Free: The Future of a Radical Price [NOOK Book]

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Overview


The New York Times bestselling author heralds the future of business in Free.


In his revolutionary bestseller, The Long Tail, Chris Anderson demonstrated how the online marketplace creates niche markets, allowing products and consumers to connect in a way that has never been possible before. Now, in Free, he makes the compelling case that in many instances businesses can profit more from giving things away than they can by charging for them. Far more than a promotional gimmick, Free is a business strategy that may well be essential to a company's survival.


The costs associated ...

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Overview


The New York Times bestselling author heralds the future of business in Free.


In his revolutionary bestseller, The Long Tail, Chris Anderson demonstrated how the online marketplace creates niche markets, allowing products and consumers to connect in a way that has never been possible before. Now, in Free, he makes the compelling case that in many instances businesses can profit more from giving things away than they can by charging for them. Far more than a promotional gimmick, Free is a business strategy that may well be essential to a company's survival.


The costs associated with the growing online economy are trending toward zero at an incredible rate. Never in the course of human history have the primary inputs to an industrial economy fallen in price so fast and for so long. Just think that in 1961, a single transistor cost $10; now Intel's latest chip has two billion transistors and sells for $300 (or 0.000015 cents per transistor--effectively too cheap to price). The traditional economics of scarcity just don't apply to bandwidth, processing power, and hard-drive storage.


Yet this is just one engine behind the new Free, a reality that goes beyond a marketing gimmick or a cross-subsidy. Anderson also points to the growth of the reputation economy; explains different models for unleashing the power of Free; and shows how to compete when your competitors are giving away what you're trying to sell.


In Free, Chris Anderson explores this radical idea for the new global economy and demonstrates how this revolutionary price can be harnessed for the benefit of consumers and businesses alike.

Editorial Reviews

Janet Maslin
Mr. Anderson has come up with a lively conversation piece. Even when the particulars of his argument are easily assailable, the gist is clear: Now that a cornucopia of Internet material has been made available without fee, and in some cases without scruples, the smart business must find ways to adapt to that new reality. "The way to compete with Free is to move past the abundance to find the adjacent scarcity," he writes. And Free is full of specific examples of how to do just that.
—The New York Times
Rob Pegoraro
Anderson…provides useful insights into both the market forces he describes and what to do about them.
—The Washington Post
Publishers Weekly

In the digital marketplace, the most effective price is no price at all, argues Anderson (The Long Tail). He illustrates how savvy businesses are raking it in with indirect routes from product to revenue with such models as cross-subsidies (giving away a DVR to sell cable service) and freemiums (offering Flickr for free while selling the superior FlickrPro to serious users). New media models have allowed successes like Obama's campaign "billboards" on Xbox Live, Webkinz dolls and Radiohead's name-your-own-price experiment with its latest album. A generational and global shift is at play-those below 30 won't pay for information, knowing it will be available somewhere for free, and in China, piracy accounts for about 95% of music consumption-to the delight of artists and labels, who profit off free publicity through concerts and merchandising. Anderson provides a thorough overview of the history of pricing and commerce, the "mental transaction costs" that differentiate zero and any other price into two entirely different markets, the psychology of digital piracy and the open-source war between Microsoft and Linux. As in Anderson's previous book, the thought-provoking material is matched by a delivery that is nothing short of scintillating. (July)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Library Journal

While the best things in life may be free, a business model based on giving stuff away seems a little crazy. But Anderson (editor in chief, Wired), who made a big splash with The Long Tail, tells us that this business model is already here. In The Long Tail, he showed how online businesses were making good by selling less of more, that is, by selling a huge range of niche or low-volume products that added up to big bucks. Here he demonstrates that the concept of making money by giving things away has already taken hold in the digital world. VERDICT With explanations of basic economic principles like supply and demand and an analysis of the differences between products in the physical world and those in the digital world, Anderson makes the Free premise sound quite reasonable. Lots of companies are making lots of money from "free." Google and Yahoo, for instance, have some of the biggest computer server complexes in the world, yet they let us use their email, news, and search services every day. While this book may not be free, it will generate interest among both academic and general readers.—Carol J. Elsen, Univ. of Wisconsin, Whitewater


—Carol J. Elsen
The Barnes & Noble Review
The Future of a Radical Price, says the subtitle of Chris Anderson's Free. But for many readers unschooled in the preposterous paradoxes of the Internet economy, the idea of "free" as a financial price sounds ridiculous rather than radical, more comic than economic, closer to Monty Python's Flying Circus than to Adam Smith. Perhaps it is no coincidence, then, that Anderson begins Free with the hilariously stern public announcement made by the Monty Python team on the free video website YouTube in November last year. This note began in classically Monty Python tongue-in-cheek outrage:

For 3 years you YouTubers have been ripping us off, taking tens of thousands of our videos and putting them on YouTube. Now the tables are turned. It's time for us to take matters into our own hands.

