Some resources to help Developer Relations do their job
- Awesome Repositories
- Career Ladders Examples
- CFPs
- Communities
- Content Tone & Voice
- Developer Programs
- Developer Relations Salaries
- Google Apps Tools
- Learning
- Mascots
- Open Source Documentation
- Slack Tools
- Swag
- Vendors
- Writing Programs
- Argo (CD, Events, Rollouts, Workflows)
- CFP Land
- Conference Tracker
- Confs.tech (GitHub)
- dev.events
- Developer Conferences Agenda (GitHub)
- KDnuggets: Data Science, Machine Learning, AI & Analytics
- SeeCFP
- Tech Daily CFP
- PaperCall
- CNCF: Cloud Native Computing Foundation Slack community
- Continuous Delivery Foundation
- Momentum Developer Conference: Slack for the Momentum Developer Conference
- Devrel Collective: for advocates, evangelists and community managers
- devrelX: learning & training, data & resources, contribute and connect with peers and industry leaders.
- Flyless Dev: weekly meetup, presentations and community. DevRel without the airmiles.
- Learnk8s: Learnk8s community on Slack, learn and discuss all things Kubernetes with over a 1000 members.
- Kubernetes: the official Kubernetes community
- DoK Community: an Open Community for Data on Kubernetes
- Mind the Product
- Product Collective: you need to subscribe to the newsletter to get Slack access (you can unsubscribe after)
- Product Manager HQ: you need to pay a one-time membership fee to join the community
- Product School
- Write the Docs: for technical writers or anyone who cares about documentation
Here are some examples of blog/documentation tone & voice/style document/guide:
- Auth0 Ambassador
- AWS Community Builders
- Cloud Native Ambassadors (CNCF)
- Cypress Ambassador
- Google Developer Experts
- HashiCorp Ambassadors
- Microsoft MVP
- MongoDB Champions
- Mozilla Reps
- Twilio Champions
- The Developer Relations Collective 2021 survey results
- State of Developer Relations by Hoopy (DevRelCon)
- Form Notifications: create and configure email notifications for response thresholds and Form respondents.
Never underestimate the power of having a cute company or product related mascot for your developer relations work. Here's a list to get inspired if you ever bring that topic to your next meeting with the leadership's team.
- Amazon Web Services (AWS): Sam the squirrel
- DigitalOcean: Sammy the shark
- Go: Gopher
- HootSuite: Owly the owl
- Linux: Tux the pinguin
- Mozilla: a dinosaur
- mParticle: Higgs the capybara
- npm: Wombat
- README.io: Owlbert the owl
- Rust: Ferris the crab
There is also a non-exhaustive list of some of the most well-known product mascots in tech.
Here is a non-exhaustive list of closed sources product or company not known for being open which have open source documentation. This could be helpful to show your company the benefits of having the public documentation on GitHub, and that it's a common practice.
- Aiven
- Algolia DocSearch
- Amazon Web Services (AWS)
- Amazon Web Services (AWS) OpenSearch
- Basis Theory
- Camunda
- CircleCI
- DataDog
- ElasticSearch
- GitHub (Microsoft)
- Google TensorFlow
- Kong
- LiveChat
- Mender
- Microsoft Azure
- Microsoft Visual Studio Code
- MinIO
- New Relic
- Pantheon SaaS Platform
- PlanetScale
- Platform.sh
- PlatformOS
- Postman
- Sitecore OrderCloud
- Twilio Segment
- Vonage Nexmo
There are also lot Open Source projects having their documentation open.
- Channel Tools: bulk invite all members of a Slack team or a channel to another channel & quickly export all members from a channel
- Community Inviter: Slack invitation management tool & landing page (free & paid plans available)
- Slack Invite Automation: a tiny web application to invite a user into your slack team
- Slackin: public Slack organizations made easy
Please note that this list is not an endorsement, and we are not responsible for the products' quality: it is offered as a reference list for you to validate yourself.
If you have had a bad experience with one of these vendors, please let us know about it and provide some details about your experience, and we will remove them from our list.
- Sticker App: they can do stickers with back paper print
- Sticker Mule: @fharper's go to for stickers
List any other types of vendors that can be useful for developer relations.
* Please don't do this: a program that give a $25 gift card to the best performing article monthly. Pay guest writers properly, or do something like DigitalOcean program, and give a decent donation to the writer's non-profit of choice. Writing great blog posts is a skill, and takes time, don't use these programs as a way to get cheap labor "in exchange for visibility". I'm still listing their program as the details could be useful.