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- DISK VENDOR'S GUIDE
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- Copyright 1992 by
- Association of Shareware Professionals
- 545 Grover Road
- Muskegon MI 49442-9427
- U.S.A.
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- March 15, 1993
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- CompuServe 72050,1433
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- A limited license is granted to reprint short extracts from
- this guide as long as credit is given and a copy is sent to
- the address above. Individuals may copy this guide for each
- other as long as no fee is charged. Others including disk
- vendors, BBSs and User Groups may distribute copies of the
- unmodified self-extract VGUIDE.EXE file as long as the file or
- its contents are NOT renamed, modified or made part of some
- larger work without the written permission of the ASP. A BBS
- may rearchive the unmodified VGUIDE.DOC file that is contained
- within VGUIDE.EXE as long as the resulting archive name is
- VGUIDE.ZIP, VGUIDE.LZH, VGUIDE.ARC, VGUIDE.???
-
- ----
-
- NOTICE: ALL INFORMATION, TIPS AND ADVICE IN THIS GUIDE ARE
- PRESENTED TO "GUIDE" YOU INTO AREAS FOR YOU TO RESEARCH AND
- STUDY IN MORE DETAIL ON YOUR OWN. IN NO CASE WILL THE ASP OR
- OTHER CONTRIBUTING WRITERS BE LIABLE FOR DAMAGES RESULTING
- FROM YOUR ACTING UPON INFORMATION THAT IS CONTAINED HEREIN. IN
- PARTICULAR, AN ATTORNEY SHOULD BE CONSULTED ON ANY QUESTIONS
- OF LAW BEFORE FOLLOWING ADVICE CONTAINED HEREIN.
-
- ----
-
- The primary author of this document is George Abbott.
- Contributing authors are Nelson Ford, Eric Isaacson, Tom
- Wagner and many others.
-
- ----
-
- To contact the ASP, write to Association of Shareware
- Professionals, 545 Grover Road, Muskegon MI 49442-9427,
- telephone 616-788-5131 or you can FAX to 616-788-2765 and ask
- for a Vendor Application kit.
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- Table Of Contents
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- 1. Forward . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 1.1 What Is Shareware? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
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- 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
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- 3. Getting Started . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 3.1 Identify Your Market Niche . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 3.1.1 Local Shows & Flea Markets. . . . . . . . . 6
- 3.1.2 Selling Shareware From Your Retail Store. . 6
- 3.1.3 Shopping Malls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 3.1.4 Mail Order Shareware. . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 3.1.5 Rack Vendor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 3.2 Collecting Shareware Disks - Overview. . . . . . . . 7
- 3.3 Reviewing The Disks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
- 3.4 Logos & Letterhead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
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- 4. Preparing Your Catalog . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 4.1 Honesty In Advertising . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 4.2 Use A Good Word Processor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
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- 5. Hardware . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 5.1 Computers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 5.2 Do NOT Depend On 1.2m Drives . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 5.3 Disk Duplicators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
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- 6. Software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- 6.1 Catalog-On-A-Disk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- 6.2 Compression Software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
- 6.3 Disk Duplication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- 6.4 Virus Scanning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
- 6.5 DOS Tutorial Shareware . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
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- 7. Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
- 7.1 Diskettes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
- 7.2 Mailers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
- 7.3 Label Stock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
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- 8. Trademarks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
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- 9. Collecting Shareware . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
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- 10. Providing Technical Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
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- 11. The Association of Shareware Professionals ("ASP") . . . . 34
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- 1
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
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- Table Of Contents (Continued)
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- 12. Summer Shareware Seminar (SSS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
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- 13. Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
- 13.1 Telephone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
- 13.2 Credit Card Merchant Accounts . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
- 13.3 A Banker's Perspective . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
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- Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
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- 2
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 1. Forward
-
- The purpose of this guide is to provide tips on how to start
- and run a shareware disk vending service. A shareware disk
- vending service (Vendor) is defined as someone or a company
- that gathers and maintains a collection of shareware
- evaluation disks (creates a library), keeps the library up to
- date, publishes a catalog (printed and/or on-disk) and sells
- evaluation copies to end users. Some vendors specialize in
- mail/telephone order, others operate booths at fairs, flea
- markets, booths in malls, etc.
-
- A variant of a disk vendor is one that places racks of
- shareware in one or more retail locations. This is usually
- referred to as a "Rack Vendor" as compared to a "Mail Order
- Vendor" as described above. The Rack Vendor shares a portion
- of the sales price with the owner of the rack location. Racks
- are often found in airport gift shops, convenience stores,
- retail chain stores like Walmart, K-Mart, book stores, etc.
- Further, the Rack Vendor replenishes the supply of disks in
- the racks. The racks vary from cardboard displays to fancy
- wire or metal racks.
-
- Another type of vendor are those that produce CD-ROMs that
- contain shareware software.