The logical response, of course, would have been for Monty Python to hire some killer lawyers and sue the pants off the kleptomaniac kids. But, as Anderson explains, "taking matters into our own hands" meant quite the reverse for the Monty Python team. Instead of building more secure walls around their content, Monty Python would post all their high-quality videos on YouTube. And it would all be free!

So where's the rational economics in this? any reasonable thinking person would wonder. How can Monty Python make money if they give away their content for free? Herein lies the paradox of today's digital economy. As the announcement explained, Monty Python wanted something "in return" for their free content. But rather than their fans' "driveling, mindless comments," Monty Python wanted them to watch the free content on YouTube and then "click on the links, buy our movies and TV shows and soften our pain."

As Anderson triumphantly reports in Free, YouTube viewers did indeed soften Monty Python's pain. Three months after the YouTube "free" experiment, Monty Python's sales at Amazon.com increased by 23,000 percent and their DVD rocketed up to No. 2 on the movie and TV bestseller list.

It could have been a classic Monty Python skit, but it wasn't. Give away all your best content on the Internet and raise real sales by 23,000 percent! Not even John Cleese could have written anything that unbelievably absurd.

While Anderson -- the author of the 2006 bestseller The Long Tail who moonlights as the editor-in-chief of the Condé Nast–owned, San Francisco–based Wired magazine -- might not be quite as funny as Cleese, his Free is an accessible and highly entertaining riff on the conundrums of today's digital economy. According to Anderson, "Freeconomics" is enabled by digital technology, which "nearly" halves the cost of computer processors, Internet bandwidth, and online storage, thereby cramming down the price of distributing online content closer and closer to zero.

This zero cost of distributing digital content is, Anderson argues in Free, the core principle of the 21st-century "radical" economy. The 20th-century industrial market of "atoms" is replaced by the informational market of "bits." Digital information -- such as Monty Python videos on YouTube -- is infinitely abundant and, therefore, will inevitably be free. But Anderson, an Anglo-American economics journalist who earned his spurs in the dismal science at the dismally realistic Economist magazine, is no misty-eyed, end-of-history style cornucopian. He acknowledges that this digital abundancy creates valuable new scarcities in the 21st century, primarily those of attention and reputation, the two gold standards of the digital age.

The most radical implication of Anderson's theory is the commodification of all-things-digital and the revaluation of all-things-physical in the 21st century. Thus, using his own creative self as an example of his theory, Anderson explains that while he's perfectly happy to give away copies of Free online because it costs him nothing to store or distribute, the increasing scarcity of his time drives up the price of his live speeches, thereby enabling him, he confesses, to save enough money to send all five of his kids to college.

Anderson is, of course, correct. The Internet is killing the value of most digital content while simultaneously driving up the value both of high-end physical products and of live performance. He thus also uses the example of Radiohead's In Rainbows album, which the band gave away for free online but which ended up selling 3 million copies worldwide, including 1 million copies of a deluxe $80 box set, and triggered the sale of 1.2 million tickets for their post-album tour.

While all this macro-historical economic theory might sound a tad technical for general readers, Anderson writes about the digital transformation with verve and humor. I particularly enjoyed his all-too-brief history of the economic theory of free, with the priceless anecdote about the late-19th-century French mathematician, Joseph Bertrand, who "half-joking" reworked another French mathematician's model of free economics -- only to find that this "marginal cost pricing" theory turned out to be correct!

For humor, though, the best joke in Free concerns, in classic Monty Python fashion, dirty toilets. In discussing the environmental costs of 21st-century free economy, which Anderson acknowledges to be myriad, he dryly describes the olfactory consequences of free public toilets as "uncompensated negative externalities." Certainly this gives new meaning to Anderson's eighth principle of abundance thinking, entitled: "Embrace Waste."

Free won't be humorous for all readers. What will be entertaining reading for entrepreneurs at freeconomy companies like Google, will be consumed in gray, humorless silence by professionals of the old atoms economy. For these denizens of the old economy, reading Free will be as unpleasant as visiting a free public toilet. Indeed, Anderson gives explicit warning to travel agents, stockbrokers, and realtors to discover new scarcity in the age of digital abundance. But, of course, the sharpest polemic in Free is directed toward old-media dinosaurs whose refusal to radically rebuild their businesses is now decimating the music, newspaper, and book industries.

So is Anderson right? One profoundly important subject that only gets a cursory chapter in Free is the destructive costs of the new digital economy. My advice is to read Free in parallel with Ellen Ruppel Shell's essential new book about the downside of free: Cheap: The High Cost of Discount Culture. "Cheap" and "Free" are the two key words in our current thinking about the global economy and culture, and both these valuable books will help shape an important debate about the pricing, value, and quality of life in the 21st century.

