Deelip Menezes has taken the CAD industry by storm. He has scored some major
coups. At this year’s SolidWorks World, he sat down product manager
Shaun Murphy and got him to admit that SolidWorks’ backward incompatibility and inability to read/write CATIA files were “business issues.” In other words, Dassault had basically conspired to deny its own customers two capabilities they were desperate for. A few days later, he scores an interview with Carl Bass, CEO
of Autodesk. I was surprised he wasn’t at PTC’s press/analyst event this week — but that didn’t stop the event organizers from talking reverently about him.
It’s just not right. The most sought after, one of the most prolific and most
insightful journalists I’ve ever met is not a journalist at all. He lives on the
opposite side of the world (Goa, India) and writes code during the day. He has
never taken a journalism course. Though his English is just fine, it is probably
his second language. He may not have a travel budget. He was not launched
from an established print magazine, never paid by a publisher and has never had
the luxury of waking up to spend the whole day writing articles. How is it that
the plain Deelip.com blog (it looks like an off-the-rack template) is on the short list of must-reads for CAD insiders and
Deelip himself is widely regarded by the CAD industry and those who cover it as a
“thought leader.”
I needed to find what made this man tick? I spent a day with Deelip, between
his trip to SolidWorks World in southern California and his trip to Hawaii (he was there to see a
business partner). I picked him up in the tony Marina
district, where he was staying overnight courtesy of an Autodesk employee. We
shot across the Golden Gate Bridge, through Marin County, had lunch in
Yountville, sipped wine in Napa and had dinner at my house.
I suggested that perhaps CAD journalism was in the doldrums due to the
financial problems of several publishers, leaving veteran journalists scrounging
for their next meal. Deelip wasn’t accepting excuses. “What about me?” he said,
rhetorically. I had to concede. All Deelip did was write…part time…and keep
writing. Why couldn’t anybody do that? He tells me he often writes after
his kids go to sleep.
Though the posts are numerous (really, does this guy ever sleep?), it wasn’t the
quantity. Deelip is writing gutsy stuff, often with extraordinary insight. Unfettered from advertising and
consulting revenue, Deelip is unafraid of scaring off CAD vendors. Try to
bullshit him and you will go down. This morning, he skewered Autodesk. He had asked why Inventor LT was only available in “select countries.” First to
squirm was Kevin Schneider, the person responsible for Inventor Fusion. Kevin chose to hand off to Autodesk’s PR staff, who
came back days later with a response from Peter Vinh, Inventor LT Product
Manager. Peter carefully stated how Autodesk was rolling it out to various
geographies, but never mentioned India and avoided giving any specific information, like dates. Deelip
called it “neatly crafted crap.”
 Deelip Menezes enjoys California-style bouillabaisse at Bouchon in Yountville.Â