-
- This guide is going to folks who are considering starting a
- disk vendor business, so some of the points may seem obvious
- or elementary to experienced vendors.
-
- The information and opinions in this guide are drawn from
- talking to many vendors from the ASP headquarters and from the
- contributions of many ASP members. Many of the ideas and
- concepts in this document are discussed from time to time on
- the ASPFORUM on CompuServe. If you have access to CompuServe,
- GO SHARE to reach the ASP forum and "talk" to hundreds of ASP
- members.
-
- This document has been put together and freely distributed in
- the spirit of sharing. The ASP does not make money from it.
- All input, new information and corrections are gratefully
- accepted.
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- 3
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
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- 1. Forward (Continued)
-
- 1.1 What Is Shareware?
-
- Nelson Ford (one of the ASP's founders and historians)
- relates the following: "Andrew Fluegelman started the
- formal shareware concept (he trademarked the name
- Freeware for it). Andy did not say that everyone who
- spent an afternoon writing a program, uploaded it to a
- couple of BBSs and sat back and waited would get rich.
- He said that the freeware approach provides a way to let
- the users decide (rather than the people who control the
- advertising prices) which programs should succeed, based
- solely on the quality and usefulness of the program."
-
- Later, an article in InfoWorld used the term "shareware"
- and as far as we know, Bob Wallace (PC-Write) was the
- first to use it with a shareware product. Also during
- that time, Nelson Ford wrote a column called "The Public
- Library" for the late SOFTALK magazine. Nelson asked his
- readers to submit names for this new way of marketing
- software and the word "shareware" was the winner. Over
- the years, the ASP has fought trademark cases in several
- countries when someone tried to trademark the word
- "shareware". The ASP firmly believes that the word
- "shareware" should be freely used by anyone.
-
- Nelson continues, "Shareware is not some magic way to get
- rich from trivial or substandard, amateurish products of
- limited appeal or usefulness. Some shareware programmers
- who have failed prefer to blame the shareware approach
- rather than themselves. They think that millions of
- people are using their programs without paying and that
- the shareware concept just doesn't work."
-
- "To these people we always reply: If shareware doesn't
- work, how are Button (PC-File), Wallace (PC-Write), and
- others making over a million dollars a year at it? 'These
- are exceptions!' they reply. Sure they are exceptions.
- Anyone making a million dollars a year at anything is an
- exception. Many others are making lesser, but
- respectable, incomes. Not bad for a business that anyone
- can get into at virtually no up-front cost."
-
- "Yes, shareware definitely works. Like anything else,
- how well it works for you depends on hard work, ability,
- and even a little bit of luck. And even luck often boils
- down to being prepared to take advantage of opportunities
- when they coming knocking. We hope this guide will help
- you get prepared."
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- 4
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
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- 2. Introduction
-
- These days, it seems that many people that recently purchased
- their first computer and ran across the shareware concept
- think they can easily get into the shareware disk vendor
- business. They see the catalogs produced by other vendors and
- say "I could do that." Or, they realize that there are no
- disk vendors in their part of the country.
-
- Starting a shareware disk vending business is a lot more work
- than first meets the eye. There are hardware, software and
- knowledge requirements that must be considered and mastered.
- First, you need a shareware disk collection AND permission
- from the authors (copyright holders) to distribute the
- shareware. Next, you need appropriate hardware. Most
- importantly, you need a lot of marketing, computer and
- software knowledge to succeed. If you are just looking for a
- fast buck, are not willing to review the programs you carry,
- don't plan to get the latest versions, don't plan to prepare
- an organized catalog, GIVE UP NOW - you will probably fail in
- this highly competitive business.
-
- However, if you don't give up, realize that there are
- thousands of disk distributors in the world today. New ones
- start up almost daily. Unfortunately, vendors fail and go out
- of business fairly often. Where you will fit into the
- shareware picture is largely up to you and your efforts. We
- hope that after reading this document, you will either be a
- successful shareware disk vendor or you will have the detailed
- information to cause you to explore different profit
- opportunities. If you are already a shareware disk vendor,
- this document may give you tips on how to be more successful.
-
- Keep in mind that a shareware disk vendor does NOT own or
- control the copyright on the shareware programs, documentation
- and supporting files provided by the author. The author owns
- and controls the copyright. The author can select who will be
- allowed to copy his/her shareware and how it is to be
- distributed. The copyrights ARE enforceable. RESPECT the
- author's copyright. Examine every disk, not sent to you
- directly by the author, to see if the author has placed any
- copying restrictions on the disk. You will likely need to
- write to the authors asking permission to carry their
- shareware. You may get both permission AND the latest
- version. Some will even send major future upgrades.
