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TOC: Chris Anderson/Free: The economics of giving stuff away

Tuesday, June 19, 2007 — posted by Sarah

Chris Anderson, editor-in-chief, Wired Magazine

The cost of things tend to fall to zero over time.

You can build business around giving things away:
If marginal cost of reaching the N+1 customer is approaching zero, then treat the product as free and figure out how to sell something else.

The price of a magazine like Wired is arbirary; it bears no relationship to the actual cost of the magazine. The subscription price is intended to qualify your interest. Setting the price too low "devalues the product."

Most music is free. "Free as in speech" -- DRM is going away. "Free as in beer" -- bands are experimenting with giving away music to market the live performances.

Games and movies would be free if not protected. They are locked down to enforce prices. Artificial barriers tend to fall over time. Already seeing ad-supported videogames. (neopets)

The shining exception: Books! They are not asymptotically approaching free. Books make sense. They provide the optimal way to read. The physical product is better than digital product...excellent battery life, screen resolution, portable, and it even looks good on your shelf. Easy to flip through.

If "free" is "the business model of the 21st century," how could a book be free?

(This was preceded with a disclaimer that many of these options would be "offensive" to people in the audience.)

For his next book, Anderson wants to do the following:
How could a physical book be free?
Why do it?
Why aren't more people doing free content?
The most critical point: The interests of the author and the publisher are critically misaligned. Publishers doesn't benefit from speaking fees of consulting fees, only from book sales.

Sounds like an argument for self-publishing to me.

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