Posts Tagged ‘monetization’

Post-class Reflection: Economics 101, courtesy of Monday Night Football, Chris Anderson, and Mickey Mouse

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Epic MickeyI’ll explain what this image is about momentarily, but first, let me begin with a prologue.  Tuesday night in my Net Economics course at the UW MCDM a lively debate, to say the least, was had over Chris Anderson’s new book “Free”; whether free as a concept was good or bad.  I took the free side, but it made me feel a little lonely.  I almost felt like I was the only student in the room who believed that it’s a good thing that we’re moving towards a digital economy based on giving bits away, harnessing business models that find alternative sources of revenue.  For instance, a fellow student mentioned that Microsoft has a 90% market share of netbook operating systems, a testament to the strength of their software, no doubt.  However, I posited that if MSFT went the Anderson route and gave their OS away for free they could have a 100% market share.  I’m not going to say what the reaction to that was, but considering our proximity to Redmond and the makeup of the class, which includes Microsoft employees, you can take a wild guess…

Anderson’s “Free” starts out by giving us a quick economics briefing, using that as backdrop to defend the notion of ‘free’.  He explains that, for instance, traditional, or old media has used a third-party advertising model to earn revenue while still providing a “free” product.  I may not pay for 30 Rock, but when I buy products advertised during commercial breaks on TV or in interstitials on Hulu, I am still giving my money to NBC.  It’s pretty basic and has worked for Google, a benevolent empire that has largely amassed their wealth through selling advertising and diversifying revenue streams.  Of course, the model isn’t absolutely identical – the web magnifies things by presenting opportunities to apply wisdom gleaned from specific metrics and target users with relevant advertising, as well as ways of satisfying niches with long tail services – but the principle is the same: subsidize one product (free content) with money made from another (paid ad space).  Multiply and diversify.

With the notion of one product funding the other in mind, I further illustrate the point by explaining how I helped inadvertently save ABC, Monday Night Football, and the Disney company in 2004.  Maybe.  Or not.  But keep reading!  I think you’ll enjoy the reasoning anyways!

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Where da money at?

Friday, August 14th, 2009

For my final blog post in Drew Keller’s Web Storytelling course this summer in the MCDM, I am going to diverge just a little from the exact question Drew posed for us with this entry, which was: Bill Wasik at Big Think believes shorter content on-line will always be free; do I agree or disagree?  Wasik, in this video, takes new media to task, discussing things like the beauty of what the longtail provides us,  the detriments of endless online distractions, and what people are willing to pay for on the web.  I’m less concerned about whether people will pay for content based on duration or production value, or what they will or will not pay for in terms of any type of content at all.  I’m satisfied with the current status quo – I love that the web evens the playing field for cultural commodities, that for a few bucks Spider-Man 3 on Netflix can be streamed one minute, or without any money changing hands a clip of a teenager brutally injuring himself on a trampoline at YouTube can be shared the next, and, also for free, I can finish with a live satellite feed from CNN of a breaking news event in India while engaging fellow Facebook users about what’s happening, all of it right here online and on my lappy at the coffee shop.  Obviously people are willing to pay for access to the infrastructure that provides all of this content – the DSL, the cable Internet, the FiOS and so forth.  And they’ll pay for that Netflix download and other certain things, too.  But it seems that web culture was FOREVER decided that digital = free, so content providers have to generally rely on meager revenue streams from embedded adverts and banner ads and interstitials and the like so I can still watch the latest episode of “Desperate Housewives” any time of day.  But I guess that’s just not enough for content producers and providers.  They keep asking – everyone keeps asking:

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About Chris Anderson’s “Free”, Malcolm Gladwell’s review, and why I think Mark Cuban is mostly right

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Chris Anderson, editor of Wired and author of The Long Tail, has recently released a free book, suitably entitled FreeDrew Keller, our “Web Strategies for Storytelling” instructor this summer in the MCDM, pointed us students to several responses to the release, including those by Malcolm Gladwell of The New Yorker, marketing guru Seth Godin (in response to Gladwell’s generally dismissive review), and Dallas Mavericks owner/attention whore Mark Cuban.  Forgive me for sounding overly casual or trite in my response to the discussion, but I think at this point a dead horse is being beat to an outright pulp.  The overwhelming message of the digital age is that free is what the people want, free is what the people are finding ways to get, and new business models are in high demand to figure out how to cash in on free (as impossible as it sounds).  Of course, everyone is trying to figure out what those models are. (…and we of the MCDM know the answers always begin with the word ‘social’…)

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