Showing posts with label consumer trends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label consumer trends. Show all posts

January 9, 2012

Prognostication correct! Free NOOKs

Robin Wauters reports today in Tech Crunch, "Barnes & Noble is now heavily discounting (and even giving away free) NOOK devices with digital subscriptions to a magazine or newspaper, the first time a bookseller has ever done this type of promotion if I’m not mistaken."

You're not mistaken, Robin. And neither was I when, (way back) in November 2009, I ventured that e-readers (as we then called them) would take off only when their business model changed. Eventually, said I, we'd get the reader for "free" when we paid for subscriptions. Just like a cable box.

Back then e-reader sales were sputtering in defiance of so many high hopes. One popular analysis held that the devices needed more features. Others thought slick interfaces and better form factors were the answer. "As soon as Apple properly address e-readers there will be no hesitation," wrote one foolhardy industry watcher on LinkedIn.

Months later came the iPad Spring that revolutionized the category and proved everybody right but me. But I hardly noticed, so thrilling were the times. The ungainly "e-reader" departed the lexicon and in flew the "tablet." Form factors, features and operating systems proliferated wildly. Intense competition kept prices flat while awesomeness climbed steeply. Indeed, some of the hungrier brands began selling devices at a loss in pursuit of market share. All the while, the only fixed variable in tablet sales was content.

Until now. Credit the intersecting challenge of monetizing digital publication, particularly of periodical journalism. All that stuff that used to be free on the Internet and that people weren't happy to pay for once the publishers erected paywalls. The marriage of paid subscriptions and free tablets (details here via Wired) works to close gaps in the perceived value of each.

In 2009, reported Forrester Research, roughly three million e-readers of all types were sold. Granted, there were only a few types. In 2011, reports Computer World, Apple sold 40 million iPads. No doubt sales will continue to rise. But increasingly the buyers will be publishers themselves. They will subsidize the cost of putting devices in people's hands as the enticement to get them to pay for digital content. 

April 14, 2009

The "Fluff" Agenda

Greenwashing: this is not a new topic. But it's something that has become ever so widespread that it's pouring over into every industry. This blog post by GreenProfs addresses the question of where this will lead. To people following and then disregarding "green" as simply a trend based on current consumer self-interest? To people realizing their duties as citizens of this planet and making it a lifestyle? Or to being fully integrated into the economy as a design value or desirable attribute to make purchases?

Amalgam has been working with a housing consultant on formulating bank policy for reduced mortgage rates on green housing. Together, we are trying to figure out how to deliver green housing as affordable to make it easier for people to stay or move into inner city areas like North Minneapolis. This is an example of "How can you tell whether a product or an offer is greenwashing or not?" You can tell because there's a monetary value connection between greenness and cost efficiency over a period of time.

But this topic is so much more pertinent to our lives than something like the introduction of the iPhone. Just like any other movement, news story, etc, the hype over-saturates the market and people stop investing their time and emotions. Think about the presidential election, which was momentous, yes, but so drawn out that I began to lose momentum before it even started. I, and many, hope that this green fluff doesn't cloud consumers' buying choices or citizens' actions towards true commitment to a necessary environmental and social change.