-
- There are some authors that require that all RACK and CD-ROM
- vendors get written permission and SOMETIMES royalty payments
- BEFORE the vendor can place the author's copyrighted works on
- racks or CD-ROMs EVEN IF THEY SENT YOU THEIR DISK IN THE FIRST
- PLACE. FOLLOW ALL COPYING RESTRICTIONS OR RISK LAWSUITS
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
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- 3. Getting Started
-
- 3.1 Identify Your Market Niche
-
- What got you interested in becoming a shareware disk
- vendor? What are your objectives? How much time can you
- devote to disk vending? What are your financial
- resources? Have you formulated a Business Plan? What
- level is right for you to start? How big do you want to
- get? Are you prepared to succeed? Are you prepared to
- fail?
-
- 3.1.1 Local Shows & Flea Markets.
-
- A really low cost way of starting is to take a
- card table to a local computer show, swap meet
- or flea market and set up a "booth". You have
- a box full of shareware disk copies, a list of
- titles and a cash box. Sounds easy? Well, a
- lot of work is behind that simple "booth".
-
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- 3.1.2 Selling Shareware From Your Retail Store.
-
- You already operate a computer, book, or other
- retail store likely to be frequented by
- computer users (almost anyone these days). You
- operate like the flea market fellow except that
- you have counter or shelf space in place of the
- card table and you have a cash register rather
- than a cash box.
-
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- 3.1.3 Shopping Malls.
-
- This approach is similar to the Flea Market
- approach except that you operate out of a small
- booth in the walkway of a shopping mall.
-
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- 3.1.4 Mail Order Shareware.
-
- You put together either a printed or on-disk
- catalog for your customers to make telephone or
- mail order purchases. You advertise in trade
- magazines, local newspapers, local "shopper's
- guides" or you make blind mailings to targeted
- purchased mailing lists. You should be able to
- take credit card orders to succeed in telephone
- or mail order.
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
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- 3. Getting Started (Continued)
-
- 3.1 Identify Your Market Niche (Continued)
-
- 3.1.5 Rack Vendor
-
- A Rack Vendor is one that places racks of
- shareware in one or more retail locations. The
- Rack Vendor shares a portion of the sales price
- with the owner of the rack location. Racks are
- often found in airport gift shops, convenience
- stores, retail chain stores like Walmart, K-
- Mart, book stores, etc. Further, the Rack
- Vendor replenishes the supply of disks in the
- racks. The racks vary from cardboard displays
- to fancy wire or metal racks.
-
- You can combine any or all of the above as dictated by
- your resources and situation.
-
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- 3.2 Collecting Shareware Disks - Overview.
-
- Investigate the marketplace. See what others are doing.
- Determine how you want to tackle the market. Your disks
- must come directly from the author so that you get the
- latest and don't have copyright problems. However, you
- can obtain disks from the various sources below so that
- you will know which authors to contact. Make sure the
- list you put together IS of shareware or public domain
- and NOT ripped-off commercial or traditional retail type
- software.
-
- Section 9 will cover Collecting Shareware in more detail.
- Following is a quick overview of some of the ways to
- start your shareware list.
-
- 3.2.1 You have been involved with a large local User
- Group and have obtained a copy of their
- collection to build a list of authors.
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- 3.2.2 You are an avid BBSer that has downloaded a lot
- of shareware to build a list of authors.
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- 3.2.3 You purchase disks from various other vendors
- to build your list of authors to contact.
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- 3.2.4 You obtain a CD-ROM disk containing hundreds or
- thousands of shareware and public domain
- programs. You use this to build your list of
- authors to contact.
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
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- 3. Getting Started (Continued)
-
- 3.3 Reviewing The Disks
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- Scan EVERY disk for virus infections. Be sure you also
- scan shrinkwrapped "retail" software as tens of thousands
- of infected disks are shipped by major retailers every
- year. They think viri are a shareware or BBS problem
- (NOT TRUE) and they are careless and sloppy in preparing
- their master disks.
-
- Know what is in your collection. Don't just quickly read
- the on-disk documentation. Many ASP authors have a
- VENDOR.DOC file that contains any copying or distribution
- restrictions, a list of the files that must be present
- and a catalog description. However, you should install
- the shareware and run it.
-
- By running the software, you may find that you have
- obtained a damaged or incomplete disk. If you distribute
- this disk, you will get expensive to handle technical
- support calls and you will have to give credit or send
- out another disk. Or the customer will call the author.
- Most authors send these customers a new disk AND
- recommend some other vendor to your PREVIOUS customer.
- The same authors also recommend other vendors if you
- insist on carrying old versions.
-
- If the software isn't better or different than what you
- are already carrying in your catalog, you may not wish to
- carry the shareware. Or, you may find the new system
- better and use it to replace an existing catalog entry.
- For example, YADS stands for "Yet Another DOS Shell" or
- menu system. Seems like everyone thinks they have
- designed the best there is. They haven't even looked at
- what is already available in the shareware marketplace.
- You just can't afford to carry all of the menu systems,
- screen blankers, clocks, tickler systems, etc. that are
- constantly being designed by the authors.
