You’re in a market and a competitor arrives. Should you be worried? Not always.
Record labels were petrified of radio, when it arrived, but it only drove their
sales upwards. Small coffee shops generally see their sales rise, not fall,
when a Starbucks opens up nearby. And in the blog world, a new blog in your
space is all but certain to increase your own traffic.
The same thing can happen even when the competitor is yourself. Most big newspapers
today put all of their content online for free. What does that do to sales of
the print product? Publishers have been generally reluctant to embrace the internet,
and have often done so only because they have to, and not because they want
to. It seems obvious that if your newspaper’s content is available for free
online, then people are less likely to pay money for it in paper form. But the
obvious is not always true, and so Matthew Gentskow, of the
University of Chicago’s business school, actually bothered to run
the numbers, using the Washington Post as his object of study.
Both reduced-form OLS regressions and a structural model without heterogeneity
suggest that the print and online editions of the Post are strong complements,
with the addition of the post.com to the market increasing profits from the
Post print edition by $10.5 million per year. In contrast, when I estimate
the full model with both observed and unobserved heterogeneity, I find that
the print and online editions are significant substitutes. I estimate that
raising the price of the Post by $.10 would increase post.com readership by
about 2 percent, and that removing the post.com from the market entirely would
increase readership of the Post by 27,000 readers per day, or 1.5 percent.
The estimated $33.2 million of revenue generated by the post.com comes at
a cost of about $5.5 million in lost Post readership. For consumers, the online
edition generated a per-reader surplus of $.30 per day, implying a total welfare
gain of $45 million per year.
In English, this means that the publishers’ intuition is true, in a narrow
sense. Without the website, the readership of the paper would go up. But it
wouldn’t go up very much: just 1.5%. And of course the website reaches many
more readers than the print edition ever will, quite aside from making money
itself.
Elsewhere, I’m quite sure that the readership of the print version of the Onion
increases with the popularity of the website: if the website had never been
launched, the print version would be nowhere today, or at least certainly not
in New York. Similarly, smart magazines like Wired and Portfolio
put all of their content online for free because they know (or at least suspect)
that it drives print sales, rather than cannibalizing them.
Whether the entertainment industry is going to wake up to this paradigm, however,
remains very doubtful.
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