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ToonsWare
Nov 10

by Jack Loechner, Today, 8:15 AM

American Press Institute, with ITZ Publishing and Belden Interactive, recently published initial results of a study designed to help Newspaper executives understand the current peer practices in generating revenue from digital content, the various pay models, success levels, and approaches to issues like site registration, electronic editions and tracking original content across the Web.

Among the preliminary findings, nearly 60% of respondents are considering initiating paid access for currently open/free news and information online, and nearly 25% expect to implement a paid strategy in the next six months. This is a big change, says the report, considering that 90% of the responding newspapers currently do not charge for content, and only 3% currently have a paid-only site.

Capturing new revenue and preserving print are likely the key drivers of any final decision to adopt a paid-content strategy. 34% of respondents think capturing new revenue opportunities is or will be the most important factor, while 28% think it is or will be preserving print circulation.

Key Drivers Of Decision Making by News Providers
Driver % of Respondents
Capturing new revenue opportunities

34%

Establishing value for copyrighted content

18%

Preserving print circulation

28%

Driving product development/new revenues

13%

Replacing lost display ad revenues

4%

Replacing lost classified revenues

0 %

Don’t know

3%

Other

2%

Source: American Press Institute, November 2009

Most of the respondents overlook the opportunities and discount the convenience of e-editions, which give users the experience of reading a newspaper online. Most are not charging for e-editions or are not charging enough:

  • Only 67% offer an electronic edition of the paper on their Web sites
  • 59% of those offer it free to their print subscribers
  • The median price for an online-only subscription is $5.99 a month.
  • The median up-charge price, for those who offer it to print subscribers, is $4.99 a month

Current prices for online subscriptions strongly suggest that “convenience” pricing is generally in play, not tied to rigorous price analysis or research into what people are willing to pay. Respondents report a wide range of online subscription charges (from $1 to $27.50 a month), yet they report surprisingly uniform levels of uptake on subscriptions, typically 1% to 3% of print circulation, regardless of price.

While most of the respondents allow users to register for their sites, few require it and even fewer are monetizing registration in any way.

  • Only 27% require users to register
  • 23% have a specific program for monetizing registration information in active use
  • 36% of respondents indicate they are considering a registration program
Web Site Registration Programs
Program % of Respondents
Allows registration

71%

Requires registration

27%

Considering registration

23%

Monetizing registration

36%

Source: American Press Institute, November 2009

The report points out that there is a potentially deep disconnect between news organizations (The Provider) and the audience (The Reader) for their Web sites. Industry executives’ responses are compared with user responses aggregated from Belden Interactive 2009 Local Market Surveys. While 54% of news executives rate their online news and information as “very valuable,” only 44% of news Web site users see it that way.

Value of Online News and Information (% of Respondents)
Provider Perception Reader Perception
Very valuable

54%

44%

Somewhat valuable

39%

51%

Not very valuable

1%

3%

Not at all valuable

1%

1%

Don’t know

6%

1%

Source: American Press Institute, November 2009

Only 9% of news executives think it would be “very easy” for their audience to find a replacement for the online content their news Web sites are currently providing, compared with 19% of users.

Degree of Difficulty to Replace Online Content From Site Currently Provided (% of Respondents)
Difficulty Provider Perception Reader Perception
Very easy

9%

19%

Somewhat easy

22%

33%

Not very easy

34%

28%

Not very easy at all

34%

15%

Don’t know 2% 5%
Source: American Press Institute, November 2009

The audience that gets its local news and information online would focus on the Internet and TV, not print, if their local newspaper Web site were no longer available. 68% of users say they would turn to other local Internet sites, 45% would turn to television, only 30% would turn to the print edition of the paper, while 75% of news executives think users would turn to their print editions.

Alternative Likely to be Selected if Local Newspaper Web Site No Longer Available (% of Respondents)
News Provider Provider Perception Reader Perception
Your print newspaper

75%

30%

Other local media sites

55%

17%

Television

53%

45%

Other local Web sites

48%

68%

Radio

46%

35%

Regional/National sites

42%

37%

Other newspaper

31%

12%

Other

4%

5%

Don’t know

3%

2%

Source: American Press Institute, November 2009

The report concludes with key variables to be analyzed by news organizations contemplating a conversion to online paid content, or any other revenue opportunities.

