.: Does Free Content - Sell?

By:Sam Vaknin

Category:Home / Internet Marketing / Site Promotion

The answer is: no one knows. Many self-styled "gurus" and "pundits" - authors of voluminous tomes they sell to the gullible - pretend to know. But their "expertise" is an admixture of guesswork, superstitions, anecdotal "evidence" and hearsay. The sad truth is that no methodical, long term, and systematic research has been attempted in the nascent field of e-publishing and, more broadly, digital content on the Web. So, no one knows to say for sure whether free content sells, when, or how.



There are two schools - apparently equally informed by the dearth of hard data. One is the "viral school". Its vocal proponents claim that the dissemination of free content fuels sales by creating "buzz" (word of mouth marketing driven by influential communicators). The "intellectual property" school roughly says that free content cannibalizes paid content mainly because it conditions potential consumers to expect free information. Free content also often serves as a substitute (imperfect but sufficient) to paid content.



Experience - though patchy - confusingly seems to points both ways. Views and prejudices tend to converge around this consensus: whether free content sells or not depends on a few variables. They are:



The nature of the information. People are generally willing to pay for specific or customized information, tailored to their idiosyncratic needs, provided in a timely manner, and by authorities in the field. The more general and "featureless" the information, the more reluctant people are to dip into their pockets (probably because there are many free substitutes).



The nature of the audience. The more targeted the information, the more it caters to the needs of a unique, or specific group, the more often it has to be updated ("maintained"), the less indiscriminately applicable it is, and especially if it deals with money, health, sex, or relationships - the more valuable it is and the more people are willing to pay for it. The less computer savvy users - unable to find free alternatives - are more willing to pay.



Time dependent parameters. The more the content is linked to "hot" topics, "burning" issues, trends, fads, buzzwords, and "developments" - the more likely it is to sell regardless of the availability of free alternatives.



The "U" curve. People pay for content if the free information available to them is either (a) insufficient or (b) overwhelming. People will buy a book if the author's Web site provides only a few tantalizing excerpts. But they are equally likely to buy the book if its entire full text content is available online and overwhelms them. Packaged and indexed information carries a premium over the same information in bulk. Consumer willingness to pay for content seems to decline if the amount of content provided falls between these two extremes. They feel sated and the need to acquire further information vanishes. Additionally, free content must really be free. People resent having to pay for free content, even if the currency is their personal data.



Frills and bonuses. There seems to be a weak, albeit positive link between willingness to pay for content and "members only" or "buyers only" frills, free add-ons, bonuses, and free maintenance. Free subscriptions, discount vouchers for additional products, volume discounts, add-on, or "piggyback" products - all seem to encourage sales. Qualitative free content is often perceived by consumers to be a BONUS - hence its enhancing effect on sales.



Credibility. The credibility and positive track record of both content creator and vendor are crucial factors. This is where testimonials and reviews come in. But their effect is particularly strong if the potential consumer finds himself in agreement with them. In other words, the motivating effect of a testimonial or a review is amplified when the customer can actually browse the content and form his or her own opinion. Free content encourages a latent dialog between the potential consumer and actual consumers (through their reviews and testimonials).



Money back warranties or guarantees. These are really forms of free content. The consumer is safe in the knowledge that he can always return the already consumed content and get his money back. In other words, it is the consumer who decides whether to transform the content from free to paid by not exercising the money back guarantee.



Relative pricing. Information available on the Web is assumed to be inherently inferior and consumers expect pricing to reflect this "fact". Free content is perceived to be even more shoddy. The coupling of free ("cheap", "gimcrack") content with paid content serves to enhance the RELATIVE VALUE of the paid content (and the price people are willing to pay for it). It is like pairing a medium height person with a midget - the former would look taller by comparison.



Price rigidity. Free content reduces the price elasticity of paid content. Normally, the cheaper the content - the more it sells. But the availability of free content alters this simple function. Paid content cannot be too cheap or it will come to resemble the free alternative ("shoddy", "dubious"). But free content is also a substitute (however partial and imperfect) to paid content. Thus, paid content cannot be priced too high - or people will prefer the free alternative. Free content, in other words, limits both the downside and the upside of the price of paid content.



There are many other factors which determine the interaction of free and paid content. Culture plays an important role as do the law and technology. But as long as the field is not subject to a research agenda the best we can do is observe, collate - and guess.



This article is, of course, free content...:o))



APPENDIX - Types of Free Content



The experiment of online content is in its infancy. Content creators, providers and aggregators fall into seven categories, though hybrids and permutations abound:



I. Entirely Free Content



Unrestricted access to the entire body of content available through a central URL or database.



II. Registration Required



Access to the entire body of content available through a central URL or database conditioned on providing a few personal data and being assigned - or choosing - a user ID and password. But, subject to registration, the content is entirely free, as in (I).



III. Time Limited Free Content - New but not Archived



Unrestricted but time-limited access to some content available through a central URL or database. Access to new material is free and unrestricted. Access to archived material requires a subscription.



