With all the free and open-source products circling the web, why should you pay for a product that has a free equivalent for download?
If you put in a little more effort you can even get retail goods without paying a single red cent!
So what’s all this buzz about businesses continuing to sell goods (software, graphics, photos, etc.) online when there is so much free stuff floating around; when their own retail products can be pirated through the thousands of warez sites and p2p file-sharing applications? Why don’t these online businesses just give up already!??
I’ll tell you why. For starters, business people are a strange bunch. They will pursue opportunities that justify profits, and it turns out that a healthy business can result from selling digital goods online.
But how? When I can download an open-source software equivalent or download royalty-free photographs and graphics? Not to mention pirate commercial versions of all of the above?
Let me answer this by using a parallel, real-world example: Premium art. Better still, let’s look at The 500 year-old Mona Lisa. Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you know what it is.
There are thousands of Mona-Lisa replicas floating around (in digital and in printed form). Someone, somewhere even has a full-sized replica with a gold-plated frame hanging on his / her living-room wall.
You can have your own copy too, by simply googling “Mona Lisa” and saving one of the many painting graphics that pop-up in your google search results.
So why won’t you feel content by doing just that?
For starters, it’s because you know that – although it looks exactly like the real thing – it can never give you as much joy as owning the genuine article. Why not break into the Musée du Louvre in Paris and steal it? Are you kidding me?!! ( I fear some numskull somewhere will probably entertain the idea… what would the world be without them, anyway?)
Granted; electronic goods are not as highly valued or as closely guarded as The Mona Lisa but the point I want to make is that human nature will always stay more-or-less the same. It will always measure value in a way that will drive lab technicians to the insane asylum.
Human-nature is the reason we make the choices we do make and it is no different online. It is the reason some people prefer to buy from pharmacies instead of eying government-issue condoms from public toilets; the reason some don’t line-up at food shelters simply because the food is free; the reason some prefer a 5-star chef to cooking dinner themselves.
Self-perception, quality, service
These are some of the same real-world reasons that make selling digital goods online still viable. Some people will chase after anything as long as they can get it for free. Some would rather spend money on a good product and save on bargain-hunting time and effort. Some value the service that comes with commercial purchases.
Online and off-line: the buyer of your products is a human-being with their own peculiar reasons for prowling the market for their item of desire.
And since aliens and dogs are not yet sufficiently trained to operate a web-browser, you can rest assured that human nature has more than enough need for premium online electronic goods. That strange bunch of business people certainly thinks so, and they haven’t been proven wrong yet.
2 Responses for "Selling Digital Goods Online: Still Worth The Effort?"
I remember a lesson in standard 9 ( shows you how old i am) when my physical science teacher introduced INERTIA. He said that it is the idea that people will continue to do what they are already doing.
You may be sitting here, scheduling you next blog post for tomorrow, while your significant other ‘gently’ encourages you to get pizza for the evening. You would rather spend R40.00 extra to order in dinner than leave your notebook. There you go, INERTIA.
People love convenience. That is our weakness. I loaded office 2007 on my system. Ask me what feature do I use that has not been available since office ’97 ? What made me do it ? Microsoft Marketing !!
So as long as we are lazy and are easily mesmerized by smoke and mirrors, we will never quench our insatiable appetite for convenience !
March 14th, 2009 at 8:18 pmI agree. Good marketing will help to identify people who want to buy a premium product to know that they will get the best quality they can afford.
March 17th, 2009 at 3:43 pmLeave a reply