To read the variables and recommendations, and for additional details about the study in PDF format, please visit the American Press Institute here.

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Jul 03

Ian Paul, PC World

Apple iPhone 3GS

Apple iPhone 3GS

The iPhone 3GS is hot according to AT&T. No, I’m not talking about the overheating issues, but a alleged leaked memo from the iPhone’s exclusive U.S. carrier. In the memo, AT&T reports the iPhone 3GS launch day on June 6 was the best-ever sales day for AT&T retail stores, according to MacDaily News. June 6 was also the second largest traffic day for AT&T stores, and the most upgrade eligibility checks in a single day were performed during the iPhone 3GS launch day. The 3GS debut was so huge, for AT&T retail stores anyway, that sales for the device surpassed launch day sales for the iPhone 3G by noon Central Time.

After the iPhone 3GS initial launch weekend, Apple also reported a successful launch of its latest smart phone reporting that it had sold more than one million iPhone 3GS devices at Apple retail locations. That’s the same number Apple used to describe the iPhone 3G launch weekend last year.

What’s surprising, however, is a growing consensus that the iPhone 3GS debut may have been far bigger than the launch of the iPhone 3G. Last summer, the iPhone 3G debut was lauded as the most successful launch of any tech product in history. For days after its initial availability, fans were lining up around the block at Apple Stores across the United States and the world to get their hands on the iPhone 3G. Device shortages were a regular occurrence, and customers in less populated areas were left waiting for months to get their own wonder gadget from Apple.

This year, the lines were not as long for the iPhone 3GS, and the frenzy that accompanied the 2008 iPhone 3G launch was not present. This could have been for a number of reasons including better inventory supplies on Apple’s part, and a public less willing to line up for days on end just to get their hands on a smartphone. But if suspicison are correct, then relative customer apathy was not an issue for Apple this year, and the recession may not have made much of an impact on iPhone 3GS sales either.

Other signs of the iPhone 3GS’ popularity are also starting to crop up. Earlier this month, Apple resurrected its iPhone availability tool to help you find the Apple Store with the best 3GS supplies near you. Customers in the United Kingdom and Canada may find it harder to get the iPhone 3GS in the coming weeks. The World of Apple is reporting that two carriers–O2 in Britain and Fido in Canada–have run out of their iPhone inventories; however, Apple Stores in both countries are still stocked up with inventory.

So the iPhone 3GS is shaping up to be the hottest iPhone ever, but we may not know how hot until Apple releases its quarterly earnings report later this month.

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May 03

Last month, Apple said consumers had downloaded more than 1 billion iPhone applications from its online App Store, and that software developers had filled the store’s virtual aisles with more than 35,000 programs.

Clearly, iPhone users love to deck out their phones with new games, friend-finders, restaurant guides, and business applications, which can range in price from free to $899. Most sell for 99 cents to $3.99. But for Boston-based companies developing software for the iPhone - even some that have found early success - it’s not yet certain that the increasingly crowded aisles of the App Store offer the opportunity to build a sustainable business.

Local companies sell (and give away) applications to help users lose weight, navigate the world of wine, remotely access a far-off desktop computer, or flirt with someone. Some ventures are creating tools to make it easier to develop iPhone apps, or offering custom app development services.

Apple pockets one-third of all app revenue, as it does with the music, movies, and TV shows it sells. The dynamics of the marketplace could change this summer, however, when Apple enables software developers to generate reve nue from their apps in new ways.

  • Perhaps the best promoter of the local bunch is Jason Jacobs, who sells an app for runners that tracks things like distance and speed. Last month, he ran the Boston Marathon dressed as an iPhone - displaying his company’s RunKeeper software, of course, and posting Twitter messages and photos along the way. (He finished in 3:55.) The free version of RunKeeper is on Apple’s list of the top 10 apps in the health and fitness category, but the $9.99 version is only in the top 30. Jacobs has been working full time on the company for a year, sans salary, and the rest of his team includes six freelancers working for equity and a small development shop that he pays on a project basis.

