Industry News  |  In Practice  |  The Bigger Picture  |  Digital Marketing  |  Your Business

Latest Articles

Business Briefing: Where Next for Venture Capitalists?

Despite the economic downturn venture capitalists are still looking at investment opportunities in digital media. New Media Knowledge spoke to one to get the low down on what VCs want.

more

Social Media in Practice: BBC Radio 5 Live

Web publishers and broadcasters always have to look for new and innovative ways to maintain existing audiences and win new ones. When BBC Radio 5 Live realised it was losing listeners to other sources of football-based content it launched a new service to win them back. New Media Knowledge met the people responsible.

more

Conservationists Embrace Social Media

Television is increasingly embracing new media to reach new audiences and add interesting applications. New Media Knowledge talks to the people behind a new online conservation series that aims to raise wider awareness of the plight of endangered species.

more

Related Articles

Mileage In Paid-For Content?

Filed under: all articles
By: NMK Created on: January 26th, 2005
Bookmark this article with: Delicious Digg StumbleUpon

Is paid-for content the only way? Dale Lovell charts the shifts in direction and opposing drivers in the debate over subscription-based content models...

By Dale Lovell

[Register and post your own comments on this article below...]

That fact that websites have managed to persuade users to stump up the cash for online content is proof, if any were needed, that the paid for format can, and does, work online. In fact, it works very well. Jupiter Research predicts that UK consumers will be spending £1billion a year on online content by 2006.

Many online publishers are currently faced with a dilemma – to charge or not to charge. Economics may automatically encourage publishers to charge, but is that really feasible?

Not only does switching to subscription charging require a large marketing budget in order to persuade existing users and encourage new ones to subscribe to the paid-for format, but the added cost of setting up and then billing, whether using micro-payments or not, each individual subscriber, can mean that the initial benefits of charging for content are considerably diminished.

Pushing online publishers into the paid for content format is the fear that if they do not begin to charge they will not be able to compete effectively. But there are ways for sites to compete without charging for their content.

The fact that online advertising topped £500m in 2004, and the wide recognition that the medium is now a serious challenger to radio in terms of ad spend, is positive news for those providing free content.

If the current trend of charging for content continues, opportunities will arise for sites providing free content to compete with their subscription based rivals because sites that ring-fence their content with subscription charges will inevitably lose some of their userbase.

Brand jeopardy

While e-commerce has undoubtedly become the top reason for advertising online, many brands, most recently Heinz to coincide with the launch of their new soup range, are increasingly using the internet as a way of increasing brand awareness. Any website which loses as much as 80% of their visitors virtually overnight with the introduction of subscription charges will do little to endear themselves to brand managers hoping to use the internet as a medium for boosting brand awareness.

Websites which continue to provide free content will have to step into the gap left by their subscription based rivals and cater to the needs of advertisers looking to maximise their brand online.

Websites providing free content must attract those users who resent paying for content online, of which there will be many, and then when their user levels are high enough, aggressively highlight the benefits of the free content medium to advertisers.

Of course, if the content on a site has about as much appeal as a dirty weekend away with Jeremy Beadle, no amount of marketing will make a site competitive.

In the UK we are currently protected from the extremes of paid for content by the BBC. In so long as the BBC continues to provide an exceptional online service free from advertising and subscription charges, on topics as diverse as news, family history, finance and lifestyle, there is a limit to how successful a large all encompassing paid-for content operation can be.

Currently the paid for format only works for a number of well branded sites that are usually supported by a strong off-line presence. The Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times are just two such subscription sites that fall into this mould. Making the switch without a significant offline ‘carrot’ to tempt users into subscribing can be extremely difficult.

The ghetto effect

However, with the BBC’s charter up for renewal in 2006 and the analysis of the Corporation’s activities outside the realm of public service broadcasting that this brings, the future may not be as clear cut when it comes to paid for content.

If the BBC is compelled to curb some of its online operations, as is becoming increasingly likely, and UK consumers continue to adapt to the subscription format, there is a very real danger of a ‘ghetto effect’ taking place online as a result of charging for content, with certain parts of the web becoming no-go areas, restricted only to fully subscribed members.

What none of us want for the future; publisher, advertiser and user, is for the web to become an online version of Satellite television, where everyone with a dish can receive it, but unless you cough up and subscribe to a monthly package it isn’t really worth it.

[Register and post your own comments on this article below...]

About the Author:
Dale Lovell is Content Manager at www.50connect.co.uk
50Connect is a content-led lifestyle portal for today's over 45s. It was launched in early 1999 and today is the largest website for the over 45s in the UK.

Comments

You must be logged in to comment.

Log into NMK

Register

Lost Password?
Login

Newsletter


For the latest news from NMK enter your email address and click subscribe:


Subscribe