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If everyone is a developer, is it still developer marketing?

Daphna Giniger Daphna Giniger
2 min read
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If everyone is a developer, is it still developer marketing?
Quick Take

Developer marketing is facing a major shift. As AI, no-code, and automation tools lower the technical barrier, more people are identifying as developers — even those with limited technical skills. Brands that want to stay relevant must double down on defining their core audience, protect their developer-first identity, and create smart pathways for non-traditional users without diluting their credibility. Bigger brands may not need to overhaul today, but they can’t afford to ignore where the next five years are heading.

For years, developer marketers prided themselves on understanding a niche audience: technical, skeptical, allergic to hype. Now? Everyone is calling themselves a developer — including people who've never opened an IDE.

Thanks to AI, no-code, and "vibe coding," the technical bar is lower than ever. The audience you're marketing to today is bigger, less skilled, and a lot less patient.

The problem? Most developer marketers are still obsessing over authenticity and technical depth — talking past half their audience and boring the rest. They're building campaigns for a 2018 developer, not a 2025 reality.

The job now isn’t just "market to developers." It's market across a spectrum:

  • Hardcore engineers who want deep dives.
  • Builders who want quick wins.
  • Hobbyists who want to feel like they belong.

If you don't adjust, your brand will either look arrogant, out of touch, or worse — invisible.

What Should You Do?

  1. Decide who your real audience is.  
    Are you still building for developers? Then act like it. Your brand, your voice, your product experience should stay unapologetically technical. Don’t water it down to chase a broader crowd if it kills your credibility with the people who matter most.

  2. Create pathways, not compromises.  
    If you’re seeing non-technical users adopt your product, great. Give them dedicated resources: simpler tutorials, beginner-friendly documentation, maybe even a tailored onboarding track. But don’t dumb down your core product or messaging to accommodate them.

  3. Stay rooted in your identity — but think ahead.  
    Especially for bigger, more established brands: you may not need to change much about what you’re doing today. But you can’t afford not to think about tomorrow. In five years, will developers still be your center of gravity? Will your marketing still speak their language? Start answering those questions now — before the market answers for you.

Launch with confidence

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pay attention.

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