-
- LOOK FOR the author's distribution restrictions. Some
- authors will NOT allow you to carry the shareware unless
- you get written permission from them. As mentioned
- before, you should contact the author anyway as you will
- probably get the latest version if the author gives you
- permission. SOME authors not only require written
- permission, but may also require royalties from rack and
- CD-ROM vendors even though they may have sent you their
- disks in the first place.
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
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- 3. Getting Started (Continued)
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- 3.3 Reviewing The Disks (Continued)
-
- Look for files advertising other vendors. The files
- placed on disks the other vendor distributes are probably
- copyrighted by that vendor and you can not issue disks
- with that file. Further, you don't want to advertise
- that other vendor's service.
-
- Vendors can copyright "compilations" of many separate
- small shareware systems on one disk. This is often done
- with small utilities. The vendor can NOT copyright the
- individual programs and documentation (not written by the
- vendor), as the authors retain their own copyrights.
- BUT, they can copyright the compilation. Don't forget
- you still need permission from many of the authors to
- carry their system even in a compilation.
-
- You must build up your own compilations that don't
- infringe on the other vendor's copyrights.
-
- If you use disk numbers in your catalog, don't copy some
- other vendors numbering system. You could end up in
- court. Do your own thing. Don't use the program
- descriptions out of some other vendor's catalog. This is
- another way to look for copyright trouble. However, the
- same description may appear in many vendor catalogs IF
- they all use the author's description found in the
- VENDOR.DOC file used by many authors. You may use the
- author's description if it isn't pure hype. Be sure that
- you describe the shareware on the disk and not some
- retail product the author is pushing in place of the
- shareware.
-
- If you are/become a member of the ASP, you will receive
- the latest Official ASP Catalog each month that contains
- the author written program descriptions.
-
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- 3.4 Logos & Letterhead
-
- If you really want to go into a business, get your ducks
- lined up first. Pick a company name. Coming up with a
- unique name could be a tough one, particularly if you use
- the word "shareware". Also, avoid the word "freeware" as
- Headland Press still owns the Trademark on that word. A
- lot of authors of shareware REALLY don't like to send
- their disks to an outfit with the words "public domain"
- in their name as that implies "free" (read that as no
- registration income).
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
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- 3. Getting Started (Continued)
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- 3.4 Logos & Letterhead
-
- A logo always looks good on your letterhead. If you are
- not artistic yourself, or do not have an artistic friend,
- go to your local college Art Department and see if you
- can find someone to design a logo. At least get some
- help laying out your letterhead even if you don't use a
- logo.
-
- Create a Business Plan. Prepare a budget for the next
- several years that compares your expected income with
- expected expenses. What advertising schedules will you
- use? Where are you heading or where could you head?
- Look at the market. What penetration do you expect?
-
- Go to your local IRS office (in the USA) and find out how
- to get a Federal Tax I.D. number. It costs nothing.
- Even if you have no employees, you will need it for your
- Tax Schedule C. Many states that have Sales & Use taxes
- will use the same number for your State Tax license
- number. Contact your State sales tax office.
-
- Get a business checking account. It makes it easier to
- track your costs and income for tax purposes. If you
- have a good history with your bank, you may be able to
- get a Master/Visa Merchant account from them. Being able
- to handle credit card sales is a real asset. Do you have
- a sharp looking business card to hand to the bank manager
- when you are applying for a credit card Merchant Account?
- You should be dressed in a business like manor. Have
- every phase of your image be business like.
-
- The image you present is very important. It conveys a
- lot about your drive and commitment to succeed. Send out
- professional looking letters to the authors and others.
- Many authors will "round-file" (read that - trash)
- letters not on letterhead paper printed with a 9-pin dot
- matrix printer in the draft mode. If you received such a
- letter, would you consider the sender to be "for real"
- and commit the expense to send disks?
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- 10
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
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-
- 4. Preparing Your Catalog
-
- If you are a Rack Vendor, your catalog may consist of a Table
- of Contents type of listing on your rack. You may only have
- the descriptions on the disk packages. If you are a Rack
- Vendor, you may be able to skip after you read Section 4.1.
-
- 4.1 Honesty In Advertising
-
- Over the years, many of us in this shareware business
- have seen many of the sleazy shareware advertisements and
- catalogs touting FREE!, FREE!, FREE! Software. You don't
- find too many any more as most of those vendors have
- failed or have decided that honesty is the BEST policy.
- After all, the entire shareware industry is based on
- trust between the author, vendor, BBS and end user.
-
- You should prominently display a description of shareware
- and the registration process. This is also true for Rack
- Vendors. You must make an attempt to educate your
- customers on the nature of shareware. You can write this
- information in your own words or use the ASP recommended
- wording:
-
- a. "The fee paid to the vendor is a distribution charge
- and does not cover the cost of the program itself."
