In Christianity, the word
evangelist comes from the
Koine Greek word "" (transliterated as
euangelion) via Latinised
evangelium, as used in the canonical titles of the Four Gospels, attributed to Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John (also known as the
Four Evangelists). The term
software evangelist was coined by Mike Murray of
Apple Computer's
Macintosh computer division in the early 1980s. It was part of Apple's drive to compete with
IBM and it specifically described the initiative to win over third-party developers rhetorically to persuade them to develop software and applications for the
Macintosh platform. In Guy Kawasaki's own words, it meant "using fervor and zeal (but never money) to convince software developers to create products for a computer with no installed base, 128K of RAM, no hard disk, no documentation, and no technical support, made by a flaky company that IBM was about to snuff out." The first so-identified technology evangelist was
Mike Boich — who promoted the Macintosh computer. In 1987,
Steve Ballmer introduced the technology evangelist role at
Microsoft to build excitement and drive adoption of
Windows and its development tools. The job is often closely related to both sales and training but requires specific technology marketing skills. For example, convincing a potential buyer or user to change from older methods to new ones. There is also the case of adopting new products such as
green IT. The marketing aspect involved in technology evangelism was strongly influenced by
Geoffrey Moore and his books concerning the
technology adoption lifecycle. One of his positions maintain that the role of the evangelist becomes critical when addressing what he identified as the "chasm" that exists between early and mainstream adoption. Technology evangelism is sometimes associated with an internal employee assigned to encourage new practices within an organization. Methods of evangelism available include a modified STREET process (Scope, Track, Rank, Evaluate, Evangelize, Transfer) and the process that takes advantage of the hype cycle. ==Role==