Developer community meetups vs Zoom anxiety
Developer community meetups vs Zoom anxiety
Developer community meetups vs Zoom anxiety
Developer community meetups vs Zoom anxiety
Developer community meetups vs Zoom anxiety
🗣 english
🕘 07:35 〜
08:05
UTC
at Sea
It's so special...to compete for developer attention when doomscrolling is what people do. One can pour money onto ads and perhaps attract celebrities to get that click, that view. But then one checks the "average watch time" and it's minutes in an hour long video stream.
It all looks like the developer marketing and relations landscape is rapidly changing. How? And even more important, what we as developer relations professionals do to still be relevant in the industry?
It's so special...to compete for developer attention when doomscrolling is what people do. One can pour money onto ads and perhaps attract celebrities to get that click, that view. But then one checks the "average watch time" and it's minutes in an hour long video stream.
It all looks like the developer marketing and relations landscape is rapidly changing. How? And even more important, what we as developer relations professionals do to still be relevant in the industry?
It's so special...to compete for developer attention when doomscrolling is what people do. One can pour money onto ads and perhaps attract celebrities to get that click, that view. But then one checks the "average watch time" and it's minutes in an hour long video stream.
It all looks like the developer marketing and relations landscape is rapidly changing. How? And even more important, what we as developer relations professionals do to still be relevant in the industry?
It's so special...to compete for developer attention when doomscrolling is what people do. One can pour money onto ads and perhaps attract celebrities to get that click, that view. But then one checks the "average watch time" and it's minutes in an hour long video stream.
It all looks like the developer marketing and relations landscape is rapidly changing. How? And even more important, what we as developer relations professionals do to still be relevant in the industry?
It's so special...to compete for developer attention when doomscrolling is what people do. One can pour money onto ads and perhaps attract celebrities to get that click, that view. But then one checks the "average watch time" and it's minutes in an hour long video stream.
It all looks like the developer marketing and relations landscape is rapidly changing. How? And even more important, what we as developer relations professionals do to still be relevant in the industry?