June 2009
16 posts
Malcolm Gladwell review of Free in The New Yorker
A long review of Free by Malcolm Gladwell. Like many journalists, he finds Free unsettling: “Anderson is very good at paragraphs like this—with its reassuring arc from “bloodbath” to “salvation.” His advice is pithy, his tone uncompromising, and his subject matter perfectly timed for a moment when old-line content providers are desperate for answers. That said, it is not entirely clear what...
Jun 29th
11 notes
Boston Globe's excellent Ideas section reviews...
Drake Bennett writes a long, thoughtful and, well, mixed review of Free. Sample: “Duncan Watts, a network theorist and a principal research scientist at Yahoo! Research [says] “He’s taking perfectly reasonable and in themselves interesting and valid observations and expanding them into a grand theory, but it turns out that the grand theory can’t sustain itself,” Watts says. “To the extent...
Jun 28th
6 notes
Turning digital pennies into dimes
NBC’s Jeff Zucker once complained about having to trade “analog dollars for digital pennies”. Now at least it’s dimes. Bloomberg reports that top shows such as the Simpson now get higher ad rates on Hulu than broadcast. From the article: ““This is about scarcity,” Poltrack said. “All of the networks who are now streaming online have multiple advertisers competing for...
Jun 28th
4 notes
"Is Free News Really Worth the Price?"
An NYT appeal from the “last Reuters correspondent known to have to sent dispatches by carrier pigeon many years ago from Matabeleland”: Please pay for your newspaper. It’s better than Twitter.
Jun 28th
6 notes
How Free vs. Paid is playing out in personal...
PaidContent has a good piece analyzing the various free and freemium models on the personal finance sites: “In the battle for the online personal finance market, free has become the status quo. Both startup Mint.com and rival Quicken Online have amassed more than one million members each by charging zilch for their services. Now, though, both companies are seriously exploring charging for...
Jun 26th
11 notes
Socialtext now free for up to 50 users
From the press release: “Socialtext, the leading provider of Enterprise 2.0 solutions, today announced the availability of Socialtext Free 50, a new free offering aimed at mainstream use for up to 50 people within an organization to collaborate using Socialtext’s social software platform. Employees can join or create their own private collaboration networks by using their work email...
Jun 23rd
3 notes
Good Freemium examples
A roundup of Freemium best practice on the web: “Here are a couple of services that have found the right formula for success when it comes to charging their members. There might be some valuable lessons learned by examining these successful services to see how they managed to get their users to take out their wallets rather than their pitchforks and torches.”
Jun 23rd
3 notes
What to do with "infinite bandwidth"
A Boston Consulting Group analyst describes how to apply abundance thinking to bandwidth: “Today, for example, radiologists don’t need to be located where the image is created. Images taken at a clinic where the patient is located are transmitted from the imaging machine to a distant image-analysis centre - an entirely new business made possible by increasing bandwidth at ever-falling...
Jun 23rd
3 notes
An argument on why microbilling is better than...
I disagree with this (I think the marketplace has already spoken: people hate microbilling, defined as a few cents or less), but the analysis here is worth reading: Sample: “But here’s one thing freemium fans can’t deny: in their model, a tiny minority of paid users subsidizes the service for everybody. It is this simple fact that makes the freemium model self-defeating, because, for the...
Jun 16th
6 notes
Amazon's growing free Kindle book biz
From a note from Morris Rosenthal, who had done good research on Amazon Kindle sales; “One of the things that you might find interesting is the large number of free Kindle books that are flying off the shelves, classic out-of-copyright books that Amazon has provided, plus the number of 1 cent novels, uploaded by small publishers and self publisher in hopes of generating buzz for the print...
Jun 12th
3 notes
More data on sales effect of free books
From BoingBoing: “Brian F. O’Leary has posted slides updating his quantitative research on the effect of “piracy” and/or free giveaways on book-sales, done independently using data from O’Reilly and Random House (the largest tech publisher and general publisher in the world, respectively). The new slides, from the recent Book Expo America, expand the work with a...
Jun 11th
3 notes
The $0 iPhone
From TheStreet.com: “…Within hours of Apple’s announcement Monday that it was cutting the price of the old iPhone by half to $99, speculation arose that AT&T would eventually cut the price to $0.”
Jun 11th
3 notes
How $0 laptops could save media
Smart piece from Simon Dumenco in AdAge: “In other words, hardware makers may have no choice but to turn their internet devices into multi-tier-subscription-based media machines, because there will never again be enough margin in the basic price of the hardware. And the more we get used to the idea of essentially subscribing to media as a way to pay for hardware … well, the more hope...
Jun 8th
3 notes
NYT on the Danish Free Newspaper bubble burst
From the NYT: “Since the economic crisis deepened last autumn, however, the free newspaper business has gone into free fall. Circulation in Europe, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the global total, has fallen by more than 10 percent, Mr. Bakker said, and dozens of titles have closed.”
Jun 8th
3 notes
Steve Brill's case for paid online newspapers
Note that almost all the “paid” online newspaper models are actually “freemium”, a mix of free (for reach) and premium (for revenues), which is mostly what my book is about. The latest is Steve Brill’s case to the newspapers, found here.
Jun 5th
3 notes
BookExpo report on Free book experiments
From Publishers Marketplace: “First up with some hard numbers on the pros and cons of free was Peter Balis, Director of Digital Content Sales at Wiley. For the first time, the company found its e-book sales have migrated from academic research to consumer reading. He offered up Frommers.com as an example of making the entire contents of particular travel books available for free, but instead...
Jun 4th
3 notes