Rich Media

Media Week's digital editor Rich Sutcliffe looks at the worlds of digital, print and the grey areas in-between

Is Chris Anderson's new book a complete load of codswallop, or are we too afraid of the consequences to accept the truth?

 

Having finished reading the Long Tail author's new book ‘Free, The Future of a Radical Price' this morning - the full £18.99 version rather than the free abridged edition - this is the question now vexing me.

 

There is much to disagree with in the Wired editor's new book-of-big-ideas, and Anderson has had his fair share of criticism since its publication, not least from fellow big idea toting author Malcolm ‘Tipping Point' Gladwell.

 

Indeed Anderson's own thesis - "making money around free will be the future of business" - appears at times to be contradicted in the book.

 

It seems to me having now read it, that Anderson doesn't suggest that free is the way forward at all. In fact Anderson says himself, though it takes until page 240, that "free may be the best price, but it can't be the only one".

 

For all its talk of business models that embrace free, from freemium, to time-limited, feature-limited, seat-limited and customer-type limited strategies, along with the book's exploration of non-monetary attention and reputation economics, at some point the only business model that works, unsurprisingly perhaps, involves someone putting their hand in their pocket and handing over a bit of hard-earned.

 

What the book lays on the line, and this is the bit media owners know only too well and are currently tackling to lesser or greater degrees of success (predominantly lesser it has to be said) - is that the current ad-funded model isn't working, and getting people to pay for content online is a challenge that may prove insurmountable.

 

As a journalist, who has a career and mortgage invested in the paid-for model, I'll happily admit that I have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo.

 

If Anderson is right and the natural price point of bits is dragged inexorably toward zero, and the digital age consigns my chosen career to the dustbin - as the machine-age did for manual labour - it will  not do so now, nor did it then, without the equally natural human instinct to fight against it.

 

Whether that fight is won or lost, one thing the media industry must do well if it is to survive is adhere to an irrefutable Anderson maxim: "Sooner or later every company is going to have to figure out how to use Free or compete with Free, one way or another." Let battle commence.

 

All Comments

  July 10, 2009

The media industry needs to be wary of shooting the messenger when it criticises Anderson's new book.  He is simply dramatising the challenge faced by every business in the media and entertainment industries.  Although the prognosis is bleak for many media businesses, new economic models will emerge.  

The music industry has faced a similar challenge for the past few years and appears to have been reasonably successful in refocusing investment on live events and merchandising to compensate for a loss of revenue from traditional music sales.

  July 12, 2009

Maybe I want to read this book when I get time

Amarjit Singh Kullar

www.amarjitsinghkullar.info

  July 14, 2009

"money makes the world go 'round"

Always has...always will.

When something is 'sold as free, you [or somebody] is paying for it elsewhere.

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Media Week's digital editor Rich Sutcliffe looks at the worlds of digital, print and the grey areas in-between

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