can earn is 100% :)

V
vimvim, 2012-07-07
@vimvim

The end user buys not a CMS, but (as they wrote above) a solution.
The sale of the solution is carried out by a specific developer studio.
Thus, for successful promotion, you need as many studios as possible to want to
use your CMS to develop client sites.
To do this, your CMS must be better than common commercial and Open Source systems according to the following set of criteria:
- Ease of development. Friendly and simple API.
- A sufficient amount of ready-made functionality.
- Flexibility and good extensibility.
- Comprehensive documentation
- Beautiful and convenient User interface
- Moderate resource requirements and good performance
— Good support (commercial and community)
— Acceptable pricing policy (for the commercial version)

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question