rev2oh | Classifieds: Use a tiered selling strategy

RevenueTwoPointZero is a new group of very smart folks who are trying to rethink the business model behind journalism. After their conference last weekend, they've published a series of blog posts on their brainstorming sessions. I'll be responding to many (if not all of them) with the rev2oh slug.The one concern I had when reading the rev2oh plan for classifieds was the approach to selling premium content, which seems to follow a micro-payment model. Rather than nickel and diming the customers to death, I've got a better solution.… Read the rest of the post…

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RevenueTwoPointZero is a new group of very smart folks who are trying to rethink the business model behind journalism. After their conference last weekend, they've published a series of blog posts on their brainstorming sessions. I'll be responding to many (if not all of them) with the rev2oh slug.

Category specific search UI mockup
A mockup from the rev2oh team.

The rev2oh team came up with a really solid plan for how newspaper platforms can redo their classifieds sales online. I was really please to see them include aggregating craigslist as one of the goals. After all, why should newsorgs try to create a new social network when a perfectly good one already exists?

The one concern I had when reading their plan was that the premium content is very much a micro-payment model. This does work, (see: ebay), but it's not very user friendly.

In part, this response is applying Jeff Jarvis’ question: “what would Google do?” Or, more appropriately, “What would Apple do?”

What Would Google Do?

Apple is the master of simplifying their offerings. You can’t buy options for an iphone to get a brighter screen, bluetooth, extra data every month, and a fingerprint-proof backing. That many options is confusing. iPhone comes in two versions that differ in just one way: memory. A customer only has one decision to make, and that simplifies their experience.

And that, after all, is what this entire proposal hinges on: a better user experience.

Freemium

If you take a look at the model that of some of the pioneers of freemium, (37signals), they've got with a stratified pricing scheme.

Recognizing that a tiered system is a different selling scheme, I opine that it's more user friendly. Let users pick from three options: free, extra, and high class.

Each tier will give them more benefits.

Free can be exactly as described. Plenty of flexibility, the option to upload pictures, tag your listing, etc… Mid-range could drop the ads, allow for more photos, allow for higher placement, give a few additional themes, and a shelf life of twice that of a free listings. Top of the line listings would drop ads, allow for unlimited photos, offer the best possible placement, bolder search results, give them more keywords, at least 5 themes, and a shelf life of at least a month.

The advantage of a tiered system like this is that users don’t really have to think. They’ll not be concerned about buying a new theme for a little extra money, or saving on keywords just to save a few bucks.

This is all about good design. As Steve Jobs says, “Design is not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works.”