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Nicholas C. Zakas

If every company where ESLint was used donated just $100 each month, we'd have more than enough to fund the project on an ongoing basis. Especially if your company incorporates ESLint into a paid product, we'd love to have you as a sponsor and partner going forward.

All of the information you need to know about the project, how we use the funds, and how to become a sponsor, can be found here:

eslint.org/donate

I'm always happy to hop on a call to discuss with any potential sponsor.

3 comments
Frank

@nzakas My experience trying to get my organisation to set up a donation for an open source project... won't work. Management doesn't understand donations.

How about offering a license? It can be a license for something insanely silly, say the Enterprise Documentation Addendum.

Devs understand open source and they can go, hey, we use this and now we need this license.

A license is something Management and Finance are accustomed to and a proposal/request won't hit total blank stares there.

rhempel

@fschaap @nzakas It depends on how much your finance/procurement team knows about mission critical software.

As soon as they hear it's an open source package, they interpret that as free, and maintained by volunteers.

In corporate America there is no concept of being seen as supporting things that are available to everyone, but they fall all over themselves to sponsor 5k runs and naming sports venues, because that comes out of the marketing budget.

Maybe it's time to stop updating packages ..

Frank

@rhempel @nzakas Maybe marketing can sponsor the 5kLOC event? They can sponsor the Platinum ASCII Banner at the start!

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