Murdoch Wants Google To Get Lost

A recent post I read over at Techdirt has gotten me thinking a lot about the “free vs paid content” debate online. Apparently Rupert Murdoch is looking to stop Google from indexing a lot of News Corp’s websites in favour of putting up paywalls that require users to pay a subscription fee from access to his content.

Mark Cuban thinks this is a genius move on Murdoch’s part. The game changer in his opinion is Twitter, Facebook and similar social media sharing tools because they allow a more organic dissemination of news content than search. I agree, that for real time news content receiving something from your friends via Twitter or Facebook is more likely to pull your interest towards reading that content. However, I don’t think Twitter and Facebook are going to be of much value when the site has a paywall. You are less likely to share content that is behind a paywall, and your friends/contacts are less likely to view it once they realize they have to pay for it. Their first instinct is going to be “is this an affiliate link?” and with all the Twitter and Facebook spam that’s getting passed around now I wouldn’t blame them.

More and more I’m starting to think that online media is starting to merge media with direct response marketing concepts. Advertising revenue is hardly enough if you can only generate a CPM of $2-3! There has to be other ways of monetizing, and paid content could be worth looking at. I think paid content is better suited to niche audiences, but it could be done for a larger audience, especially something like the Wall Street Journal which is targeting a more affluent, business oriented audience who need this information quickly. The challenge is protecting that content. What is to stop a blogger or other publication from paraphrasing your content? You can’t copyright news or ideas, just the specific words that you wrote. I know GigaOM for example recently launched GigaOM Pro with an annual price of $79 for access to their content

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Google doesn’t have to be everything online. Of course they are the dominant company for the time being, but keep in mind they are barely 11 years old and things change very rapidly online. I often think about the internet marketing community and how they manage to thrive oftentimes paying for all of their traffic, and not depending on search traffic at all. If you know your conversion rates and other metrics, buying visitors is a valid option if your customer acquisition costs are lower than your prices. There are all sorts of ways to build your own lists of prospects, and all sorts of ways to make money of of them. The idea of not depending so heavily on Google is potentially a good move on Murdoch’s part, and an even better move if he can get other major media companies to follow suit. It is also of course a very risky move, but as they say fortune favours the bold.

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