SEO Book.com |
Posted: 07 Mar 2013 03:31 AM PST "Information wants to be free" was a phrase coined by Stewart Brand, a counter-culture figure and publisher of the Whole Earth Catalog. This was the context of the quote:
Brand talks about distribution cost, but not the production cost. Whatever our views on information freedom, I think everyone can agree that those who create information need to pay their bills. If creating information is how someone makes their living, then information must make an adequate return. Information production is not free. The distribution cost has been driven down to near zero on the internet, but it is the distributors, not content creators, who make most of the money. "Information wants to be free", far from being an anti-corporate battle-cry, suits the business model of fat mega-corporations, like Google, who make money bundling "free" content and running advertising next to it. In this environment, the content creator can often struggle to make a satisfactory return. So, content creators have been experimenting with models that reject the notion information must be free. One of these models involves the paywall, which we'll examine today. Content Disappearing Behind The WallMore than 300 US dailies now have paywalls, and that number is growing. Big players, like the New York Times and the Financial Times, have reported increasing paid subscription numbers for their online content:
Their paywall experiment appears to be paying off. However, critics are quick to point out that those newspapers enjoy an established reputation, and that lesser-known media outlets might have trouble emulating such success. Certainly, this seems to be the case for the Rupert Murdoch owned "The Daily" which went belly-up due to poor subscription numbers:
Even with the clout of News Corporation behind it, the Daily folded in less than two years. It was reportedly losing an estimated $30 million annually. But was size was part of its problem? Did that paywall model fail due to high overhead and the relative inflexibility of a traditional media operation? Perhaps success involves leveraging off an existing reputation, innovation and running a tight ship? Some smaller media start-ups have opted for the paywall approach. Well-known blogger Andrew Sullivan left the Daily Dish and went solo, offering readers a subscription based website. Was this a big risk? Could Sullivan really make subscription content pay when the well-resourced Daily failed? Sullivan did 333K in 24 hours.
Sullivan doesn't have the overhead of The Daily, so his break-even point is significantly lower. It looks like Sullivan may have hit on a model that works for him. Another small media outfit, called The Magazine run by Marco Arment, started as an "IOS newstand publication for geeks". Arment was known to his audience as he was the lead developer on Tumblr and and developer of Instapaper. The Magazine publishes four articles every two weeks for $1.99 per month with a 7-day free trial. It started off as an app for the iPad but has since migrated to the web, but behind a paywall.
So how's this niche publication doing?
Then there is Paul Carr, ex-Tech Crunch journalist who started NSFW Corporation, a web publication that has, up until recently, sat entirely behind a paywall. It's a general interest and humor site that, by Pauls' own admission, doesn't need a ton of readers, just enough readers prepared to pay $3 a month for access so they can make money. He figures if he gets 30K paying subscribers, then that's enough to break even. Interestingly, he's announced that they are diversifying into print. He claims NSFW will be profitable by the end of the year:
It's probably too early to draw many firm conclusions on the paywall experiment, although it's clear that some operators are making it work. News is a difficult form of content to monetarize on the web. It's ephemeral, time-sensitive and ultimately disposable. However, if you're providing educational and consultancy content, then it should be easier. If you do publish this type of content, how much of this should you be giving away? And if you do, what return are you getting back? Do you have a way to measure it? The answers will be different for everyone, but they are interesting questions to consider. Many publishers are making paywalls work. And these people are making money from web content without exclusively pandering to flaky search engines in the hope some traffic may come their way. The free content in exchange for free traffic "deal" is simply no longer worthwhile for many publishers. Paywalls Are HardPaywalls are difficult to get right. When "The Magazine" launched, it placed too much content behind the paywall, in the form of an app, meaning people couldn't link to it. This meant the conversation was happening elsewhere.
The Magazine is now offering one free article view per month. The casual reader will still be able to assess the value and conversation and interaction can still happen, whilst most of the valuable content sits behind a paywall, helping ensure content creators paid. Taking a different approach, The Times of London erected a "Berlin Wall", locking content inside a fortress. How did that work out?
When it comes to paywalls, mixed models appear to work best. Some content needs to appear where everyone can see it. Some content needs to appear in search engines and social media. The question is how much, and via what channel? Some sites use a free-on-the-web model, whilst charging for mobile access. Other's use a freemium model where some content is free in order to entice people to pay for premium content. One of the more successful models, of late, has been a metered approach.
People don't like to be forced into paying for content, but don't seem to mind paying once the value has been demonstrated. One of the most successful apps in the Apple store, Angry Birds, enticed people to pay by giving the basic game away. Once they could see the value, people were more willing to pay.
