New: Why Developer Marketing Exists

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Curated developer marketing resources

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Jobs Career

DevToolJobs

A focused job board for GTM roles at developer tooling companies. Find marketing, sales, and community positions at the intersection of developer tools and go-to-market strategy.

Community Slack

Developer Marketing Slack Community

Active Slack community for developer marketing professionals. Connect with peers, share strategies, and discuss best practices for marketing to developers.

Learning Roadmap

Frontend Developer Roadmap

Step by step guide to becoming a modern frontend developer in 2025. Covers HTML, CSS, JavaScript, frameworks, and essential skills for web development.

Resource Cheat Sheet

Developer Marketing Cheat Sheet

Comprehensive one-page reference for developer marketing roles, responsibilities, tech stack, KPIs, and resources. Includes downloadable PDF version for quick access.

Marketing Influencer

Plug - Developer Influencer Marketing

Platform connecting developer tools with technical influencers. Amplify your product through authentic developer voices and community engagement.

Strategy Budget

How to Spend Your Marketing Budget

PostHog's guide on allocating marketing budget for developer tools. Real insights on what works and what doesn't when marketing to developers.

Events Conferences

Dev.Events - Developer Conferences

Comprehensive listing of 1,151+ developer conferences worldwide for 2025/2026. Filter by technology, region, or topic to find the perfect events for your community.

Examples Inspiration

Markepear - Dev Tool Marketing Examples

Collection of the best developer tool marketing campaigns, designs, and copy. Features landing pages, social posts, product tours, and creative positioning strategies.

Case Study OOH

Stytch's Out-of-Home Campaign

Behind-the-scenes look at how Stytch executed an impressive outdoor advertising campaign. Learn their strategy, execution, and results from going big with OOH.

Careers Jobs

DevRel Careers

Job board for Developer Relations and Developer Marketing roles. Find opportunities in developer advocacy, community management, and technical marketing.

DevRel Newsletter

Stefan Judis - DevRel Contractor

Stefan Judis is a developer advocate and independent contractor who runs Web Weekly, a curated newsletter covering web platform updates, browser changes, and tools for modern developers.

Design Branding

Brand Over Matter

Deb Grillo's agency specializes in creating impactful brand identities and experiences. Helping companies stand out with creative design and strategic branding expertise.

Tools Research

Wappalyzer - Technology Profiler

Discover what technologies websites are built with. Identify CMS, frameworks, analytics tools, and tech stacks for competitive research and lead generation.

Analytics Performance

Core Web Vitals by Technology

Looker Studio dashboard for analyzing Core Web Vitals performance by technology stack. Compare page speed and performance metrics across different platforms.

Newsletters Content

The Ultimate List of Developer Newsletters

Comprehensive collection of the best developer newsletters across all programming languages, frameworks, and tech topics. Stay updated with curated content from top technical writers and communities.

Tools Design

Carbon - Code Snippet Tool

Create and share beautiful images of your source code. Perfect for social media posts, documentation, and presentations with customizable themes and syntax highlighting.

GitHub Profile

ProfileMe - GitHub Profile Generator

Create an impressive GitHub profile README with ease. Add custom sections, stats, technologies, and styling to make your developer profile stand out.

Template Content

Content Tracker Template

Example content tracking system built in Airtable. Organize your content pipeline by stages from ideation to publication with this ready-to-use template.

DevRel Strategy

DevRel Strategy Breakdown

Comprehensive breakdown of Developer Relations strategy from Tessa Kriesel. A timeless guide covering tactics, planning, and execution for building effective DevRel programs.

Launch Guide

Awesome Product Hunt

Comprehensive GitHub repository for Product Hunt launches. Includes curated resources, a complete launch guide, and best practices for launching your product successfully.

Podcast Marketing

CodetoMarket

Excellent resource for developer marketing featuring an insightful podcast. Co-hosted by Hank Taylor, a 0-to-60 dev marketer with deep expertise in scaling developer-focused go-to-market strategies.

Research Survey

Stack Overflow Developer Survey

Annual survey of developers worldwide covering technologies, tools, demographics, and industry trends. Essential insights into the developer ecosystem and what technologies are gaining traction.

Tools SVG Library

SVGL - SVG Logo Library

Curated collection of 500+ SVG brand logos ready for download. Open-source library where you can contribute by submitting PRs to add more logos to the collection.

Handbook
Developer Marketing Handbook

Goals

Developer marketing builds trust first, pipeline second.
The work connects your product to how developers actually build and helps that credibility translate into adoption and revenue.

A great developer experience is the foundation. It starts with discoverability, continues through docs, and carries into the product itself. Good documentation shortens time to value and builds confidence that your product can scale with real teams. Developers trust what they can inspect, so show how the product works and let the system speak for itself.

Success isn't clicks or vanity metrics. It's measurable engagement that creates product-qualified leads, builds influence across teams, and contributes to both product-led and sales-led growth.
When developers use your product by choice and advocate for it inside their company, you've done the job right.

