Build It and Give It Away
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When I started in internet marketing, that’s what we called in back in the olden days, I was all about getting paid. And 5 internet years is equal to about 2 dog years which comes out to about 7 human years. So, I got it right, 5 years ago was the olden days. Now when I hear the term "internet marketing", I do get a creepy vibe, like I just opened my self up for spam and autosurfing sites that were built with 90’s design, 8 colors and a table.
And I did fall for that crap for a while. I also tried to sell everything. I wrote an ebook and I would set a price tag. That link was to a book I wrote to be viral. And it still is, five to six years later. I wrote software and made it shareware and sold it. But I gradually caught on.
I write useful software, but not necessarily the best you can find. I had to get a job done. No downloadable software was available or the software that was cost too much. So I wrote my own and then decided that all that work needed a price tag.
The first software I tried to sell was software I wrote to find hot items on Ebay, before Ebay did it themselves or had RSS feeds. I wrote a scraper. It was a bitch too. Ebay switched their pages around every month or so and I would have to update it. At the same time, I had customers who had already purchased the software.
The software would sort the listings by bids whether you searched or browsed. Then it would take the titles of the top bid auctions and analyze keyword density across all of them. I figured most people search title only and those auctions with the top bids also had the most common keywords they used to find the product they were looking for.
But it was clunky. Never being one to waste time on useless "Hello World" exercises, I taught myself to write the code by actually writing the code and reading as I went. There was a lot of things I could have learned.
Eventually I took the product off the market and slowly backed away. Customers are a pain. And if you write software, customers are even a bigger pain. They can break things and find bugs where you never thought. And then, they don’t even know how to tell you what they did.
It was a few years before I wrote more software. This time it calculated KEI for keywords and analyzed Adwords competition. And this time it was free.
I had learned something. There are few things that people buy when they are "internet marketers". They buy ebooks. They buy software. They buy advertising. They buy hosting. And the list can continue for a little while. I learned you don’t have to sell every one of these things to every person who hit my site.
I learned that if I picked one to give away free, I would have a better shot at selling the other things on the list. And if I was the only one giving away the free thing and everyone else was selling, I would have a lot of people coming for my software, even if it was below par. As long as it did the job. Free has power.
I am currently working on an inventory database in Filemaker. Not just any inventory database. One that does everything for an ecommerce type site. Inventory, invoices, P.O’s, sales reports, and a direct connection to a remote osCommerce installation. The closest commercially available software is $6000. I know. I didn’t want to write this thing, so I looked for what could be bought. That wasn’t even the biggest price tag. That one was closer to $30,000.
These people are really proud of their work and when I am done, I am going to piss them off. I think. That’s a lot of money. No, it’s more interesting to piss high dollar developers off. I will give it away and if I could find a Mac person will Filemaker Advanced 9, I could even give away a Mac version. It’s not done yet, but it’s close.
Now I just have to figure out how appreciative a user would be of free software like this and add in some affiliate links. Of course, giving it away should be pretty good link bait to boot. Not crazy link bait, because not everyone wants to own an ecommerce site. But I know those that do wouldn’t mind saving a few thousand dollars.


That’s pretty crazy! May you succeed in your link bait =D!
MarketingDeviant’s last blog post..Manipulation Method using Reverse Psychology
Yup, I agree Stephan; how do they and how many do appreciate the free gift. There are folks in the Internet business scene that grab whatever they can get for free but then put it on the shelf. No action other than “off the desk”. On the other hand, there are people that recognize the value of a gift.
I mean, there is a bunch of crap out there, but also a couple gems.
I’d rather remove all the crap from my hard disk to have enough GB available for a few gems, and then let them flourish by putting them into good use and/or acting upon them.
Having said this, giving gems away for free is, as you said, a good door opener. People get to know you and the quality of your products. And once they start getting results they are open for more, more, and more.
~Marcus
Marcus Hochstadt’s last blog post..You Are MUCH More Worth Than You Think
My story sounds just like yours….I did pretty much the same thing. Good luck with your internet work in the future.
Bose Computer Speakers’s last blog post..Bose® Acoustimass® 16 Series II home entertainment speaker system
@Deviant
Thanks for the luck.
@Marcus
This will probably be the best piece of software I written so far. I am actually writing it for other people to use. Sometimes I don’t make them too user friendly. We’ll see.
[...] am currently writing a database/program in Filemaker to keep all of my link lists in. I have expanded this until form filling software for linking [...]
What’s your timescale when you say “olden days”? I’d be interested to know whether that’s 1 year, 5y, 10y 15? I’ve been doing some kind of marketing on the net since I got my first email account in January 1989.
I bet you can beat me on that…
db
David Bradley’s last blog post..Who Do You Work For?
My marketing started truly back in 1998. My programming started back in 1989 on a Texas Intruments TI-99/4A when I was fourteen. I wrote software that calculated wingspan, length, etc. for drawing up flying model airplane plans. I wanted to create a flying model of the Swedish Viggen. Never quite made it that far though. At that time, I was going to be an aeronautical engineer. Things change.
Good point. I’d also argue that giving away something for free helps to create a value context.
A potential customer might then conceivably think “I liked (product a) which was free, (product b) must really kick ass to be $20.”
Alex’s last blog post..Will It Blend? and Seth Godin make a Meatball Sundae – don’t try this at home!
Most ecommerce related products do have a price tag. There is a lot of picks and shovels that can come after software like this.
[...] can’t I connect Filemaker directly to [...]