I love having all my media in one place: on my iPod, media center, or gaming console. Disc switching is so 2004. And slowly entertainment companies are getting it – we want digital downloads of our movies, games, and music. But they don’t understand how we want them priced.
I’m going to skip, for this article, the true economics of digital goods (they’re infinite in supply, they should be free). Instead, let’s start with making them cheaper than their tangible alternatives. Why? There’s a win-win situation here.
First, digital goods save the creator money. The is no packaging, processing, stocking, or shipping. A little hard drive and some bandwidth are all you need. This should all cut substantial costs out of the creator’s bottom line, and that’s savings worth passing along to the customer.
Consumers, while adding the convenience of fewer discs and more content, lack the ability to resell their digital goods, which research shows increases the initial value of tangible goods (you spend more on a car knowing you can resell it for some money, and the same applies to video games and DVDs).
So why are digital goods still priced so high (and by high, I mean, the same price as their tangible counterparts)?
Part of the reason is retail chains are eager to keep customers coming into stores and want DVDs and video games as weekly incentives. Creators might want this traffic for impulse (or non-technical savvy) purchases, but in truth, they are the losers in this arrangement. Creators fight for shelf space often paying premium dollars for ideal placement when digital stores allow for better navigation and unlimited shelf space.
Yes I believe digital goods will eventually all be free (it’s inevitable) and new business models will support their creation. For now, let’s just make the prices fair. Remember, BitTorrent has all this content available for free anyway.













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