Strategy

Start with reality, not aspiration.

Map where your product fits in the developer workflow, then help them do that job faster or with less friction.

Lead with clarity. Explain what it is, what it does, and why it matters.

Show the system behind the product. Architecture, examples, and tradeoffs explain more than positioning ever will.
If you can do it in a clever or playful way that still feels authentic, that's bonus points.

The best developer marketing respects time, delivers value, and makes something complex feel obvious.

Journey

Awareness → Evaluation → Adoption → Advocacy.
Each stage should connect clearly to the next.

Awareness happens in places developers already spend time: GitHub, Reddit, newsletters, blogs.
Evaluation happens in your docs, demos, and sandboxes.

For most developers, the docs are the real homepage, so accuracy and structure matter more than polish.

Adoption depends on how fast they reach first success.
Advocacy is when they start teaching others what they learned from you.

Personas

Create personas based on who buys the product and who actually uses it. For example:

Buyers: CTO or Engineering Leader, Senior Engineer, Implementation Architect.
Users: Frontend, Full-stack, App Developer.
Adjacent: Ops, Product, Design.

Each persona has different pain points and goals.
CTOs and Engineering Leaders care about governance and ROI.
Senior Engineers look for performance, flexibility, and code quality.
Implementation Architects focus on how well a tool integrates and scales.
Write for what each person owns, not what you wish they cared about.

Messaging

Be clear first. Be clever only if it helps.
Make every message easy to scan. Lead with the point before expanding on it.
Good developer messaging is specific, practical, and rooted in how people actually build.

Clarity earns trust, but a bit of personality makes it stick.
The goal isn't to sound like marketing. It's to communicate something real that developers recognize and care about.

Build around three pillars:

  • Speed: faster builds, fewer tickets
  • Efficiency: consolidated stack, lower maintenance
  • Control: safe scale, long-term confidence

If you can back it with code, data, or proof, keep it.
If it only sounds good, cut it.

Campaigns

Treat campaigns like product launches.
Plan, ship, measure, repeat.

Each campaign should answer three questions:

  • What developer problem are we solving?
  • What proof are we showing?
  • What happens next?

Treat developer feedback like bug reports and close the loop quickly when something needs to be corrected or clarified.

Make it easy for developers to try, test, or share.
Run retros on every launch and capture what worked, what didn't, and what to change next time. Always learn from what you launch.

Content

Write with clarity and intention. Every piece should help developers build faster, learn something new, or solve a real problem.

Strong content earns attention because it's useful.
Lead with the outcome or insight, then show how to get there. Make it easy to skim from top to bottom.
Show working examples, explain tradeoffs, and include visuals or code where it helps understanding. If it doesn't teach or demonstrate something real, it doesn't belong.

Core content types

  • Blog posts: tutorials, technical breakdowns, or opinionated takes grounded in experience.
  • Guides and tutorials: step-by-step instructions that lead to a working result.
  • Integration or workflow content: explain how tools connect and where they fit in a developer's process.
  • Technical guides and code examples: deeper material for experienced readers who want implementation detail.
  • Explainer or glossary content: clear, factual definitions written to answer specific questions directly.
  • Video or live sessions: demos, interviews, or walkthroughs that show real workflows.
  • Research and surveys: reports or insights that help developers understand the state of their field.

Content strategy buckets

  1. Awareness — generate buzz and discussion. Hot takes, thought leadership, or topics that invite conversation.
  2. Acquisition — bring new developers in through problem-solving content. Tutorials, guides, and explainers that answer real questions.
  3. Enablement — help existing users succeed. Deep tutorials, documentation extensions, and practical how-to content with long-term value.
  4. Convert Paid — drive upgrades or signups. Feature-specific walkthroughs or advanced use cases that show value worth paying for.

Each piece should fit into one of these buckets and serve a clear purpose. Awareness earns attention. Acquisition builds trust. Enablement drives success. Convert Paid turns success into growth.

Clarity is the standard. Use it to earn credibility.

Community

Reddit. GitHub. Discord. Slack. YouTube and other social platforms.
Join conversations, don't start pitches.

Be helpful. Add context. Share working examples.
When your content becomes the answer people link to, you've earned credibility.

Metrics

Measure adoption and revenue, not reach.
Awareness is useful, but only if it drives activation or expansion.

Focus on signals that show impact:

  • Product or API usage
  • Time to first success
  • Product-qualified leads
  • Developer-influenced revenue
  • Retention and repeat engagement

The goal is to prove that trust earned from developers shows up later in product usage and revenue.

Developer Marketing Skill

I built a Developer Marketing Skill for Claude that helps evaluate content, strategy, and campaigns against the principles in this handbook.

Use it to stress-test messaging, review technical content, plan developer campaigns, or get feedback on positioning. It applies a "trust first, pipeline second" philosophy with an emphasis on clarity, technical credibility, and measurable engagement.

Need more resources?

Check out my curated collection of developer marketing tools, newsletters, and resources.

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