Traditional business models have scarcity at their core: when something is scarce, it becomes valuable. Online, this notion is challenged: in a world where every one of us can copy and distribute content at the click of a mouse, notions of ‘scarcity’ become more and more distant from reality. Several commentators have suggested that scale – i.e. providing more access to ‘valuable’ content rather than less – is actually a more scalable business model for the online economy. This session will look at ways in which content can be freed, and will also examine some of the issues which follow around control and authority.
2. I am Mike Ellis
I have spent 10+ years working on the [content] web
I am a user experience zealot, strategist, social(web)-ist
I work for a not for profit IT company called Eduserv
20. now the entire value landscape has
literally been blown away
21. the effectiveness of the network has
devalued the distribution chain
“It makes increasingly less sense even to talk
about a publishing industry, because the core
problem publishing solves - the incredible
difficulty, complexity, and expense of making
something available to the public – has stopped
being a problem.”
Clay Shirky / “Newspapers and thinking the unthinkable”
http://bit.ly/YoqJi
22. networks are getting faster / more ubiquitous,
DRM is dead,
hidden content is unpopular
24. 1. search and find is everything
2. fickle, shallow, agile users
3. quot;digital nativesquot; (ug!)
4. quot;free is 'normal', right?..quot;
25. models of ownership and
consumption are changing
“..for my generation you partly constructed your
identity around what you owned - your bookshelf,
record collection and DVD archive were important
aspects of who you..but for the digital generation
this strong link with ownership has been broken.
It took time and money to build up any of those
collections. Therefore they demonstrated a
commitment which was worth exhibiting. In a
digital world this effort is greatly reduced, and as
a result so is the emotional attachment one feels
towards them.”
Martin Weller / “Ownership ain’t what it used to be”
http://bit.ly/2vU1oB
27. less CDs, more digital music being sold
“17 million fewer CD buyers
in 2008 compared to the prior
year”
ZDNet UK: “CD sales drop, digital downloads on the rise”
http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=14758
32. according to Clay Shirky
“When someone demands to
know how we are going to
replace newspapers...they are
demanding to be told that old
systems won’t break before
new systems are in place. They
are demanding to be told that
ancient social bargains aren’t
in peril, that core institutions
will be spared, that new
methods of spreading
information will improve
previous practice rather than
upending it. They are
demanding to be lied to.
There are fewer and fewer
people who can convincingly
tell such a lie.”
35. Paulo Coelho, author of The Alchemist
“ 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.
http://torrentfreak.com/alchemist-author-pirates-own-books-080124
47. the evidence is starting to show that
scale is more important than scarcity
“There is more opportunity in leveraging the scale of the
Web than trying to create scarcity.
We’ve all been engaged in many attempts at creating
scarcity [in digital music] and none of them have worked.
Meanwhile, others have been leveraging the scale of the
Web with great success.
We should learn from this pattern and apply our energy
appropriately.”
Ian Rogers, ex-VP Yahoo! Music
http://www.fistfulayen.com/blog/?p=147
48. this means that letting go of the hold
you have on your content becomes
increasingly important
56. systems that are institution or industry
focused are the ones that will fail
57. access (not necessarily free,
but it helps) is a Good Thing
quot;Where some people have trouble is that
those new opportunities may be in
different places than the existing...
...the total amount that any content
creator can capture is still much larger
than it was before. It's one of those cases
where getting 20% of a huge pie is much
better than getting 90% of a tiny pie.quot;
TechDirt: quot;The Grand Unified Theory On The Economics Of Freequot;
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20070503/012939.shtml
66. if..
..giving away PDF's of books increases book sales
if..
..streaming music for free increases other revenues
if..
..having an open API increases content reach
69. thanks for the free stuff:
big finger me
don't panic http://flickr.com/photos/brighton/2153602543
question http://www.flickr.com/photos/drachmann/327122302
castle mine
trees and moon mine
landscape http://www.flickr.com/photos/24471966@N04/2851251413/
connection http://www.flickr.com/photos/29487767@N02/2855271953/
tag cloud wordle
chicken http://www.flickr.com/photos/slopjop/2476844826/
vertigo http://www.flickr.com/photos/anapinta/1324230318/
diamond http://www.flickr.com/photos/clagnut/233522021/
valuable http://www.flickr.com/photos/10ch/3347658610/
hidden http://www.flickr.com/photos/21173961@N07/2189341054/
cash http://www.flickr.com/photos/thomashawk/211399263/
crowd blur http://www.flickr.com/photos/victoriapeckham/164175205/
bifurcation http://flickr.com/photos/ethanhein/2292232215
suberbia
robots
fog
baby http://www.flickr.com/photos/ntr23/730371240/
lazy http://www.flickr.com/photos/darkumber/2645078671/
cds http://www.flickr.com/photos/joemad/2170846681/
web2
newspaper http://www.flickr.com/photos/thomashawk/172495285/
book http://www.flickr.com/photos/andross/3137926953/
sea http://www.flickr.com/photos/10589224@N05/3386776372/
bored dogs http://flickr.com/photos/bobilina/361415711
revolution http://www.flickr.com/photos/flickerbulb/53116195/
light http://www.flickr.com/photos/pagedooley/3199296759/
direction http://www.flickr.com/photos/b-tal/116220689/
easy
silos
opportunity http://www.flickr.com/photos/wasabicube/2270556458/
good things http://www.flickr.com/photos/kaplanbr/526326334/
openness http://www.flickr.com/photos/gauri_lama/3039881498/
resisted http://www.flickr.com/photos/mandj98/2931196061/
lights http://www.flickr.com/photos/mostafa/19172096/
telegraph http://www.flickr.com/photos/ericsetiawan/23293820/
forget http://www.flickr.com/photos/mfajardo/396104047/
zen http://www.flickr.com/photos/robnwatkins/113258509/
golden http://www.flickr.com/photos/da100fotos/490531799/
unknown http://www.flickr.com/photos/ahmedrabea/246570462/
70. and thank you for listening
mike.ellis@eduserv.org.uk http://slideshare.net/dmje
Editor's Notes
Head of Web at The Science Museum
Before that, Web Production at Waterstone’s Online
Before we get started...
