All
I think this is a really interesting thread.
Understanding what value can be had from exposure is obviously key. There's
lots of evidence out there that getting more eyeballs to your
stuff (and accepting that some "stealing" will take place) is a much better
business model than hiding your assets away and people simply not getting to
it at all.
The evidence often clusters around PDFs downloads: see
http://torrentfreak.com/alchemist-author-pirates-own-books-080124/ where
Paulo Coelho, author of "The Alchemist" says this:
"In 2001, I sold 10,000 hard copies. And everyone was puzzled. We came from
zero, from 1000, to 10,000. And then the next year we were over 100,000. […]
I thought that this is fantastic. You give to the reader the possibility of
reading your books and choosing whether to buy it or not. […]
So, I went to BitTorrent and I got all my pirate editions… And I created a
site called The Pirate Coelho."
With the demise of music DRM apparently on the horizon, it's a hot topic
with the major music labels, too. Ian Rogers from Yahoo! wrote a fantastic
post with slides entitled "Losers wish for scarcity. Winners leverage
scale". I've written about this on my blog:
http://electronicmuseum.org.uk/2008/01/14/scarcity-vs-scale/ ...
What would be fantastic (if unlikely) would be if a museum or gallery agreed
to take part in a quantitative study: take one selection of images and hide
them away behind watermarking, DRM and thumbnails; take another and make
these widely and hugely available via Facebook, MySpace, Flickr, blogging,
etc. Offer both sets for purchase in hi-res, then sit back and measure over
a period of time. Common sense says that people will steal all the small
ones and not bother buying: increasing bodies of evidence show the opposite
is actually true.
I'd personally argue that once stuff is on the web, it's being "stolen"
anyway, so we can fight this or go with it and do what we can to encourage
sales off the back of the "scale". But I don't run a picture library so I'm
more than ready to put my neck on the line
So. Any museums going to step up to the "make it free" challenge? :-)
ta
Mike
________________________________________________
electronic museum
..thoughts on museums, the social web, innovation
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e: [log in to unmask]
On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 4:05 PM, Ridge, Mia <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:
> Frankie Roberto wrote:
>
> > At the conference there did seem to be a vague consensus that we
> > should be moving towards giving access to these images (the public
> > domain ones at the very least) away though - especially with the
> > general buzz around Flickr Commons.
> >
> > Does anyone have any thoughts about this? And what are the
> > barriers we need to overcome?
>
> I think we gain more than we lose when we provide access to our images,
> but then I'm an old hippie and open source geek.
>
> I think we need to show that it's going to benefit our audiences and our
> institutions; and particularly that it's not going to lose money for our
> institutions.
>
> I'd love to see the figures for total expenditure on commercial image
> licensing and print services versus total income - do these services
> currently make a profit, and would that profit be enhanced by increased
> exposure and 'discoverability' or would that profit be dented if people
> no longer feel the need to pay for images? Do our museums even know if
> their image services are truly profitable, and if so does anyone want to
> volunteer their data?
>
> Someone's just started a discussion on the MCN list (http://www.mcn.edu)
> with the subject 'Monetizing museum web sites' and that thread might
> also throw up some useful suggestions.
>
> cheers, Mia
>
>
> Mia Ridge
> Database Developer, Museum Systems Team
> Museum of London Group
> 46 Eagle Wharf Road
> London. N1 7ED
> Tel: 020 7410 2205 / 020 7814 5723
> Fax: 020 7600 1058
> Email: [log in to unmask]
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