-
- This is important in maintaining customer
- satisfaction. Too often a customer purchases a disk
- from a vendor only to be offended when s/he learns
- that an additional payment is required. Customers
- should be fully informed before their purchase.
-
- Some rack vendors have failed when they were not
- honest up front with the user. The user thinks the
- price sticker is the ONLY cost of shareware. They
- get angry when they see the author's registration
- requirements, demand their money back from the store
- owner and the store owner dumps the trouble causing
- rack.
-
- b. "If the user finds a Shareware program to be of use,
- s/he is expected to send the registration fee to the
- author."
-
- Users are not "encouraged to register", they are
- "required to register". Please do not imply that a
- user registers only if s/he "likes" the product.
- Liking the product is irrelevant if the user
- continues using it beyond the evaluation period.
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
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- 4. Preparing Your Catalog (Continued)
-
- 4.1 Honesty In Advertising (Continued)
-
- Registration is required for use beyond evaluation,
- and emphasis should be placed upon the individual
- author's registration requirements. The user's
- trial or evaluation license is determined by the
- copyright holder. This is a legal requirement, not
- an optional formality.
-
- c. "Registration entitles the user to various rights
- and benefits (depending on the author). These range
- from the legal right to continue using the software,
- to printed documentation and/or higher levels of
- service."
-
- Please do not make promises which the authors can
- not fulfill, such as stating that registration
- always brings printed manuals. Usually this is
- true, but the actual registration benefits depend
- upon the individual author. Each author has his/her
- own registration incentives.
-
-
- Actually, the above is a requirement, not just a
- suggestion, for ASP Vendor members.
-
- If you throw honesty to the wind, both you and the
- authors will get complaint calls and letters. Authors
- getting these complaints will almost always recommend
- some other vendor that the author knows believes in
- honesty in advertising. Another opportunity for failure
- in this business {grin}.
-
-
- 4.2 Use A Good Word Processor
-
- There are many excellent shareware word processors that
- will produce excellent looking printed catalogs (be sure
- to register {smile} ). Or you can use a good non-
- shareware word processor. There are excellent shareware
- Desk Top Publishing systems if you wish to include screen
- captures in your catalog.
-
- If you are preparing an on-disk catalog, almost ALL word
- processors can "print" to a straight ASCII file that
- contains no control characters except a Form Feed (ASCII
- 12) after line 59 on each page. Do not pad blank lines
- to make a full 66 lines per page. The HP laser printers
- (and compatibles) can handle only 59 or 60 lines before
- they eject the page.
-
- 12
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 5. Hardware
-
- 5.1 Computers
-
- At a minimum, you will need a computer with BOTH 5.25"
- 360k and 3.5" 720k disk drives. These days, a 100m hard
- drive is very reasonable in cost. You need a good
- computer to review the shareware and public domain
- software that you may place in your catalog. Get the
- latest and greatest that you can afford. At the time
- this document was last updated, fast super VGA computers
- with at least 100m hard drive could be purchased in the
- $1,500 (or less) range.
-
- You may also want to pick up an old machine with a
- Hercules type monochrome monitor to see if the color
- selections used by an author will give a readable screen
- on an old monitor. A laptop with LCD display may be
- another good test bench for the same reason. Some
- authors just don't take the time to shut off color so
- that the program can be used on the older monitors.
- Naturally many games these days are written for VGA as
- many serious gamers have up to date monitors.
-
- 5.2 Do NOT Depend On 1.2m Drives
-
- You MUST have a TRUE 5.25 inch 360k drive. You may also
- want a 1.2m 5.25 inch drive, but you MUST have a true
- 360k drive to make your 360k disks.
-
- ALL disk vendors distribute either 360k 5 1/4" or 720k 3
- 1/2" disks. A few distribute collections on 1.44m 3.5"
- disks. Very FEW vendors sell 1.2m 5 1/2" disks. Don't
- let a computer store or mail order outfit tell you that
- you can make 360k copies on 1.2m high density drives.
- Sure, sometimes you can. Often a customer will NOT be
- able to read the disk. You will get a LOT of calls from
- those to whom you have sent disks. It will cause you
- loss of big bucks, lost sales and frustrated customers.
- Sort of akin to the end of the world for a shareware
- vendor.
-
- Why? The answer is fairly simple. To get 1.2m on a
- 5.25" disk, the disk drive "paints" a track that is 1/2
- as wide as the 360k drives so it can place 80 tracks on a
- disk rather than 40. Sure, you can ask the DOS FORMAT
- program to tell your disk drive to lay down only 40
- tracks for a 360k format, but they are still THIN tracks.
