Happy 30th Birthday, RootsMagic! Part 3: The New Full-Time Job

RM-30th-Anniversary

NOTE: This is Part 3 in our ongoing series documenting the history of our company. If you’re just joining us, be sure to read Part 1 and Part 2.

As word of mouth spread about QubeCalc and InstaCalc, sales slowly picked up throughout 1987.  Then in August of 1987, we got our first “national” mention when Brit Hume wrote this article reviewing some shareware programs.

He actually called and talked to me about how much he liked the program, but I probably should have told him how to spell my last name.  My mom was so excited when she saw a syndicated copy of the article in her newspaper in Albuquerque.  I still have 3 or 4 copies of the article she cut out and sent to me.

The next month we decided to try and make this software thing a full-time business.  My wife Laurie was getting tired of trying to answer tech support questions during the day while I was at work and thought it might be nice if I got to answer the phones instead.  So we packed up and moved to Sandy, Utah.

Laurie’s parents were split on our decision to leave a nice paying engineer job and move 800 miles to be self-employed.  Her mom thought we were making a huge mistake, but her dad said we needed to go for it.  He said if we didn’t try we would always wonder “what might have been”.  Although there were many rough times during the early years, looking back now makes me appreciate even more the wisdom of that advice.

The first snag we hit after moving to Utah was our company name.  When we applied for the same FormalWare name, the state told us we couldn’t use it because it was confusing with a tux rental (formal wear) company.  Looking back now I realize that since we were in different industries we should have been able to use that name, but I was just a business novice, so I just accepted the decision and changed the company name to FormalSoft.  I chose that name simply because we were under a tight budget that let us keep our same logo, and required a minimal amount of changes to packaging and advertising materials.

FormalSoftLogo

We did tweak the logo just a little bit, making the bow tie and disk more “realistic,” but deep down I have always loved my simpler logo better.

The first several years in Utah were bumpy ones.  Expenses always seemed to exceed sales, and we didn’t have enough of a track record to get outside funding.  If it weren’t for our maxed out credit cards and loans from our parents, the company would have never survived those years.

But then in February 1988, we thought our fortunes had changed forever.  We started getting a bunch of phone orders from people who told us our software was awarded PC Magazine Editor’s Choice, which at the time was probably the highest honor a computer program could receive.  And not only that, but we now had two Editor’s Choice awards.

PCMagEditorsChoice

Sales took off and we figured we were on easy street, but this was to be a great learning opportunity.  Within a few weeks, sales had dropped back down and were barely higher than before.  Fame is fleeting, especially in the software business.  We realized if we wanted to continue to grow, we needed to do more advertising, but at least now we had these awards to use in our promotions.

We bought a pop-up booth to use at trade shows and in April 1988 we attended our first trade show, the West Coast Computer Faire in San Francisco.  I only owned one computer, so we hauled that out to California to demo our software to customers.

WestCoastComputerFaire

Over the next couple of years, we took our booth to numerous trade shows, including the big one in Vegas, COMDEX Fall.  Very rarely did we break even, but we kept pushing hoping that eventually we would get noticed.

NEXT: More products, and a chance encounter

6 thoughts to “Happy 30th Birthday, RootsMagic! Part 3: The New Full-Time Job”

  1. Starting a business is very hard and only strong people do it and survive. I am glad you did!

  2. I think I remember InstaCalc! It was way better than I could do on my own. It was a really big deal. Didn’t like paying for programs but that one was worth it. It even convinced my dad that computers were worth while. Glad you stayed with it. Don’t know where I would go if RM was not here.

  3. I am replacing FTM with RootsMagic and hope for a very pleasant experience I have been with FTM for over 20years and now I must leave do to unreconcilable differences. FTM16 worked well and I still use it. Ancestry FTM never worked very well and was incapable dealing with large trees.

  4. I’ve been using RM since RM 4 was released and used it until last year when I finally bought RM 7. I’ve used FTM when I first actually dove into my family’s history back in 1999. And I’ve used Legacy’s program too. But by far RM is much better than either program. I’m definitely sticking with your company. Thanks for creating it.

  5. Hi Bruce: I started out with FTM and switched to Family Origins 8.0 back when it first came out. I thought it was a much better program than Family Tree Maker back then. I worked on both my wife’s family and mine with FTM and really got moving with Family Origins. We got back to the year 1630 in Germany with your F.O. 8 version. Have stopped for a few years now but will begin again soon. Thanks for a great Program.

    Ken Mazikowski

  6. Have to hand it to anyone that tries to make a living through a program they have produced. Anyone doing as you have done with writing a program and then just for genealogy has an even greater challenge because of what they are up against with a specific need program. Kudos for staying with it and providing a great program that keeps getting better. Then dedicated in providing great support and training for a very reasonable cost. I’d love to see a full MAC version but that won’t stop us from running Roots Magic on a MAC for sure. Hope all goes well for Roots Magic and that it will continue to serve us all well.

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