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Wall Street Journal To Introduce Micropayments

Wall Street Journal To Introduce MicropaymentsOne of the hot topics at the FIPP conference last week was the issue of micropayments – being able to buy journalism iTunes-style in little chunks. Now the first major player to offer the system has emerged in the form of the Wall Street Journal, who are launching their micropayment system in the autumn.

The US newspaper business is in dire straits. Recent death rattles have included Sam Zell’s Tribune group filing for bankruptcy protection and its LA Times title whoring itself ever more shamelessly to advertisers; the Boston Globe, who is owned by the same company that own the New York Times, is scraping together its existence – its unions have just approved cost-cutting measures, like pay cuts and the scrapping of lifetime job guarantees to try and make enough savings to warrant the paper’s ongoing existence.

Now the WSJ is poised to try and fill the gaps in content created by these cost-cutting papers: “We’re going to move in on each of the big cities”, said managing editor Robert Thomson. The paper currently allows free access to certain articles, but has a subscription plan for its premium financial content as well as a fair chunk of its other stories. Now it’s looking to make that more sophisticated, and allow, for instance, a reader interested in today’s Clearnet bid to buy just that story without having to fork out for a whole subscription. They’re also going to create premium subscriptions for their truly niche, high-quality business content, in areas like “energy, commodities, wealth management”.

It comes as the New York Times Co.’s chairman Arthur Sulzberger Jr. hinted a couple of week ago that the NYT might install a micropayment model: ”We continue to take a fresh, hard and deep look at various subscription, purchase and micropayment models”. Ariana Huffington is a fan too – in an interview with German paper Die Welt, she said the following:

“The idea that you can go back to a pre-Internet world where you can create walled gardens around content, and charge for admission, is simply futile. Those who try that are going to fail. Today we live in the linked economy, not a walled-off content economy. The challenge is to find different ways to monetize links among media through advertising or micropayment or whatever, not subscription for exclusive content.”

Well, it’s going to be a bit more sophisticated than that. Micropayments make sense for the WSJ, given their specialised content for specialised readers – you can maximise the profitability of a niche through micropayment, when a businessperson finds they absolutely need its individual bits of information. But a more casual reader will find the barrier of individual payment pretty offputting – a subscription model makes more sense for them, because after one payment they can go back to the browsing style they’re used to.

Micropayment probably needs to be not at the truly micro level of individual stories, but payment for a week’s worth of, say, green tech stories. Bundling a story from elsewhere on the site for free along with the paid package could work well too, both as an incentive to purchase and a means of drawing readers to other parts of the site. The beauty of online means that there is this freedom to offer these different payment structures at once – Huffington et al should be thinking of all of the possible ways to monetise their product.

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Posted by Ben Beaumont-Thomas in Creative Economy | May 11, 2009 10:43AM |

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