-
-
-
-
-
- 13
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 5. Hardware (Continued)
-
- 5.2 Do NOT Depend On 1.2m Drives (Continued)
-
- If the disk was previously formatted, and often suppliers
- sell pre-formatted disks at no additional price, the
- vestiges of the 80 tracks are STILL there, even though
- your disk drive just wrote a 40 track 360k format onto
- the disk. A true 360k drive has a WIDER head and will
- easily pick up portions of bits from the adjacent
- unerased thin track that was laid down previously. The
- 360k drive reads garbled data and DOS gives up.
-
- Even if you make 360k disks with disks that have NEVER
- been formatted before, the tracks are too thin to be read
- by many 360k drives. A slightly out of adjustment 360k
- drive can read true 360k disks just fine, but will choke
- on one of those darned disks made on a high density
- drive.
-
- This problem does NOT exist with 1.44m 3 1/2" drives.
- The track width on both the 720k and 1.44m formats is the
- SAME. Eighty tracks are used for both 720k and 1.44m.
- The 1.44m format just has twice as many sectors to the
- track.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
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-
- 14
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-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 5. Hardware (Continued)
-
- 5.3 Disk Duplicators
-
- You can use the DOS DISKCOPY command to make copies from
- your shareware masters. If you are not familiar with DOS
- commands, most high schools have Continuing Education
- courses that will teach you how to use a computer. See
- Section 6.5 for training shareware.
-
- Hopefully, your sales will reach a point where you can no
- longer keep up with using a computer and DISKCOPY. Below
- are several companies that supply disk duplication
- equipment.
-
- Midwestern Disk o Has 4 and 5 at-a-time for
- Duplication Center 360k, 720k, 1.2m and 1.44m
- 509 W. Taylor disks.
- Creston IA 50801 o Carries the Ventuno line of
- 515-782-5190 3.5" & 5.25" bin autoloader
- 800-221-6332 type duplicators.
- FAX: 515-782-4166 o Call for prices.
-
- MediaFORM o Xpress autoloaders and disk
- 75 Uwchlan Avenue labelers for all types of
- Exton PA 19341 disk media.
- 215-524-7600 o Call for prices.
- 800-220-1215 o 12% discount for ASP members
- FAX: 516-363-3735
-
- Micro-Technology o Axiomatic 4 at-a-time for
- Concepts 360k, 720k, 1.2m and 1.44m
- 258 Johnson Avenue disks.
- Brooklyn NY 11206 o Call for prices
- 718-456-9100
- 800-366-4860
- FAX: 718-456-1200
-
- If you are in need of disk duplicators, be sure to call
- all of the above companies to get the latest price and
- feature combinations so that you get just what you need.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 15
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 6. Software
-
- 6.1 Catalog-On-A-Disk
-
- CATALOG-ON-A-DISK (from EmmaSoft Software Company, Inc.)
- makes it easy for your computer-using customers to buy
- from you. They can browse or search for products and
- order as they go along using only the (Enter) and (Esc)
- keys, arrows and numbers. The order form is sent to a
- printer or text file, with taxes and shipping calculated,
- to be mailed, faxed, called in, or sent by modem.
-
- The program is particularly appropriate for selling
- shareware because all your customers have computers, it's
- a unique and modern way to distribute the catalog, and
- the program itself is shareware. It's a fast way to get
- a catalog put together, and is less expensive to produce
- than a print catalog. CATALOG-ON-A-DISK also offers
- unique ways to distribute your catalog. Businesses
- distribute catalogs on floppy disks, on the hard disks of
- computers they sell, and even have customers download
- catalogs from their BBSs.
-
- CATALOG-ON-A-DISK makes buying easy because it is based
- on the (Enter) key to make choices, and the (Esc) key to
- back out. There are very few keys for the user to find,
- so ordering goes very quickly with no obstacles between
- your customer and your products. You make your catalog
- files with your favorite text editor, then compress the
- files using the Companion program. Compressed files fit
- an enormous number of products on a floppy disk. They
- are read directly into memory - no intermediate file is
- created so it displays fast and pricing and other catalog
- data is secure.
-
- You make the catalog screens to best represent your
- company. Opening Screens display your splash screen,
- tell about the catalog, your products, and your company.
- The Main Menu displays categories of products. The
- "Exit" menu is where customers print the order form,
- review an order, or view Special Forms (discount coupons,
- informational text or ordering details). You can set up
- your own help screens and a help bar. If your catalog is
- not in English you can translate the program's internal
- text. Address and date formats can be set for US or
- international use.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 16
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 6. Software (Continued)
-
- 6.1 Catalog-On-A-Disk (Continued)
-
- You can also set your catalog to automatically calculate
- sales tax for one, all, or no states or provinces. You
- can also build shipping options into the catalog, letting
- the customer choose an option so the shipping will be
- calculated into the total on the order form.
-
- Trial shareware versions are available from:
-
- Electronic Service Area Library File Name
-
- CompuServe GO WORK 14 CATALG.EXE
- Genie HOSB 12 CATALGxx.ZIP*
- ESC BBS Files 1 CATALGxx.ZIP*
-
- *Replace the "xx" with the most current version number.
