|
|
|
|
|
by axod
5934 days ago
|
|
Problem is, people expect things to be free. By restricting yourself only to people willing to pay money, you've cut out most of the internet population. You might be restricting yourself to a small business. There's also a heap of other reasons... for example, if you create X, and sell it to users, you're only selling one thing. By advertising other peoples products, you can be selling 1,000 different things. The chances of success are vastly increased. Also, if you sell directly, your users are likely only to purchase once from you. If you run advertising, they are more likely to generate continuous revenue for you, from multiple products. |
|
Businesses don't.
> By restricting yourself only to people willing to pay money, you've cut out most of the internet population.
No, you've cut out freeloaders who expect something for nothing, people you generally don't want anyway. This isn't cutting people out, it's filtering out bad prospects. People who want stuff free are the worst customers, I'd much prefer those who are willing to pay for something they find valuable to them. You can avoid a lot of scaling problems by only focusing on paying customers and there's no shortage of paying customers if you build something of real value.