Sherie Griffiths

April 8, 2010

Would You Pay For News Online?

I never thought I’d see the day, but reading yesterday’s Guardian online, I found myself agreeing with Rupert Murdoch. In an article by Paul Harris, he was advocating putting online newspapers behind a ‘pay wall’ – making them available only to paying subscribers. The idea has met with fierce resistence, but I have to admit, I’m not sure why. Is it because it comes from someone like Murdoch? I have to say I didn’t like his assertion in the article that consumers could be “forced” to change their behaviour – that “if there’s nowhere else to go”, they would pay; but I honestly don’t understand the general avertion to the idea of paying for online content, news or otherwise. People who buy newspapers quite willingly part with their hard-earned on a regular basis. The same is true of buyers of books, cds, dvds etc. Yet when any of that material is made available online, a substantial percentage of people expect to get it for free. Surely we, as 21st century humans, aren’t so simple that we only value things we can hold in our hands? Surely most of the value of any information product is in the content, not the packaging? A piece of journalism, for instance, is the product of the journalist’s training, +his/her time and talent. He or she will bring the same training, the same skills etc to bear, however the results are made available to the world – so don’t those results have monitary value, whether their packaging is tangible or intangible? Am I missing something here?

I’m not saying we should always pay the same price for electronic information as we pay for the paper version. I can see the logic behind charging less for an ebook or an epaper than for a hard copy, because production and distribution costs will be lower. There will be costs, though, associated with producing an ebook or updating a newspaper’s website, which have to be covered by someone. When the vast majority of readers were buying old-fashioned newspapers, maybe companies could afford to make their online content free to the end user, but as fewer and fewer people buy physical papers, that becomes more of a challenge for publishers. Murdoch hailed the launch of the Apple iPad in the States on Saturday as the potential saviour of the newspaper industry. If he’s right and increasing numbers of readers move away from newsprint to the screen, some kind of charging model is going to be essential to the survival of titles. The only other option is advertiser-funding – but that’s another blog, for another day!

 

In the meantime, if you fancy getting your hands on an iPad before its worldwide launch, check out this article in The Inquirer.  Interesting marketing move …

November 10, 2009

“The Savvy Business Mountain Guides – A Book In The Making”

At our London launch in May, I used the metaphor of climbing a mountain to describe my experience of getting Savvy up and running – http://www.savvybc.com/aboutsavvybc.php.

I wasn’t trying to be clever – I think in pictures and that was the picture which kept coming to mind. (The fact that someone who works primarily with sound, and has a guide dog, thinks in pictures may seem a bit odd to you, but that’s another story!). Anyway, it rang a few bells with the audience on the night.

As time went on, others started asking me about putting some podcasts together to help people at different stages of business – start-up, expansion etc – and eventually the two ideas came together (or should that be “collided”?) shortly after 5:00am last Friday, 6th November 2009 and “The Savvy Business Mountain Guides” were born. I’d already written an ebook, on an aspect of law for non-lawyers but this time, I thought, I could do something a bit different and combine the book with some audio and audio-visual material so that contributors can, literally, speak for themselves. I’ve run it past several people and so far the response has been fantastic – what do you think? Constructive criticism is as good as enthusiasm – so let me know.

It’s a major project, which I must be mad to take on at this stage in my own business life – but then, as I said to a fellow business author last week (who is in the process of completing her second book) – “You don’t have to be bonkers to go into business – but it certainly helps! The trick is to find the method in your madness, so you can infect other people with it”.

I’m aiming to get the first book launched within the year. Over the coming months, I’ll keep you up to speed with how it’s going, who I’m talking to and, no doubt, what I’m learning from the exercise. If I can work out how to upload multimedia material here, I’ll do some of that by way of audio and perhaps even some video.

If you want to get involved, email me at sherie@savvybc.com.

Hosted by Killer SEO SuperBlogs