|
The Growth In Computer Animation Software
Category:
How to get Lesbian girls to bed with you
Category:
5 Rules for Remodeling your Kitchen Cabinets
Category:
Top 3 Techniques to Double or Triple Your Affiliate Profits Over...
Category:
Top 10 Tips for Starting A Successful Networking Business
Category:
When the Snow Melts the Fun is just Beggining
Category:
The Fear of Feeling
Category:
How To Target Your Market
Category:
Shoes Gone Astray
Category:
Meeting Jesus In Meditation
Category:
Who Lives Your Life?
Category:
Expand Your Horizons
Category:
Take Advantage of Today’s Sub-Prime Mortgage Squeeze
Category:
Bridge Your Way To A Better Life
Category:
FILING: How To Find What You Need When You Need It
Category:
Why Is Your Home Cluttered?
Category:
How To Pick An IT Consultant
Category:
It Takes A Lot Of A Little To See The Good Times Roll
Category:
Choosing Simple And Easy To Install Security Cameras
Category:
How One Simple Concept Can Increase Your Sales
Category:
Mind Tricking Sales Letters
Category:
Are Banner Ads Worth It? The statistics tell the tale.
Category:
Powerful Email Strategies
Category:
Stretching Your Marketing Dollars--7 Cheap and Easy Ways to Mark...
Category:
Business Like Image
Category:
Where is the Best PR Value?
Category:
A Strategic Fifth Column
Category:
Towards a Strategy of Prevention
Category:
The Sink Or Swim Approach To Leadership
Category:
Adventure Land: Fantasy Action Adventure Book is Almost Ready
Category:
How to Follow Up For Success
Category:
What Skills Really Matter Online?
Category:
Where does your security lie? part two (2)
Category:
What Does 21st Century Success Look Like?
Category:
How to Overcome Emotional Eating
Category:
How (NOT) to Buy Mutual Funds
Category:
Storytelling - The Great Motivator of People
Category:
Distribute Your Self-Published Book (Part 1)
Category:
Produce More Sales from your Email Promotions: Five Ways (Part 1...
Category:
Whose Watching You?
Category:
Valued Experience
Category:
Top 5 Affiliate Marketing Myths
Category:
?Out of Focus? Ads Can Cost You Customers
Category:
Touching One's Soul ... The Ultimate Inspiration for a Writer
Category:
Are We Our Own Worst Enemies?
Category:
Parenting Yourself When You Have Small Children
Category:
Cheap Advertising Methods That Work!
Category:
Google has a flaw? Didn?t think it was possible.
Category:
Trust Your Instincts
Category:
Spitting Feathers
Category:
Hitting The Fan
Category:
How to Design a Corporate Website in 10 Easy Steps
Category:
Why communication is so important when selling to a global marke...
Category:
Ensure Open Communication Without Relying On E-Mail
Category:
IAHBE membership. International Association of Home Business Ent...
Category:
U.S. Merchant Systems - merchant account packages.
Category:
Earning $100,000 a year...
Category:
Time Management And How It Affects Your Kids
Category:
Informational interviews your gateway to the inside scoop
Category:
10 reasons why consumer opinion is low for carpet cleaners and o...
Category:
Alice and the Journey of Life
Category:
WHEN IS IT RIGHT TO REFINANCE?
Category:
Your Strengths, Your Money
Category:
Top Tips For Creating a ?Pro? Looking Newsletter
Category:
Decorate your Outdoor Space without Breaking the Bank
Category:
No Load Mutual Funds or Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs)?
Category:
How To Choose A Competent Therapist
Category:
Bush Administration Officials Say al-Qaida Remains Threat
Category:
kind
Category:
Win Your Own Lotto!
Category:
Empower Your Trainees
Category:
Sarbanes Who?
Category:
Some "Free Stuff" Still Survives Online
Category:
KEYWORD POWER! Stop Fumbling Around In the Dark! Get Qualified T...
Category:
Could We, as Net Marketers be missing a Great Opportunity?
Category:
|
The Disintermediation of Content 0 article
The Disintermediation of Content
Are content brokers - publishers, distributors, and record companies - a thing of the past?
