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Bob Parsons, the founder and president of GoDaddy.com, has a blog. There are at least five reasons why this is guy interesting.

First, I know everybody has a blog these days, but I’m still surprised when I see an executive of any sizeable corporation blogging (without a ghost writer). Today, an executive identity and opinion that is separate from a meticulously-crafted corporate message feels strangely out of place (not that I mind).

Second, Bob has unconventional opinions. When most technology companies are trying to find ways to cut costs through offshoring, he posts a contrarian view:

I can tell you right now, Go Daddy is simply not interested in moving its operations offshore.

Bob seems to (rightly) regard software engineering as a source of competitive advantage, rather than an short-term expense that should be minimized regardless of long-term consequence.

Third, there’s the controversy around Go Daddy’s Super Bowl commercials. Conventional wisdom is that a little-known dot com should not purchase a spot in the Super Bowl. That was conventional wisdom circa 2001. But the commercials were a big success for Go Daddy.

Fourth, there are lots of programmers who spout opinions in blogs. Not all of them have created software companies with $100,000,000 in annual revenue.

Fifth and finally, he has rules to live by — sixteen of them.

2/22/2005 9:36:20 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
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The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.