AOL Learns That You Can't Just Go 'Free, With Ads.' You Need To Give People Reasons To Visit
from the business-model-101 dept
It's been a little over a year since AOL made the big decision to go free. It was about the only thing the company could do at the time. It's subscriptions were dropping rapidly. It held little to differentiate itself from the many free services out there. It had failed to build a real broadband strategy for years. The problem, though, was that the decision to go free was made way too late and, most importantly, without much additional strategy behind it. It seemed like the strategy was basically just "if we go free, we'll sell ads." They left out the important middle step though: the company needed to actually give people a reason to visit and give advertisers a reason to buy ads. Without that step, it really isn't surprising that the company is realizing its "free, with ads" strategy isn't working as well as planned. On the same day that AOL officially bought another online ad company, it was revealed that the growth in ad revenue has been slowing, and it lost a big advertising partner. This is a good reminder, though, for other companies out there who are trying to figure out how to embrace "free" as a part of their business model. You can't really neglect the rest of your business model.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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Filed Under: advertising, business models, free
Companies: aol, time warner
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AOL blew it big time
When you have an astronomical amount of subscribers and you just sit by and let your business stagnate you get what you deserve.
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Re:
I sure hope so.
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AOL gotohell.
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It's the memory of AOL that keeps people away
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corporate plan from AOL exec meeting
Step 2: ..... (Confused looks) ..
Step 3: Profit!
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AOHell.
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I havent liked AOL since my first month on the int
Step 1: Give people no reason to use your free service.
Step 2:......
Step 3: Profit
Yup looks like AOL is now run by underwear gnomes.
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