If you can read this text, your browser is not interpreting this page as the designers intended. This may be because you are using an obsolete, non-standards compliant browser or you have Cascading Style Sheets disabled. Read more about Web Standards at Reactive.

text size: A- A+

Webmaster

Start up Guide Smart Co Awards Smart co blogs
Govt assist Govt assist Links Our Partners New Products

Email Alert

Sign up to receive an email each weekday alerting you to the latest news, tips, blogs, trends and big issues

More information
RSS feeds Podcasts

Better than free

Thursday, 28 August 2008
Josh Catone SitePoint

By Josh Catone

Google may still be offering its employees a free lunch, but for many companies free isn’t the way to make money. Blogger Allen Stern writes, that “most startups give away so much for free that users have no reason to upgrade”.

Many people on the internet have begun to feel entitled to free stuff– free music, free movies, free software, free information, etc. But free is potentially taking us down a dangerous path.

Michael Galpert, one of the founders of online image editing tool suite Aviary, has a great post up on the company’s blog about getting people to pay in a world dominated by free. Galpert lays out a list of five things he thinks that people are still willing to pay for. These concepts can be applied to almost any product or service:

  1. Convenience. People are lazy, says Galpert, which is why they’ll still pay for music tracks on iTunes, rather than get it from a P2P network. If you can offer them convenience over free alternatives, they’ll pay for it.
  2. Quality. Access to higher quality content, products, support, or community features is something that people are willing to pay for. If a subscription fee keeps spammers out of a forum and makes it more attractive to industry professionals, then people will be willing to pony up the dough, for example.
  3. Additional functionality. Galpert cites 37signals, which has pioneered the “freemium” model on the web by giving away a free appetiser, but charging for the full meal. The danger, as Stern points out, is knowing how much to give out so that your pay product is still an attractive upgrade for enough users.
  4. Customisation. Customisation is a great value-added feature for many products, and people are willing to pay for it. Galpert uses Wordpress.com as an example. The site offers free blogs for anyone, but to customise the CSS or use your own domain name you have to fork over some cash.
  5. Privacy. While privacy should be built into any service at any pay level, additional layers of privacy are something that people will pay for. Galpert talks about GoDaddy, which offers a premium service that allows people to mask their information on WHOIS searches.

Galpert’s list is helpful for anyone offering a web product or service that has to compete with free offerings. Competing with free is difficult, but as the example above show, it is not impossible.

 

Josh is the lead blogger for sitepoint.com. He covers all things new and exciting on the web and is based in Rhode Island, USA.  

For more Webmaster blogs, click here

 

Add your comment

Name:
Email:
Comments:


More: Webmaster

View > Talk the talk with online apps
Thursday, 20 November 2008 10 must-have tools for communicating with clients. JOSH CATONE
View > Emarketing, better by email
Monday, 27 October 2008 A surprise finding from a new study puts email ahead of social networks for getting your business’s message out there. JOSH CATONE
View > Star Trek lives long and prospers
Tuesday, 14 October 2008 YouTube responds to the rise of long-form content. JOSH CATONE
View > Citizen journalism
Friday, 10 October 2008 Technology (mobile phones, the web, email) has put so many more feet on the ground when it comes to news gathering. The value – or otherwise – of what results depends on adequate filters. JOSH CATONE
View > The web is disappearing
Friday, 3 October 2008 Sure there is a lot of information on the web, but how long will it stay there, and what are we going to do with it in time to come? JOSH CATONE
TOP OF PAGE