Misunderstanding The Importance Of Cannibalizing Your Own Products
from the hello-competitors dept
Obviously, it's painful to see your core product and cash cow being supplanted by other offerings -- but if that's what's happening, it's because your customers like that other offering better. If that's the case, aren't you better of cannibalizing your own business? If your customers are going to go elsewhere, they might as well go to another offering from you. Too many companies don't seem to get this message. The latest in this long line appears to be a large Norwegian newspaper, Verdens Gang, that has decided that since their online version appears to be taking business away from their paper version, they're going to keep lots of content offline. This is going to backfire, badly. Basically, they're giving their users less in an attempt to get them to come back to the paper version. All that's likely to do is encourage them to simply move to completely other sources that don't have this kind of policy.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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At least they're open
I think there is still a market for credible, professional written news. Mainstream news organizations (as we know them) can still survive if they improve their journalistic standards, to a level that only the pros can offer. Techdirt wouldn't happen to be such a business, would it?
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If Techdirt grows
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I agree with Mike
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Re: I agree with Mike
Our local paper (the almost ONLY source of local news online) had a decent website. The major headlines, a few columns and a few "previews" of what's in the print edition (incidentally, a few times, those previews were enough to get me to buy the printed edition that day). It wasn't much, but it was enough.
Then they switched to ad-driven subscriptions with NOTHING free. If you don't subscribe, you get the headline and a 2 line summary of the article/column and a 'subscribe here' link. If you do subscribe (I know a clueless moron who does) and in the member's only there's even MORE ads! On TOP of that, the subscription is 17$ A MONTH!!! That's more than most dial-up accounts around here!
Since then, no webclicks from me and no deadtree purchases either.
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finally, a place to complain about this
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