home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
The Business Master (4th Edition)
/
The Business Master - 4th Edition.iso
/
files
/
grapties
/
multimed
/
install.exe
/
lha
/
YOUROWN.DOC
< prev
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-10-08
|
16KB
|
313 lines
YOUR OWN PRODUCTS
Many early users of my programs have asked questions
about how to get their products into the market, and I have
some answers for you:
Shareware Marketing
The shareware market is a fascinating corner of the free
enterprise system. The general concept is that you make a
disk, and allow people to sell or give away copies of it.
Shareware distributors sell thousands of copies, BBS users
download thousands of copies, and so your product eventually
gets into the hands of tens of thousands, even possibly
millions of users! You get no money from all this
distribution. All you get is exposure.
Within your disk is a commercial, hopefully causing
people to want to send you money. This is like network
television. The shows are free, but the commercials pay for
the programming.
There are several ways to write your commercials. The
old standard is to ask a "registration fee." This means, you
have allowed end users to try your product, and if they like
it, they are honor bound to send you money for your efforts.
Today, with somewhere around 85,000 shareware programs, this
is not particularly effective.
You can give perks for registering, such as printed
owner's manual or a fancier version of your material, but
this too, falls short of making a fortune in most cases.
What does seem to work is to pitch another related
product. For instance, Let's say you have written a disk
about care and feeding of parakeets. We recommend that you
give the disk away and let people copy it. In that disk,
you might want to write an ad for another disk you have
created about taming and training parakeets. The only way
people can get the taming and training disk is to send you
$29.95 plus postage. I think you get the idea....
First, let me tell you that shareware marketing does
work, but on a smaller scale than most shareware authors
hope for. You probably won't make a million dollars, and it
won't happen overnight. But, this is a good way to bring in
easy rainy day money, or make sure you have extra money
coming to you in your retirement!
Interestingly, if your knowledge is in a very
specialized field, you are not necessarily limited in the
amount of money you can make. specialized knowledge is very
valuable. If you can start someone on a new career, or can
explain a technique that can save a small (or large) company
lots of money, you have a product that will bring hundreds
of dollars for each copy. Hobbyists in any field have been
known to spend way too much to get exactly the knowledge
they want!
And many shareware distributors have learned that even
very obscure titles sell well, because specialists will seek
these titles out! For instance, PET, a shareware disk for
veterinarians is a good seller. HYDROFLO, which has
something to do with designing pipes and valves for fluids,
has always been a good seller!
AND HOW DO YOU GET THE DISKS TO PUBLIC?
This is amazingly simple. All you do is make copies of
your disks, and send them to shareware distributors. There
are usually 50 or so advertising in the classified ads
section of COMPUTER SHOPPER magazine. The distributors are
hungry for new products and will be quite happy to review
your disks. If they feel that your material is interesting
and reasonably well done, and many shareware distributors
will take almost anything that works, they will list it in
their catalogs and start sending out copies to buyers.
The distributors don't send you any money, and you don't
send them any money. Whatever money you make, comes from
your advertisements within your shareware disks. And your
costs? Only the cost of a few blank disks and the postage to
mail them. You can send just to a dozen shareware
distributors, or to hundreds. Of course, the more you send
to, the sooner you'll start making real money. Here are
some good distributors:
GEMINI MARKETING INC
BOX 640
DUVALL WA 98019-0640
PC-SIG
1030D E. Duane Ave.
Sunnyvale, CA 94086
PD SELECT
BOX 1884
GASTONIA NC 28053
PUBLIC BRAND SOFTWARE
BOX 51315
INDIANAPOLIS IN 46251
ATTN R. JOHNSON OR D GARNER
REASONABLE SOLUTIONS
2101 W MAIN ST
MEDFORD OR 97501
SOFTWARE EXCITEMENT!
6475 CRATER LAKE HWY
CENTRAL POINT OR 97502
SOFTWARE LABS
3767 OVERLAND AVE #112
LOS ANGELES CA 90034
BOSTON COMPUTER SOCIETY
385 Elliot Street
Newton, MA 02164
FREE BOOTER SOFTWARE
BOX 19624
PORTLAND OR 97219
SIZZLEWARE
P O BOX 6420
LAKE CHARLES, LA 70606
Perhaps you want to start big. The more distributors you
send your disks to, the more exposure you'll get and the more
money you'll make right from the beginning. We have a
current mailing list of over 300 good shareware
distributors. This list is on a disk in plain ASCII format,
along with a small program which will print them onto labels.
The cost is $29.95, and we include free postage to anywhere
in the world. To get your MAILING LIST OF SHAREWARE
DISTRIBUTORS, send $29.95 to:
Attn Gary Smith
OEC Systems
4646 N. Shallowford Rd.
Atlanta, GA 30338-6304
1-800-444-2424
or 404-394-1000
(Please specify if you need 3.5" disk size.)
Although there are some organizations for shareware
authors, you don't have to join any. This is not a union
shop. Anyone can participate without a license, without
paying dues or fees, and without waiting!