IV. Time Limited Free Content - Archived but not New



Unrestricted but time-limited access to some content available through a central URL or database. Access to archived material is free and unrestricted. Access to new material requires a subscription.



V. Time Limited Free Content - Rotation



Unrestricted but time-limited access to some content available through a central URL or database. Various parts of the Web site (desks, chapters, features, articles, stories, sections, etc.) become accessible at different times. Access is rotated between these sections periodically or thematically or arbitrarily.



VI. Teaser Content



Unrestricted - time unlimited or time limited - access to some content (selected articles, headlines only, etc.) available through a central URL or database. Access to the rest of the content requires a subscription.



VII. Subscription



Access to content subject to paid subscription or payment per item.

Digg del.icio.us Blink Stumble Spurl Reddit Netscape Furl

Article Source: http://www.articles32.com

Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.

Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.

Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com







.: New Site Promotion Articles

1). Blog Your Way To Online Profits - How To Expand Your Internet Home Business With Blogging
As an internet marketer, you can use various tools to build your internet home business, and blogging is one of the popular ways through which you can boost traffic to your website.

2). Newbie Internet Marketing Course That Leads To Multiple Stream Of Internet Income
As a newbie you have a dream to make multiple stream of internet income. That is just fine! The right attitude, a great dream, right in the beginning is the most important. The will to succeed. The great picture you have in your mind before you have just done nothing in the internet marketing. See the results in your mind in advance.

3). Positioning: What Makes Your Internet Business Opportunity Unique
We people are all different, unique ones. But is does not mean that we are equally good ones. Some are better than others in the eyes of other people. The situation is the same with internet business opportunities, they all have different, unique positioning in the minds of their prospects or customers. Some have better, some have weaker.

4). 5 Reasons Why Beginner Internet Marketers Sometimes Fail
I have made each of the mistakes described and have learned a great deal from those mistakes. This was written so that you could also learn from my mistakes. The choice is yours.

5). MySpace, Friendster, Squidoo: Which is Right for You?
Social networks are popping up all over the Internet. Which are benficial to you as an online retailer?

6). Donald Trump Is The Hottest Brand On The Planet But Not In Home Business
What a luck he is not in internet home business. If he would, we others would have no chance.

7). Are Reciprocal Links Worth the Effort
As with almost any question, the answer is both yes and no. However, before be begin the debate, it is helpful to understand clearly what is meant by reciprocal links.


.: Top Site Promotion Articles

1). Unprecedented secret for getting backlinks
Uprecedented Secret Revealed! How to get tons of backlinks to your website! This secret apparently known only to some few people around. first, let me ask you: how much would you pay for more than 1,000 one way backlinks to your website? I guess it will be around 500$-5000$, depending on the quality of the websites. Now i'll show you how to get that for a less than 200$, or even for nothing if you will be the one to do the work, which in my opinion is also fun! keep reading, my unprecedented secret in a couple of paragraphs.

2). Improve Your Directory Submission Acceptance Rates
Using directory submissions to get links to your website and gain visibility will usually give you permanent links and advertisement for your site. The benefit of this is that with only a small effort you can submit to the directories and then just sit there and enjoy the quality links and higher search engine rankings you get for your site. The problem is that the more well-known directories get thousands of applications to their sites.

3). 2 Keys To "Manual Surf Traffic Exchange" Success
Do you use Manual Surf Traffic Exchanges to drive traffic to your websites or affiliate links? In case if you are a new internet marketer and do not know what is a Manual Surf Traffic Exchange, here is a short explanation: "Manual Surf Traffic Exchange is a online service, where members can show their websites to other members, by viewing (surfing) other members websites.

4). The Bottom of the Chain - PTR and PTC Programs
There a type of traffic exchange that is worthy of mention, the paid to read email programs, and pay to surf programs. I’ve found several on the traffic exchanges. They have various payment structures. You can also use your earnings for advertising. This is where you agree to view advertisements for a set amount of time for a fraction of a penny per pageview.

5). Get More Traffic Using Niche Articles
What is the key to Internet business success? It's simple: Targeted Traffic Clever internet marketers have long used a variety of ways to herd targeted traffic to their web pages, such as: pay-per-click campaigns, email marketing, search engine optimization, and ezine advertising. However, there is a simple, effective method that many marketers have missed -- submitting brief, 400+ word articles, so that they appear all over the internet.

6). How to Select Correct Keyword Phrases
In order to get top ranking in major search engines, the basics are getting the best possible contents for the site and search engines will pick up well-edited websites and furnish them to surfers through their related keywords by means of sophisticated algorithm that generates rankings. Therefore, targeted clients, keyword and keyword phrases that reflect what clients are looking for and what the company’s major products are should be well chosen before the actual construction of any website.

7). Promote and Increase Link Popularity for Your Web Site by Writing Articles
Webmasters and newsletter publishers all over the world are constantly searching for new quality content. There are many websites that fulfill this need by providing pre-licensed articles. The requirements for using pre-licensed content is that the publisher must leave the author information and any links intact. Publishers are not allowed to edit the articles.


Page loaded in 0.166 seconds.