Address at the end
Also - will hope to have at least 5 minutes for talking / questions
...instead, I’d like to think around the question - “riff” a bit on the theme
The main point is to take a step back from the journals / publishing sector and look at the rest of the world for a moment
Hopefully, this’ll be useful, and if not, thought provoking. And if not, just enjoy some time off :-)
There is a LOT of detail, history and existing business models around online (journal) publishing. I don’t really want to spend too much time looking at this detail
This is a complicated and emotive space.
Business models, and hence jobs and futures are therefore obviously a part of the conversation
Just remember, I’m not offering an answer, just posing some questions :-)
So let’s ask a big question..
...if you have something which is valuable, and desired, hide it away
..and you can then create some form of capital (financial, social) out of your assets
This is very familiar, very standard stuff. It is what drives commerce and businesses; from market stalls to the trading floor
The emergence of the web - not “the internet”, but the web that we are starting to see today - a web that is absolutely ubiquitous to our lives and being
..things have changed beyond any kind of belief
Clay Shirky (author of seminal book “Here Comes Everybody”) focuses on the core issue of *content mobilisation* in this blog post
..three main points about this: first, the network is only getting faster, more accessible and usable.
Second - DRM has been hunted down and shot dead in a ditch. Third - hidden content (we’ll look at this in some more detail) is unpopular
Users are changing
..also changing - the *way* that people use the web, and hence their content, too
- search (mainly google, but in general) becomes the core starting point for...everything
- users need rapid satisfaction - they are less likely to be faithful, more fickle
- they are “natives” to the technology: absolutely familiar - it is “invisible”, as Tom Standage puts it
one of the consequences is that the *model of ownership* has changed because of all this. And this is in a way that “us old people” probably don’t understand!
One obvious place to look at this is in the music industry, which has suffered the digital generation more than most
Downloads are on the rise as the physicality of music drops off.
and particularly in this space, we’re seeing huge numbers of alternative business models - subscription, freemium, costing based on popularity, free! (seeqpod), social...
...not forgetting illegal! But bear in mind this particular screenshot isn’t from some dark internet backwater, it is just from a specially formatted google search. And *is* it illegal?
...more to the point - what does the industry DO about it? When everyone is a software pirate in (literally) two clicks of their mouse...
Newspapers have come under similar scrutiny, and have responded in many different ways
Clay Shirky again - his angle is that this is, effectively, the END of newspapers as we know them.
Maybe the important point in this quote is the highlighted bit - the changes are far too rapid to cope with them
The Guardian has recently been in the headlines for opening up their content and data store via a freely available API. This is radical for publishing, but the norm now online: Amazon, eBay, Flickr, Google, Yahoo! to name but a few. More on API’s later.
Books are potentially in a similar space, although we still hang on to notions of physicality, and the fact that the content is more lasting than news makes them harder to let go of. I’ve got a wall full of books, and strongly resist thoughts of not. But we should still face up to the fact that this isn’t always going to be the same for everyone
Coelho, well known author of The Alchemist, did something interesting in this new climate. Much to his publishers’ horror, he put his books available for free on BitTorrent. And saw sales radically increase because of it...
over in museums and galleries...
very familiar landscape where the *authority* is what makes these places special
object wikis, open api’s, tags, user comments, etc
Powerhouse museum - use of API’s (and don’t forget the “Ray Oscilloscope” example)
So what’s the point, really?
Firstly, the most important thing I guess is that we need to recognise, however painful, the HUGE extent of this change
REALLY huge..
and that we are truly living through a digital content revolution - one which requires radical, revolution style responses
One of the most important hallmarks of this kind of change is *emergence*. The ideas which win through aren’t often the biggest or the best funded; they’re the ones which gain traction through ease of use. RSS is a prime example
In short: the evidence is starting to show, from many quarters, that providing more access to your content is actually beneficial from many, many angles. Startlingly, some of this evidence seems to show that more access = more sales...
This means - letting go of your content, setting it free..
I talk a lot about Web2, the “social web”. Mostly this is considered important because of the surface stuff - but under the hood, content is usually accessible, and this is arguably more important. Sometimes, 5-10 x the “surface” number of users are seeing content via an API
The enabler here is open, linked data.
This means not just from a “web usability’ perspective, but those that have been focused on the goals of individuals
...and not on the goals of specific, partisan players in the industry
But these opportunities are *different*. They are challenging because they absolutely threaten the existing status quo. This is hugely unpopular, particularly where whole industries are in the frame
Coming back to journals - I think it’s absolutely the case that there are lots of positive signs
...and these are some of them
...albeit often resisted. This source (who’d rather remain anonymous) showed me a letter from a well known funder who recently wrote to universities warning that they’d be checking that OA guidelines were being followed...
Good though the open angles are, they are (like any embedded, older industry) surrounded by treacle-like politics.
And this often leads to *really* complicated business models. Example: pay at publication / pay at use / self archive...!
Experience shows time and time again that complicated, “bolted-on” business models just don’t work.
This is obviously naive! - but pushing for bigger-picture strategies that take on board user experience and expectation seem to me to be required
At the very least, examine the pain points and try and simplify. Creation of open API’s would be a huge start!
Small pieces, open (web) standards, distributed systems
These are big ideas, and as such can be very challenging.
Symposium - Identity - Cameron Neylon Open Science
21st May
Evolution or revolution: The future of identity and access management for research