-
- Example: CATALG21.ZIP.
-
- Plus many vendors and BBSs around the world.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 17
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 6. Software (Continued)
-
- 6.2 Compression Software
-
- It is a challenge for many authors to fit their entire
- system on one disk. They often use compression software
- that can squeeze the files to 50% or less than their
- original size. Compression software is always used on
- Bulletin Board Systems (BBS) to reduce download times and
- save room on the BBS hard disk drive.
-
- Phil Katz's PKZIP system is the most widely used
- compression system. For BBSs, the author compresses all
- of the program and documentation files into one ZIP file.
- For example the SmuggyWrap shareware (fictitious) Version
- 2.1 may all be ZIPed into a file named SMUGGY21.ZIP.
- Some authors send their disks to both BBSs and disk
- vendors as a single ZIP file. In this case, your job
- will be to run PKUNZIP to expand the compressed ZIP file
- out into the various program and documentation files so
- that you can evaluate the system.
-
- It may be the author's intention that you place all of
- the files in the ZIP (after uncompression) onto a single
- disk for your shareware distribution master. Hopefully,
- the author will communicate this to you with a letter or
- on-disk instructions. Authors often have a VENDOR.DOC
- file for this type of instruction. Other authors expect
- you to be a mind reader and this type author often gets
- few registrations due to poor packaging.
-
- If you plan to send out shareware disks to your
- customers, they will need to already have the PKZIP
- system or you will have to include PKUNZIP.EXE on each
- distribution disk that contains ZIP files. Further, your
- customer will have to figure out how to unZIP the
- compressed file. This is a REAL problem for end users.
- Those users that already understand how to unZIP a file
- probably obtain their shareware from BBSs and won't be
- your customer anyway. If you include PKUNZIP.EXE on your
- distribution disks, you will need a license from PKWARE
- (414-354-8699).
-
- To solve this end user problem, there is another type of
- compressed file used by many authors called a "Self-
- Extract Program". It is an executable program (.EXE)
- where the PKZIP software is at the front of the file and
- the remainder of the .EXE file that is the compressed
- data (normally in a ZIP file).
-
-
-
-
- 18
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 6. Software (Continued)
-
- 6.2 Compression Software (Continued)
-
- When you run this type of program, it uncompresses all of
- the author's program and documentation files to recreate
- the original files. It is the author's responsibility to
- get a license from PKWARE to send you this self-extract
- program file. You do not need to pay any further
- royalties to PKWARE as the author has already done so.
-
- Many authors include an INSTALL program or BATch file to
- properly install the shareware on the users hard drive.
- Therefore, you never want to uncompress the self-extract
- if the INSTALL program is looking for the self-extract
- files.
-
- Every disk or rack vendor should get a registered copy of
- PKZIP. Call PKWARE at 414-354-8699 to get your
- registered copy and ask them about royalty arrangements
- if you wish to send out disks with just the PKUNZIP
- program.
-
-
- Another popular compression system is LHA. It competes
- very favorably with PKZIP as far as compression rates and
- (as of this writing) has no royalty requirements. There
- are copyright notice requirements that must be followed.
- This software is available from most disk vendors and
- BBSs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 19
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
-
- 6. Software (Continued)
-
- 6.3 Disk Duplication
-
- You computer came with DOS. One of the DOS files is
- DISKCOPY.EXE. You can easily copy disks with DISKCOPY
- A: A: (Enter) to make one-at-a-time copies. You have to
- run it for each copy and each time, it needs to load your
- master disk.
-
- The following duplication software is available from
- several ASP authors. The descriptions are from the ASP
- Official Catalog.
-
- Product: Disk DUP
- Author: FormGen Corp., 416-857-4141
- Version: 5.9a (11-08-90)
- Needs: IBM PC, DOS 3.2 or better.
- Registration fee: $25.00
- Registration benefits: Printed manual, master disks,
- unlimited technical support,
- product discounts.
- Look for: DUP59A.EXE on BBSs; DUP59.EXE on CompuServe
- in CIS:IBMHW forum LIBrary 1 (or contact
- userID 70446,76 for assistance).
- Download size: 75k (about six minutes with a 2400 baud
- modem)
- Description:
- Speeds the duplication of disks. Master images are
- stored on hard drive, but data compression saves
- valuable space. Copies can be produced at lightning
- speed. Multi-disk option for up to ten drives at
- once! Disks can be serialized at your option. Many
- options, excellent user interface, full status
- screen. Very powerful, yet easy to use! If you
- need to make multiple copies of disks, DUP will make
- it quick and easy.
-
-
- Product: DISKCOPY
- Author: Feico Nater Shareware, 31 74 438373
- Version: 1.0 (01-01-92)
- Needs: IBM PC, DOS 2.0 or better. Hard disk.
- Registration fee: $15.00
- Registration benefits: Phone/mail support, free
- updates.