On the other hand, if you want to fully immerse yourself
in the shareware world, if you want to learn all you can
about the business, you might like to join the Association
of Shareware Professionals. The cost is $50 for the first
year. There are several benefits. They can duplicate and
mail your disks to distributors and BBSs for you (for a
price). They have an ongoing conference between shareware
authors and distributors on CompuServe. They have rather
strict rules with which your shareware must comply,
essentially forcing you to turn out a professional,
financially effective product. Using the ASP name and logo
adds a professional flavor to your shareware. Write to them
for details:
Jan Abbott - Executive Director
Association of Shareware Professionals
545 Grover Rd
Muskegon MI 49442
AND HOW MUCH HOW SOON?
I can't give you figures set in concrete, but here's
some ideas. The worst case I have heard of is a guy who
makes $10 or $20 per month in registrations of his product.
Is that ok? Would you settle for the price of a nice meal or
a new pair of shoes every couple of months for something you
did in your spare time? (and of course the time required to
copy and mail 1 or 2 disks a month)
On the other hand, another author is making $5,000 per
month. There are a few shareware authors who have made over
a million dollars, but they are by no means average. My
guess is that the average author has to put out 10 good
products over the course of perhaps three years before
reaching an income of $15,000 per year. But there is no
ceiling. You can keep improving and writing more!
Regarding time, you can't be in a hurry. It takes a
while for a distributor to print up new catalogs including
your new disk. It takes a while longer to get these
catalogs to the public. It takes another while for the
people to order your shareware disk, and then even more time
before they decide to send you money. You really shouldn't
expect to start taking in much for about one year. We have
one new product, which did not bring a single registration
for 3 months. Eventually, checks started coming in regularly
from that product.
Late breaking news: Some shareware authors report good
and relatively fast results by uploading their programs to
several major BBSs (electronic Bulletin Board Services). Of
course, the big national ones like CompuServe, Genie,
Delphi, and America On-line are the best. A company called
Megapost offers this service for you. For approximately $90
per 100 kilobytes, they will upload your shareware to many
of the big BBSs. You can write to them for more information:
MEGAPOST
c/o Andrew M Saucci, Jr.
641 Koelbel Ct.
Baldwin, NY 11510-3915
Of the big boards, CompuServe is probably the biggest.
An account now costs only $7.95 per month and includes
unlimited access time. However, many services are at extra
cost. One of these services is downloading files. The cost
is $12.40 per hour if you have a 2400 bps modem, but it
seems well worth it. Hundreds of people download Another
Company programs every month.
CompuServe has a forum called SWREG, where members can
register products via modem. The author is notified and
sends the registered version directly to the CompuServe
customer. Then, a month later, CompuServe pays the author
85% of the registration price. This is excellent for
overseas customers, who merely have the registration price
deducted from their credit card accounts, yet the program
authors are paid in US dollars. We sent a registered
program to a Russian CompuServe member yesterday.
What Should I Create?
HERE ARE SOME THINGS THAT NEED DOING:
Tutorials in playing all standard musical instruments.
How about a tutorial in reading sheet music?
Illustrated, disk-based cook books are sure to be a hit.
Car repair manuals.
All aspects of home sewing.
All crafts and hobbies.
Anything about animal care, training, breeding.
Of course, the first few people who put art, drawing, or
cartooning lessons on a disk will do quite well!
Anyone want to tackle the subject of television repair?
How about computer repair?
Or how about a general course in electronics?
Chemistry? Biology? Anatomy? Herbal medicine?
How about making a clip-arts and clip-sounds library for use
with The Multimedia Workshop, as a separate and independent
shareware release?
An illustrated separate, independent tutorial on the use of
The Multimedia Workshop. Probably just about anyone can
write something better than this text-only manual you are
presently reading!
PITCH
We have a disk-based book about shareware marketing. It
covers all the inside tricks and successful design, mailing,
advertising and registration strategies that I have learned
through personal experience, plus considerable research of
the results gained by many other shareware authors. It
uncovers all sorts of important information ranging from
toll-free 800 phone numbers to registration delay screens,
to bulk mailing rates. Also, a thorough study of what works
and what doesn't. Plus a chart of 10,000 shareware disks
sold, broken down into categories to illustrate what topics
the American public is interested in. It is called SUCCESS
WITH SHAREWARE. You can succeed without Success With
Shareware, but why learn the hard way, the costly way, the
time-consuming way, when you can have your own copy of
SUCCESS WITH SHAREWARE for $29.95?!
To get your copy:
Send $29.95 (postage included!) to:
Attn Gary Smith
OEC Systems
4646 N. Shallowford Rd.
Atlanta, GA 30338-6304
1-800-444-2424
or 404-394-1000
(Works in any IBM-compatible computer)
(Please specify if you need 3.5" disk size)
And of course, there are other marketing strategies
besides shareware. You can sell your disks directly to
retail stores, you can advertise through the mail, you can
teach courses or workshops and sell your disks to your
students. My own favorite way is shareware, however, because
in terms of numbers of people who can gain from your work,
nothing else comes close. Sure, by direct sales you might
sell thousands of copies, but your shareware product will be
seen by a million people!
The point is this: Why keep what you know bottled up
inside yourself, or teach it to a handful of students? Why
work very hard to write a manuscript only in hopes that you
can interest a publisher, and then hope the editor doesn't
trim it to pieces? Through shareware, your story WILL be
told, and it will be told YOUR way to a huge audience!
_____________________________________________________________
end of chapter.