Text reblogged from bijan sabet with 30 notes
There are a few ways online content is paid for today.
Advertising. Subscription. Pay per download or use.
There are others forms of monetization making inroads but these are the big three at this time.
Many content owners are still struggling with their digital efforts & strategy. And as a result we (all of us) are still at the early days of figuring all of this out.
Consider:
1 - Books. Yes, the Kindle is amazing. Many of my friends that own the Kindle tell me that that Amazon’s Kindle library of content isn’t great yet. So first they try to buy content thru Amazon. But if the content isn’t there they get a pirated version online somewhere and send to the Kindle as a PDF. I’m told it’s super simple to do.
The NYT has a piece about book piracy today. Many authors are concerned about finding their published works on Scribd and other places. Then you have Cory Doctorow who makes his works free online at the same time as the published book. Cory has this classic line in the article:
“I really feel like my problem isn’t piracy,” Mr. Doctorow said. “It’s obscurity.”I love that line.
2 - Television. I wish Hulu and others would completely open up. Right now there are three big problems with Hulu in my opinion. First, the library of content is getting wider (thanks to new content deals like ABC) but less deep. It’s well known that many shows don’t make it to Hulu until a full week after the broadcast. Second, many shows are taken down quickly as well. Third, Hulu limits 3rd party distribution. We don’t have a storage or techical problem. We have a fear problem. But as my friend Jamie Siminoff points out, Hulu should be able to monetize better than old fashioned tv.
3 - Banner ads. Saul Hansell has a story in the NYT today about new super-sized ads that are actually 468 pixels wide for “premium” content sites. Oy. The most interesting thing about the story is the comments where most people say that they don’t care about these super-sized ads.
Why don’t they care? Because they use Ad-blocker extension on Firefox and they don’t see any of those ads. That’s a problem isn’t it.
4 - Music. We still don’t have music right yet. For example, we don’t have an easy way for me to pay for my own radio station. Yes, Apple dropping DRM was a big step forward. But I’m finding more and more soundtracks online are only sold as full album instead of a la carte. Even on iTunes. Haven’t we moved beyond this by now?
Plus, music labels are still suing startups into oblivion that are trying to save the labels not hurt them. There are a few well known killer music discovery startups that I’ve been dying to invest in — but won’t at this time. I worry that the day I invest is the day they will get a lawsuit. Even if they don’t have a case — they will sue.
I know of a startup that has a contract with all of the major labels. They include minimum payments and even warrants (don’t get me started on the latter). The contract is up for renewal and now a few of the labels are trying to shake down this startup. It’s just gross.
Here’s the thing that all of these have in common. They try to do something that is artificial with the web. You can’t be half way open. Content owners can’t set the bozo bit on us. We want to pay for content. Please make it easier.
Howard Stringer is right. Content isn’t king. The consumer is king.
Link
PaidContent reports Disney is in “serious” talks to put ABC shows on Hulu. ESPN and Disney Channel could be on the table as well. Every major broadcaster but CBS on Hulu? TV is deeeeeeead. [via paidContent via gizmodo]
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Meanwhile, NBC and Fox only get paid when you watch the TV shows on TV or cable, which gets them Nielsen ratings and subscriber fees. Internet revenues from the likes of Hulu are puny. So they can’t afford to lose viewers to Web video shows on TV when they need them to be watching TV shows on TV. That’s the gist of Zucker’s quote.
Longer term, this anti-customer strategy will fail. (See: Music industry v. Internet.) But perhaps it saves the networks a few years, and could open more opportunities for the cable industry to build up their on-demand content and technologies so that subscribers at least keep feeding the monster $80 a month.
NBC Boss Explains Why Boxee Users Can’t Have Hulu (GE, NWS)
My 2 cents: Go all the way or don’t do it at all. The networks should put all their weight behind web technologies like Boxee. Hell, make their own (isn’t that what hulu is?), I don’t care! I think this is the quickest way to skirt this issue of ad revenue (hello, watches on Hulu will give 10x more info then Nielson ratings, eg IP, Location, Time of viewing, browser, OS, etc). No brainer if you ask me!
Link
Boxee: Latest Boxee Brings Hulu Back, Adds an App Box
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They say TV will rot your brain. That’s absurd. TV only softens the brain, like a ripe banana. To take it all the way, we’ve created Hulu.