The least convincing area in Free concerns Anderson's faith in the business models of Silicon Valley's radical-price (and radically priced) companies. Just because the old atom economy of newspapers and record labels is dying, it doesn't inevitably mean that the new digital freeconomy is viable. And while Anderson is on firm ground covering Google's phenomenal success as the increasingly monopolistic locomotive of the new economy, he's less convincing describing the supposed viability of highly trafficked free web "businesses" like Second Life, MySpace, YouTube, and Twitter -- none of which have yet to discover a profitable business model.

I wonder if Chris Anderson watched a bit too much Monty Python in researching Free. In his treatment of contemporary Silicon Valley economics, he might be seen as impersonating John Cleese in that timeless apotheosis of Monty Python's surrealism: the dead parrot sketch. By continually waving the business models of dead or dying companies like MySpace and Second Life at us, Anderson is vulnerable to becoming the victim of his own joke.

And for those of you not familiar with the dead parrot sketch, you can check it out on the Monty Python channel of YouTube. Not only is it is ludicrously funny, but it's also free (like this review). Then I would advise you to stay online and order a physical copy of Chris Anderson's Free. It might not be quite as radically absurd as the dead parrot sketch, but it is currently the spunkiest introduction to the most preposterous paradoxes of the 21st-century digital economy. --Andrew Keen

Andrew Keen is author of the 2007 international hit The Cult of the Amateur, which has been translated into 15 foreign languages. He writes a weekly column about culture, technology and media for the London Daily Telegraph and regularly tweets at www.twitter.com/ajkeen.

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781401394516
  • Publisher: Hyperion
  • Publication date: 7/7/2009
  • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
  • Format: eBook
  • Pages: 288
  • Sales rank: 246,736
  • File size: 791 KB

Meet the Author

Chris Anderson is the author of the international bestseller, The Long Tail. He is the editor in chief of Wired magazine and was a U.S. Business editor at The Economist. He began his career at the two premier science journals Science and Nature. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Physics from George Washington University and studied Quantum Mechanics and Science Journalism at the University of California.

Customer Reviews

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Sort by: Showing 1 – 15 of 14 Customer Reviews
  • Posted April 18, 2011

    Insightful

    In "Free: The Future of the Radial Price" Anderson delves into the phenomena of companies succeeding on giving away their product, or services, for free. He states that more and more companies are offering things for free, and that in order for other companies to remain profitable and relevant they will eventually have to get on board this same way of thinking, and doing business. In today's world of technology and online services, getting something for free is an every day practice. Once customers are exposed to the companies wares, or services then they may be more willing to purchase from them again. Free products are not to be looked at as cheap, throw aways, but something of value. Customers expect these free 'samples' to work properly and be something that is of value to them. While Anderson foresees a future where more and more things are given to the public for free, I do not think this will occur in the too near future.
    I think Anderson did a great job showing the evolution of the idea of 'Free.' He was able to show that while this practice may be more popular now, it is definitely not a new idea. His examples, such as Jell-o and Ryan Air showed how this idea has been used successfully for decades. These examples were valuable to me, as it allowed me to apply this concept to ideas beyond those of digital media, where it is easier, and cheaper, to give things away for free. While there is an increase of 'Free' in the marketplace, I think this is mainly due to the ever increasing use of digital media, email, and the internet. I think it is hard to imagine a totally free world, as Anderson says is the future, as there are many companies where this idea isn't as easily executed as it is with music and email.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted September 10, 2011

    Thought provoking

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  • Posted April 11, 2011

    Love Wired but bored by Anderson's books.

    I should have stopped reading after the prologue. Here, Chris Anderson describes two types of critics wary of his idea that economies can be built upon giving consumers something for "free". He found distinct responses based upon age; the older critics thought there was no such thing as free, there had to be a "catch" and they would eventually end up paying while the younger generation thought, "duh"- yes, free does work and products are built, bought and sold based on this model. For me, "duh" accurately describes how I feel about this book. According to Anderson, I am a member of "the Google generation who grew up on the internet", therefore this free concept is not foreign or new to me. For most of my life, free has factored into many, if not all, of my purchases. I get a free cell phone, but I pay for monthly service. When shopping online, I get free shipping if I spend a certain amount. In fact, I am less likely to purchase something online unless shipping is free. I refuse to download an iphone app that's not free.
    While I didn't enjoy most of the book, the history of how "free" business models came to be was mildly entertaining. Some of the sidebars where Anderson describes his thoughts on how things like college education, textbooks, and even cars can be free were interesting. Since I work in IT, I found some of the digital and internet history to be interesting as well even though some of it elicited another "duh" response. Companies spend money on expensive servers and hardware but can host thousands of customers for next to nothing. Duh. Doing things like this is what gives software companies a competitive advantage over those who require each customer to purchase their own hardware in addition to software. I like articles in Wired, but don't want to read them as expanded versions in books.

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