Yet Another Musician Discovers That Free, Implemented Well, Can Increase Fans & Make You More Money
from the haven't-see-seen-this-before dept
I almost didn't post this story, because we've seen nearly the same thing so many times -- but seeing the surprise that some have expressed about musician Andy Othling's post about giving away his music for free for a day (with a pay what you want campaign via his Bandcamp page), it seemed worth mentioning. As in other cases, he found that he ended up with many new listeners and much more attention... but what surprised him was that he also made more money. He expected to make less, assuming that people would just take the content for free. And, of course, some did. But when you expand your audience tremendously, and give them the option and the tools to support you, amazing things happen:I was anticipating a drop in revenue, because that’s usually what you expect when you start giving things away for free. But what happened was that in a single day I made more than 2x what I normally do on music sales in an ENTIRE MONTH. Yes, you read that right. More in a day than in two months of regular sales.Of course, we've seen this exact thing over and over again, so it shouldn't be at all surprising by this point. Andy points out that he greatly increased his fanbase too:
I don’t quite know how to explain this, but I think a lot of it is based on reciprocal generosity. People seemed to really appreciate that I did this and responded by paying more than they normally would. I was blown away by people who decided to give more for an album than it would have cost them the day before.
There you can see that in one day, I added almost 450 email addresses to my mailing list. That’s 450 more direct connections that I can make in the future, and 450 more people who can spread the news when I do something like this again. This is way more exciting to me than money.Of course, he chose to only do this for 24 hours... and then took away the free option. We've seen some others do this as well, to mixed results. More than a few musicians I've talked to who have run similar experiments later switch to leaving the free option up permanently, but it's not uncommon for people to try it as a limited-time experiment at first. There may be some value in the "it's only free today!" aspect to get people to act, but I do wonder if it limits long term potential. For example, with this post, some people here might want to check out his music -- but I'd bet a lot more people would be interested if the music were still free.
It's also important to note that while people often get blinded by "free" and forget about everything else, Andy didn't just do "free" and leave it at that. He (1) strategically promoted that it was free and urged others to pass that info around and (2) provided a clear way for people to support him monetarily as well, if they so chose. Free is a piece of the puzzle, but it's not everything.
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Filed Under: andy othling, free, music
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"added almost 450 email addresses to my mailing list."
So it's another "free but not exactly" day. -- That one should probably be an hourly, quite frequent.
But now, Mike, according to your "can't compete" piece, and your $100M movie example, Andy's only cost at this point is for bandwidth, so he should be charging about a nickel a tune (assuming he's paying for "premium" bits), right? But a quick sample (of someone) found $3.99 for 9 tracks...
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Re: "added almost 450 email addresses to my mailing list."
Blargha flargha!
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Re: "added almost 450 email addresses to my mailing list."
If you'd bothered to actually read that piece, or actually understand anything about economics, competition pushes price to marginal cost. You can charge above marginal cost—sometimes very far above—as long as you provide sufficient value. Remember, given sufficient funds, if value exceeds price, customer buys.
As iTunes very effectively demonstrates, people will gladly pay $.99 per track or sometimes more for the convenience of the ecosystem; as experiments like this demonstrate, people will gladly pay money for something they can get for free, if there is value in the purchase. I, for instance, would gladly pay $3.99 for 9 tracks—if the files were DRM-free and of sufficient quality, and if the money went to an artist I like.
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Re: "added almost 450 email addresses to my mailing list."
"Spam you to beg for money"? Guess what - all businesses do this to some degree.
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Re: "added almost 450 email addresses to my mailing list."
That's called advertising.
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Humble Bundle model
Sometimes components of old Humble Bundles offerings are re-offered as bonuses on new bundles, however. Luckily they let you customize the payment split (otherwise I'd have paid for World of Goo, for example, something like 3 times)...
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Re: "added almost 450 email addresses to my mailing list."
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People's consumerist obsession with money is destroying the fabric of society we live in.
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Re: "added almost 450 email addresses to my mailing list."
Also, the $100 million movie example is worn out, shall we change to the $10k movie that made over a million? If you read the damn thing right he was offering for free for those who wanted it for free. However there's an aspect that you morons from the MAFIAA hate and ignore: people will pay, and often more than the regular price, just to support their favorite artists or the ones they think are doing it right. I've done that quite a few times already. I donated to projects I don't intend to ever check again just because the creator had a nice attitude.
Just because you are a rotten, greedy bastard it does not mean the rest of the world is. Contrary to the straw man you built, those who share don't always want everything for free.
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