Paywalls can also be difficult to get right on a technical level. Some paywalls are porous in that the content can be seen so long as you know enough to jump through a few digital hoops:
However, even if some content does leak - and let's face it, anything on the net can leak as a cut n' paste is only a few keystrokes away - at least an expectation of payment is being established. The message is that this content has a value attached to it. Another way of approaching it could be to make content available in formats that are more difficult to crawl and replicate, such as streaming video, or Kindle books. Here's a guide on how to self-publish on the Kindle. Think about different ways to make it difficult for scrapers to extract all your value easily. Paywalls Are StrategicPaywalls are not just a sign-up form and a payment gateway. Paywalls are also a publishing strategy. How much are you prepared to give away for free? How does giving away this content pay off? A consultant may publish far and wide for free. The pay-off is more consulting gigs. The consultancy "content" sits behind a paywall in that you have to pay for that service. Not many SEO consultants give their detailed analysis away for free. The content we see in the public domain on SEO is a tiny fraction of the information held by the professionals in our niche, and that information may want to be free, but the owners, wisely, hold onto most of it, else they wouldn't eat. Be wary about giving away your labour in exchange for "awareness". Here's a story about how The Atlantic tried to get a journalist to work for nothing.
Such arrangements suit the publisher, of course, but all the risk sits with the content creator. Sometimes, those deals can work if they lead to payment in some other form, but ensure you have a means to track the pay-off. Another way of thinking about a paywall is a switch of channel. We're seeing the rise and rise of mobile computing and, as it turns out, mobile consumers are much more willing to pay for content than people who browse the web:
Could your content be better off pitched to a mobile audience? Made into an app? Published and promoted as a Kindle book? The Hamster WheelThis is not to say leaving content out in the open can't pay the bills. Perhaps you don't feel a paywall is right for you, but you're growing tired of running faster just to stay in the same place. Brian Lam used to be the editor of Gizmodo, Gawker media's gadget blog. Gizmodo was run on a model familiar to search marketers where you first find a keyword stream then capture that stream by writing keyword-driven articles. He likens this approach to a hamster on a wheel as he relentlessly churned out copy in order to drive more and more traffic. It led to burn-out.
The problem with ad-supported media models, such as Adsense, is that they depend on scale. With advertising rates decreasing year by year as the market gets more and more fractured, content production increases just to keep pace. Lam went in the opposite direction. His new gadget site only posts 12 times a month, but goes deep. The majority of his income comes from Amazon's affiliate program. He achieves a 10-20% click-thru rate.
Is running on a search-driven hamster wheel, churning out more and more keyword content the most worthwhile use of your time? Lam is making more money by feeding the beast less in terms of quantity and going deep on quality. Loss Leader For The Search EnginesBut, hang on. This is an SEO site, isn't it? Aren't we all about getting content into the search engines and ranking well? Of course. SEO is still a great marketing channel, however this doesn't mean to say everything we publish must appear in search engines. I hope this article prompts you to consider just how much you're giving away compared to how much benefit you're getting in return. It all comes down to an ROI calculation. Does it cost me less to publish page X than I get in return? If you can publish pages cheaply enough, and if the traffic is worth enough, then great. If your publishing costs exceeds your return, then there are other models worth considering. This article is mainly concerned with deep, researched, unique content that doesn't have a trivial production cost attached to it. If the search engines don't deliver enough value to make deep content creation worthwhile, then publishers must look beyond the "free" web model many have been using up until now in order to be sustainable. Don't let distributors suck out all your value so only they can grow fat. A paywall is more than a physical thing, it's a strategy. If you publish a lot of valuable information that isn't getting a reasonable return, then think about ways bundle that information into product form and ask yourself if you should keep it out of the search engines. Decide on your loss-leader content and create a sales funnel to ensure there is a payday at the end. The existence of content farms showed deep, free content often doesn't pay. The way they made their content pay was to make it dirt cheap to produce and so useless that the advertising became the most relevant content on the page. Content that relies heavily on search engine traffic is a high risk strategy. Some may recall a Mac site, called Cult Of Mac, that got hit by Panda. They were big enough, and connected enough, to have Google reinstate them, but the first comment in this thread tells it like it is:
True, that. It's not enough to "publish quality content". A lot of quality content gets hammered and tossed out of the search engines each day. And even if it stays listed, it may not make a return. There are no guarantees. Instead, build a brand and an audience. And then sell that audience something they can't get for free. Content may want to be free, but free doesn't pay. For many publishers, the search engines aren't giving enough back so be wary about how much you hand over to them. Categories: |
You are subscribed to email updates from SEO Book To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
No comments:
Post a Comment