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The future of getting a return on giving away your content.

I’m starting to wonder if giving your content away, be it music, books, videos or anything else, will really make you more money in the future. I understand and fully agree that the comparative few who are doing it now are seeing a return on their openness from communities but if everyone is doing it will it just be common place and loose the support from those who like that type of model, or will the people who are supporting it keep doing so and everyone else just take the free stuff? Of course the next question is whither or not there is enough people still willing to pay for something they can get for free enough to support an artist? I don’t think this applies to audio or video podcasts as it’s more a medium like TV or Radio but for actual artists who are selling a product. What’s your opinion?

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By Bill on February 1, 2008 - Filed under: Other
  • Interesting thought Bill. I think about this very thing. I wonder about the future of music. There is that old saying that says that which we get easily we esteem lightly.
  • There is an issue of devaluing your own work too. If people have been getting it for free all along eventually they may see your music as having less value. I personally don't feel it's the case but some people do.
  • Hi Bill-
    While I think we are building a culture of free, the honest truth is people won't do everything for free forever. People also don't always appreciate what they don't have to pay for, either.
    Ultimately, you have to find the price point where the basic economics of supply and demand meet. Is your stuff worth $9.99 per song? More? Less? Why or why not? If your music is a product you want to move, would you rather sell 2 at 9.99 or more at $1.99?

    Is your goal just "to get your music out there" and have other people enjoy your work? How many people is that? Can you give them a sample for free that tempts them to want more, like selling cheese at the mall? (The first taste is free....the rest costs you).

    So ultimately, whether it's music or cars or anything else, the evaluation on whether you should buy something depends on whether you "value" it enough to plunk down money for it, or not. Money keeps score. Just think- you may like a lot of artists, but there's a point where the cost of a concert ticket becomes too much for you, or the thrill of following a group around the world becomes financially untenable, and that line is not uniform for everyone.

    And if what you have to sell is special and remarkable enough to catch on, then price becomes less of a sensitive feature- everyone will want one, even if it gets more expensive later on. They're hooked.
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