In one word: disintermediation
The gradual removal of layers of content brokering and intermediation - mainly in manufacturing marketing - is the continuation of a long term trend.
By Sam Vaknin
Category: 0
Submit your Recipes Here!
Are content brokers - publishers, distributors, and record companies - a thing of the past?
In one word: disintermediation
The gradual removal of layers of content brokering and intermediation - mainly in manufacturing marketing - is the continuation of a long term trend. Consider music for instance. Streaming audio on the internet ("soft radio"), or downloadable MP3 files may render the CD obsolete - but they were preceded by radio music broadcasts. But the novelty is that the Internet provides a venue for the marketing of niche products and reduces the barriers to entry previously imposed by the need to invest in costly "branding" campaigns and manufacturing and distribution activities.
This trend is also likely to restore the balance between artists and the commercial exploiters of their products. The very definition of "artist" will expand to encompass all creative people. One will seek to distinguish oneself, to "brand" oneself and to auction one's services, ideas, products, designs, experience, physique, or biography, etc. directly to end-users and consumers. This is a return to pre-industrial times when artisans ruled the economic scene. Work stability will suffer and work mobility will increase in a landscape of shifting allegiances, head hunting, remote collaboration, and similar labour market trends.
But distributors, publishers, and record companies are not going to vanish. They are going to metamorphose. This is because they fulfil a few functions and provide a few services whose importance is only enhanced by the "free for all" Internet culture.
Content intermediaries grade content and separate the qualitative from the ephemeral and the atrocious. The deluge of self-published and vanity published e-books, music tracks and art works has generated few masterpieces and a lot of trash. The absence of judicious filtering has unjustly given a bad name to whole segments of the industry (e.g., small, or web-based publishers). Consumers - inundated, disappointed and exhausted - will pay a premium for content rating services. Though driven by crass commercial considerations, most publishers and record companies do apply certain quality standards routinely and thus are positioned to provide these rating services reliably.
Content brokers are relationship managers. Consider distributors: they provide instant access to centralized, continuously updated, "addressbooks" of clients (stores, consumers, media, etc.). This reduces the time to market and increases efficiency. It alters revenue models very substantially. Content creators can thus concentrate on what they do best: content creation, and reduce their overhead by outsourcing the functions of distribution and relationships management. The existence of central "relationship ledgers" yields synergies which can be applied to all the clients of the distributor. The distributor provides a single address that content re-sellers converge on and feed off. Distributors, publishers and record companies also provide logistical support: warehousing, consolidated sales reporting and transaction auditing, and a single, periodic payment.
Yet, having said all that, content intermediaries still over-charge their clients (the content creators) for their services. This is especially true in an age of just-in-time inventory and digital distribution. Network effects mean that content brokers have to invest much less in marketing, branding and advertising once a product's first mover advantage is established. Economic laws of increasing, rather than diminishing, returns mean that every additional unit sold yields a HIGHER profit - rather than a declining one. The pie is getting bigger.
Hence, the meteoric increase in royalties publishers pay authors from sales of the electronic versions of their work (anywhere from Random House's 35% to 50% paid by smaller publishers). As this tectonic shift reverberates through the whole distribution chain, retail outlets are beginning to transact directly with content creators. The borders between the types of intermediaries are blurred. Barnes and Noble (the American bookstores chain) has, in effect, become a publisher. Many publishers have virtual storefronts. Many authors sell directly to their readers, acting as publishers. The introduction of "book ATMs" - POD (Print On Demand) machines, which will print every conceivable title in minutes, on the spot, in "book kiosks" - will give rise to a host of new intermediaries. Intermediation is not gone. It is here to stay because it is sorely needed. But it is in a state of flux. Old maxims break down. New modes of operation emerge.
Functions are amalgamated, outsourced, dispensed with, or created from scratch. It is an exciting scene, full with opportunities.
About the Author Sam Vaknin is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He is a columnist for Central Europe Review, United Press International (UPI) and eBookWeb and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory, Suite101 and searcheurope.com.
Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com
|