![]() ![]() We can weigh the impact of it, how many people are asking for this type of stuff. We have some simple forms whenever we hear some feedback from a partner or any user, really just make sure that we can link it to other similar feedback that we've had. We were there from the start when the product spec were being thought about, or whenever we were having a neighborhood put together some feedback and bring it in, not because of the scale of things, we want to make sure that we have some processes in place and feedback can come from wherever. What does that look like for you bringing that feedback back to your developers?Īrlemi Turpault: There's different ways it's being done, because the company has grown a lot lately, when I started at Postman, we had one developer advocacy sitting in each of the squads, engineering squads that we had. I want to ask you about that before we get into the meat of the show. And that's a huge part of developer advocacy, very often left behind, very often people forget about that two- way street taking feedback back to the developers. Talking about the product, but also being the voice within the company and for external users. So there's this whole like two- way street that I like to talk about when I talk about developer advocacy. ![]() I do a couple things here, part of our role is to grow the number of people that we have using the tool, obviously, but creating content, going to talk at conferences, whether they're virtual or in- person, and just making sure that whatever feedback we get from engaging with all type of users goes back throughout the product team as well. I'm a senior developer advocate at Postman, which is known now as the API Platform. Let's begin with an introduction, maybe you could tell the folks who you are and what you do.Īrlemi Turpault: Yeah, sure. How are you doing today?Īrlemi Turpault: Doing well, doing well, and you? Welcome to the show, it's great to have you on the podcast. Follow MLynn for some upcoming interesting content. It's going to allow you to listen, but also ask questions and interact. That's MLynn, some interesting things happening on Twitter Spaces coming. We've got some really exciting things happening on Twitter coming up, you're going to want to follow me, Michael Lynn at M as in Michael, L- Y- N- N. ![]() Use the code podcast for 25% off tickets. Join us as the database community comes together in New York City to create, disrupt and transform. You'll find sessions that are tailored to you. It's a conference that was created by developers for developers, and whether you're learning the basics or you're ready to scale. ![]() There's going to be something for everyone at MongoDB World. Join us live in New York City, June 7th through the 9th for MongoDB World 2022. Arlemi's going to talk all about that and tell us more about Postman, the Postman Platform. There's this concept of API- first and many companies are shifting to that mindset. If you're a software developer and your software interacts with users or other systems, you're going to want to check this out. Postman used to be just a very simple API testing tool built right into Chrome, Chrome extension. Michael Lynn: Welcome to the show, today on the podcast, it's all about Postman. Short answer, Postman is the API platform caters to both API producers and API consumers. Postman started as what we call the API testing tool. A lot of people know Postman, but they might have known Postman three, four years ago, even seven years ago when it was a Chrome extension and it has changed a lot. Arlemi Turpault: Hi, my name's Arlemi Turpault, I'm a senior developer advocate at Postman and welcome to the MongoDB podcast. ![]()
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