Should You Publish in Print or Electronic Format
- or Both?
An excerpt from the publication, Profiting
from
Booklets and Special Reports, by Marcia Yudkin.
Copyright 2001. All rights reserved.
Now that you’ve decided to create a booklet or special report,
you need to decide whether you will be offering the text in printed
form or as an electronic download – or in both ways. Do not
use your personal preferences or values as your sole criterion (e.g.,
“I like having something printed and substantial when I pay
money for something” or “Anyone who doesn’t understand
that paper is obsolete isn’t worth selling to”).
Why not? It may turn out that your preferences aren’t as
widely shared as you think they are. And there may be important
practical considerations that you haven’t factored in yet.
Before making your final decision on this question, consider these
points:
- Perceived value may be higher for a tangible item than for a
downloaded one, particularly if the product is durably and attractively
bound.
- On the other hand, a download may offer much higher perceived
value because the information is thereby immediately available.
- Printed and bound information may be less likely to get copied
and redistributed than a download that is not copy protected.
- Your target market may not feel comfortable with the process
of downloading files, or may have so many technical problems opening
and reading the download that the customer service headaches quickly
mount up.
- If you want to provide another kind of item along with text,
such as audio or video tapes, a print catalog or an object, such
as a calculate-your-mortgage wheel or meatloaf pan, the print
format makes more sense.
- When it would be nice for people to be able to click on Web
addresses right from your text, a download may seem like the optimal
choice.
- Fraud rates for downloadable products are very much higher than
for products that get sent by mail.
- You can gather a valuable, valid postal mailing list when selling
tangible items to be shipped or mailed, but addresses are less
reliable for download sales.
Now let me say a little more about a few of the factors above.
First, fraud is indeed a very serious problem for products bought
and received immediately online. Not only does the merchant almost
always get stuck with a loss when a customer disputes an online
charge, if the rate of “chargebacks” – sales reversed
because of customer protest – gets too high, the merchant
can lose his or her credit-card processing account and find it next
to impossible to secure another one. On the other hand, established
third-party digital download services have address checking and
fraud detection procedures in place that may not be as available
to individual merchants.
Second, Adobe Acrobat (PDF) files can be copy protected by the
creator with several security options available. For example, you
can set up a file to allow someone to read but not print, read but
not copy and paste to another application, download but not create
a copy of the file or not allow the file to be e-mailed to another
computer. However, such restrictions sometimes do more harm than
good by annoying or even enraging honest users who find themselves
unable to make fair use of the material for which they’ve
paid. For instance, they may download a file at work and then be
unable to send it to their home computer, which is where they would
have downloaded it to begin with if they’d had high-speed
Internet access there.
Third, don’t underestimate the difficulties both novice and
experienced computer users may have in downloading files and accessing
that information. Nancy Hendrickson, co-author of a genealogy e-book,
had to stop offering her e-book as a PDF file because customers
had a multitude of difficulties:
- The buyer couldn’t figure out where the saved file was
on their computer.
- The buyer couldn’t figure out how to open the PDF file
(even if they already had Adobe Reader installed on their system).
- Those without Adobe Reader couldn’t figure how to download
and install it.
Even after including in the “thank you for your purchase”
message a detailed “here’s how to download and run the
file” note, Hendrickson continued to get complaints from almost
25% of her customers. She and her coauthor then converted the e-book
to a self-executing .exe file and complaints fell off to almost
nothing. However, her e-book is now not available at all to customers
with Mac computers.
If you’re tempted to dismiss her experience because your
customers are technically sophisticated, more knowledgeable or adept
computer users, consider my experience: I’ve been online since
1994, have purchased and downloaded several e-books or special reports
and have never been able to figure out why hyperlinks that are supposed
to be able to transport me from a page in a PDF file to the corresponding
Web page don’t do anything when I click on them. I’ve
also downloaded a few PDF files that were practically unreadable
because I didn’t have the font in which they were created.
I don’t say this to dismiss the potential of downloaded content.
On the contrary, I love getting an e-mail notifying me that someone
has bought one of my digital products without any intervention on
my part. Just realize: This is not a trouble-free medium, and be
prepared for technical problems and complaints.
In this light, perhaps the best option is to offer both print and
digital versions, so that people can select the medium that fits
their needs and capabilities. When one of my colleagues offered
print, PDF and both print and PDF versions, about 15 percent chose
“both.”
The above is excerpted
from "Profiting from Booklets and Special Reports"
by Marcia Yudkin, which is available from http://www.yudkin.com/bookletsreports.htm.
Marcia Yudkin <marcia@yudkin.com> is the author
of 11 books, including Internet Marketing for Less than
$500/Year and Poor Richard's Web Site Marketing Makeover. |
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