Two years ago I reported on Atlassian’s initiative to to raise funds for the benefit of Room to Read, an organization that builds schools, libraries in rural communities in Nepal, Cambodia, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Laos, Zambia …etc. Giving away $1,200 worth of software licences for $5 in a 5-day drive, they first planned to raise $25K, then increased the target to $100,000.
@Krishnan and I thought we should put our money where our mouth (pen? keyboard?) is, and both purchased a bunch of licences just to help push Atlassian towards the finish line. The last minutes were dramatic:
(Cross-posted @ CloudAve » Zoli Erdos)



Quick update on the 


The
) – but that’s typically in the context of Software as a Service, and in the SMB (small business) market. Atlassian’s products are mostly on-premise (although they now have a hosted version of Confluence) and their primary market is the large Enterprise. Yet they pulled off what amounts to a small miracle: essentially took the download.com, tucows style model we all know as consumers, and ported it to the enterprise space. 
So what is this culture like? Tough. When he doesn’t make his numbers, Atlassian President Jeffrey Walker is forced to make up for it as ticket-scalper on the street.
OK, joke apart, this photo was shot last August, when the entire San Francisco office went to see a
) I wonder when the San Francisco office will move into a winery… Perhaps
you get the picture by now: Working for Atlassian isn’t just a job – it’s a
. I have a lot to say on the subject of hiring, but it’s not specific to Atlassian, so I’ll break it out to a 


My first thought was deja vu… I myself reported on Mike and Scott winning the 

Recent Comments