    More than 325,000 people have downloaded the app, which lets runners and bikers do things like use the iPhone’s internal GPS system to map out routes and share their stats with friends via Facebook. Of people who get the free version, Jacobs says about 6 percent upgrade to the $9.99 product.

    “We’re all kind of fumbling in the dark, but I definitely think there’s a big business to be built here,” Jacobs says. “Though you can question whether it will be done by the pioneers or the fast followers who come along after the pioneers run out of money.”

  • Lose It, which helps dieters count calories, is another locally produced app - the most popular weight-loss application. It was developed initially by serial entrepreneur J.J. Allaire, who sold his last company to Microsoft, as a kind of side project. There hasn’t yet been a paid version of the app, though recently Charles Teague, a frequent Allaire collaborator, left the Cambridge venture capital firm General Catalyst to work full time on future versions of Lose It - and possibly, other apps. Neither is saying much about the company’s plans now.
  • Brad Rosen created an iPhone collection of wine reviews and info called Drync, which also allows users to build a list of their favorite vintages. It originally sold for $9.99, but lately has been discounted to $4.99. Rosen says he has sold about 20,000 copies. Charging customers a one-time download fee and constantly striving to be on Apple’s lists of the most popular apps in a given category “makes it very hard to be a sustainable business,” says Rosen, who created the app with six freelance collaborators who share in the profits.

    “It’s hard in the current model to see my way to $1 million in revenue,” he says, adding that the company is profitable. Rosen also says that his hope that Drync could make money by selling small ads hasn’t panned out: “There’s no real money in advertising.” 

  • Cambridge-based Viximo is developing its own iPhone apps, like Voodoo Doll Revenge, a $1.99 app that allows you to poke virtual pins into a photo of your enemy, and also offering tools to help others create apps. The biggest challenge, says vice president Ravi Mehta, is angling for a prominent position in the App Store. ”You have to try to talk to Apple and get them excited,” he says. “In many ways, it’s the luck of the draw.” 
  • Several small firms are starting up in Boston to help clients develop their own apps, including Rocket Farm Studios, Klick Mobile, and Apperian Corp. “Our business model is to help big brands get to the iPhone platform,” says Apperian founder Chuck Goldman, a former Apple executive. “You have apps like Lose It, but Weight Watchers has nothing in the App Store. Not having an iPhone app now is like not having a website.” 
  • Since last December, Woburn-based LogMeIn Inc. has been selling a $30 application called Ignition that allows users to remotely access files on a distant desktop or laptop machine. Ignition has benefited by being prominently featured in Apple’s iPhone advertising - at no cost to LogMeIn. 
  • The company is poised to benefit even more: This summer, Apple is expected to roll out a new operating system for the iPhone, and new business options for app developers. They’ll be allowed to charge subscription fees for continued access to apps, or give an app away but later charge for particular features or premium content directly from inside the app - without requiring the user to return to Apple’s online iTunes Store.

    “We think those new capabilities are going to be really interesting,” says Kevin Farrell, a vice president at LogMeIn. “We can create a purely free app, or a $1 app that has some add-on options that would cost extra. Those are options we’re definitely looking at.”

    The Holy Grail for anyone creating apps is to be able to write their software once, and have it run not just on the iPhone, but also on Google’s Android operating system, the BlackBerry, Nokias, and new phones that haven’t yet been released. That ability to “write once and run everywhere” is still a ways off.

    “You can make a few shekels selling a 99 cent iPhone app, if you really hit a vein,” says venture capitalist Woody Benson of Prism VentureWorks in Needham. “But it gets progressively more interesting if you can efficiently get your app onto the iPhone, Android, and the new phone that Microsoft may be working on - that’s a more compelling prospect.”

    Scott Kirsner can be reached at kirsner@pobox.com.  

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