Freemium math and B2B

Justin.King November 23rd, 2008

Chris Anderson, editor of Wired Magazine and author The Long Tail, has a blog that I have classified in my Google Reader as “Smart Stuff”.  His concept of Freemium has me thinking about the applications to B2B.  Read these articles here and here.

Free is not a business–it’s zero-cost marketing for a business. And it works best at the largest scale: a small percentage of a big number is a big number.

In the new Web 2.0 economy and what I am overusing as B2B 2.0, how can we apply “Freemium” to scale for our businesses.  I guess it depends, doesn’t it?  If you are a manufacturing company where most of your target audience knows who you are and buys from you one way or another, this plays a lot differently then if you are a software firm launching a new product into the marketplace.  Both very B2B, but very different in their approach.

But for the majority of businesses out there that don’t have their customer base “locked up”, the question of “What’s a free customer worth” should be tackled.

Problem is, convincing the regular customer to be a part of this model is difficult.  So, let’s start basic:   When you figure out where your thought leadership is, give at least some of it away for free.  Track the heck out of it and get some information from them (name, email), but give it away.  Establish yourself as a thought leader in your specialty area, start creating relevant content, and give it away.

Anderson goes on to talk about the 4 types of free:

  • cross subsidy – get one thing free for buying another
  • subsidized – third party ads support free
  • freemium – a few support the majority (basic “free” version)
  • gift – given away for non-monetary rewards

I really like the idea of doing zero cost marketing.  Marketing to the masses by offering a freemium product and getting a small percentage to subsidize the masses.

Related posts:

  1. 6 strategies to make your content relevant
  2. A practical example of creating a relevant dialogue
  • http://www.salesalignment.com seamus walsh

    We agree, free is good. We wanted to dig deeper to check the effectiveness of a registration requirement. What happens if you do, or don’t require registration? The results surprised us.

    The 1st test, a 15 business day Google adword campaign for a whitepaper with registration required, we had a 12.9% completetion rate.

    The second test, the same Google ad, the same landing page this time, no registration of any kind. We had a .7% completion rate. The results surprised us, I am thinking is a “no strings” attached white paper of value in the mind of the reader?

    These are the things that keep me up at night, we started another 15 day test with registration required. Results to follow…

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