By all accounts, Twitter is a wildly successful, innovative new product. But the just-released 2010 USC Annenberg Digital Future Study found that although 49% of people on the internet use services like Twitter, exactly 0% would be willing to pay for those services. So that makes us wonder just how successful that is because scoring a "0%" in a survey like this is hard to ignore.
"Free" is a pretty powerful incentive to get people to try a new product and it's certainly an easy way to test-market a new concept. The behavioral economist Dan Ariely has some fascinating research and observations on the irrational implications of free . At MIDIOR we say that you'll never be able to sell your product if you can't at least give it away. And, clearly you learn something if "free" is not a strong enough incentive for someone to try it. But what have you proved if the only thing you can do is give it away? Do you think you could give away mediocre cookies to about half the people on your street? If yes, what would you learn if after trying them, every single one said they would eat more (lots more) if they were free, but exactly none said they would pay something to enjoy one? Would you think you had a successful product worthy of additional investment or would you be headed back to the drawing board?
So what about Twitter? It's used (a lot) by millions of people many times every day. Even the business world has acknowledged it as an exciting new mechanism for reaching customers. And yet, 100% of the users surveyed assign it zero value. Would you continue to invest? Which leads us to wonder if online services are really that different from other products. Over-the-air television is free, yet more than 0% of us are willing to pay for cable and satellite versions. Tap water is free, yet there appears to be a market for various bottled forms of that beverage. So that 0% finding is just disturbing.
Or perhaps it's just that the survey is somehow flawed.
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