Welcome | Sign In
CRMBuyer.com
Publishing

Amazon Takes One Small Step Toward Monetizing Online Content

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Amazon Takes One Small Step Toward Monetizing Online Content

Amazon's latest Kindle experiment could be the start of something big: a way to persuade consumers to pay for online content. By paying a nominal price for a subscription, users can have automatic access to their favorite blogs. There are a number of drawbacks to the model, but if it budges the "free content" paradigm even slightly, it could be a game changer.


Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) has opened another front in its push to establish the Kindle as the dominant e-reader in the market. The company is allowing bloggers to offer their posts in a subscription format via the Kindle store.

The program is currently in beta. Bloggers can sign up for an account right now, however, by providing Amazon with information and an RSS link to their site.

The blog posts will then be delivered wirelessly to subscribers' Kindles. Unlike on the Internet, these blogs will not be available for free -- Amazon will set a price. It has not offered much in the way of pricing information for the majority of blogs likely to publish on the Kindle; the only guide is the prices it has already set for well-trafficked blogs such as the Huffington Post, which are between US$1 and $2 per month.

Whatever fee schedule Amazon does set for blogs, the majority of the revenue -- 70 percent -- will go to the company.

Flawed Model?


[Click Image to Enlarge]
Clearly, this is part of Amazon's larger strategy Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales to build traction with the Kindle -- a strategy that has included several agreements with newspapers and magazines for subscriptions as well as the forthcoming release of the Kindle DX, which, with its larger screen, is better suited for reading newspapers.

Like its other go-to-market strategies, though, there are drawbacks to Amazon's blog publishing initiative, starting with the fact that instead of paying for a blog, a user can merely access it on the Kindle's browser.

Also, the demographics don't necessarily add up, said Loren Johnson, a digital media industry analyst with Frost & Sullivan.

"A disproportionate number of Kindle buyers are over age 50," he told the E-Commerce Times. "The disproportionate number of blog writers and readers are under 50."

Somehow Amazon will have to make the twain meet -- either by convincing Kindle buyers that they should read more blogs on a regular basis or convincing bloggers to sign onto the Kindle despite the likelihood of low revenues.

Path to Monetization

For many bloggers, of course, that is probably going to be the least of their concerns. The Kindle is seen -- or at least is being marketed -- as the best approach to monetizing online content.

For instance, when Scott Fox, author of e-Riches 2.0: Next Generation Online Marketing, heard that Amazon was allowing bloggers to publish their work on the Kindle, he immediately signed up his e-commerce success blog.

"The audience for the Kindle is still small, and the number of people likely to pay for blogs delivered to their Kindles even smaller, but I would rather have my content and brand there from the start," he told the E-Commerce Times.

"That gives my blog the opportunity to grow with this new platform rather than trying to catch up later. Kindle blog publishing reaches an audience very well suited to my blog's content, too."

Long-Term Advantages

That day is not around the corner, though. If anything, Amazon is moving away from a price point that most consumers would find more comfortable.

The Kindle 2 is being offered at $359, which is too high for mass sales . The DX costs even more -- $489.

"Amazon will have to work to get the message out," Frost & Sullivan's Johnson said, "but this product is just great; I believe it will revitalize book sales at some point in the future -- perhaps even more than people are expecting today."


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Erika Morphy


More by Erika Morphy

Ballmer Gives Shareholders - and Dell - Cause for Optimism
November 20, 2009
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer was all smiles at the company's shareholders meeting, as he touted the early success of Windows 7. Ballmer's cheer may have been contagious; after posting a massive earnings decline for the third quarter, Dell needed some good news to latch onto, and the prospect of broad enterprise adoption of Windows 7 could spur PC sales.
AA.com Sucks the Fun Out of Trip-Planning
November 20, 2009
Using AA.com to book a flight was a painful experience. Densely packed, disorganized information was displayed in an unattractive format. On the plus side, it did seem as though the deals American Airlines advertised were real and not mere bait-and-switch lures. For anyone who wants a travel-planning Web site to inject a little pleasure into the experience, though, I say look elsewhere.
Salesforce.com Pumps Up Volume of Workplace Chatter
November 19, 2009
Salesforce.com has developed a collaboration platform that puts social networking to work. Salesforce Chatter facilitates employee collaboration on projects through Facebook-like profiles, status updates, feeds and groups. The question remains whether employees will be as open to social networking in the workplace as they are in their personal lives.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network