- Look for: DISKCOPY.* on BBSs; DISKCO.* on CompuServe in
- CIS:. forum LIBrary 0; DISKCOPY.* on GEnie in
- 0 forum LIBrary 0.
- Download size: 13k (about one minute with a 2400 baud
- modem)
-
- 20
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 6. Software (Continued)
-
- 6.3 Disk Duplication (Continued)
-
- Description:
- Copies an entire floppy disk onto a file on the
- fixed disk and back again. Provides: Easy copying
- of a floppy disk from A to A or from B to B, without
- the need to swap disks several times. Make many
- copies of a single disk without the need to use a
- source disk. Includes automatic formatting.
-
-
- Product: FormGen Utility Pak #1
- Author: FormGen Corp., 416-857-4141
- Version: 1.01 (10-30-90)
- Needs: IBM PC, DOS 3.2 or better.
- Registration fee: $25.00
- Registration benefits: Printed manual, master disks,
- unlimited technical support,
- product discounts.
- Look for: UPAK1.EXE on BBSs; UPAK.EXE on CompuServe in
- CIS:IBMSYS forum LIBrary 3 (or contact userID
- 70446,76 for assistance).
- Download size: 146k (about 11 minutes with a 2400 baud
- modem)
- Description: 12 excellent utilities!
- QCOPY fast single drive copy, makes multiple
- copies, no swapping
- SERA secure file erase ** MEETS DOD STANDARDS **
- DUMP high performance hex dump
- ENCRYPT/DECRYPT
- fast and very secure file encryption
- FEED/EJECT TSR page eject
- GDAY your morning smile
- SEARCH/GLOBAL
- multifile search/replacement
- LOCASE converts files to lower case
- ZIPPROC automated file processing
- TIMESYNC sets your system clock to time standard
-
- You can obtain the above systems from almost any ASP disk
- vendor or you can call the author's company directly. BE
- SURE you register all shareware that you use after the
- evaluation stage {smile}.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 21
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 6. Software (Continued)
-
- 6.4 Virus Scanning
-
- YOU MUST CHECK EVERY DISK that you receive. Don't trust
- anything, especially the so-called "retail" shrinkwrapped
- software. Shareware authors, BBSs and vendors are
- routinely careful if they expect to stay in business.
- Before you even do a DIRectory of any disk, run your
- virus scanner software against the disk. Contact the
- person that sent you the infected disk as they may not be
- aware of the infection.
-
- You may never find a virus. They actually aren't as
- common as the press would have you believe. Second to
- retail software are the computer repair shops at
- spreading virus attacks. Some rarely, if ever, check a
- disk brought in by a customer that wishes to try out a
- new computer on the floor. Some don't check computers
- that they bring in for repair. The customer's hard disk
- could be infected and the repair person can easily infect
- the test disk used to diagnose the computer. Every
- computer checked by that test disk thereafter will be
- infected. Some retail computer stores re-shrinkwrap
- returned software and place it back on the shelf without
- checking it. Scary, isn't it?
-
- SCAN EVERY DISK!
-
- Integrity Master is an excellent easy to use, up-to-date,
- anti-virus, data integrity, change management, and
- security program. It provides a single comprehensive
- solution to assure that all your programs and data are
- safe. In addition to scanning for known viruses, it
- detects unknown viruses and unlike other products will
- detect files which have been damaged but not infected by
- a virus. Integrity Master protects you against all
- threats to your data and programs not just viruses! To
- order with Master or Visa card, call 800-788-0787 or 314-
- 256-3130. You can subscribe to several upgrade packages.
-
- Virx - A so called "free" demo of the of Datawatch's
- retail "Virex For The PC". The latest Virx version can
- be obtained from the VIRUSFORUM on CompuServe, many BBSs
- and disk vendors as VIRX.ZIP. It is only the scanner and
- will detect over a thousand viri. If a virus is
- detected, you are warned so you can send back or destroy
- the disk being scanned. However, if you want to remove
- the virus, you buy a copy of Datawatch's "Virex For The
- PC" which can be purchased through computer software
- stores and mail order houses or by calling Datawatch at
- 919-490-1277.
-
- 22
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 6. Software (Continued)
-
- 6.5 DOS Tutorial Shareware
-
- Many startup shareware disk vendors have little knowledge
- of the computers they are using. Further, the people
- that answer the phones have little knowledge of what they
- are sending out. They don't even have the knowledge to
- tell the user to do a DIRectory of the disk they sent to
- the user to look for .TXT and .DOC files that can be
- printed by the user. They even don't know how to tell
- the user how to COPY the README type files to the
- printer.
-
- There are several excellent shareware programs for
- learning the DOS commands.
-
-
- DOS Sumary
-
-
- Product: DOS Summary (Hypertext)
- Author: Computer Knowledge
- Version: 2.0 (02-15-92)
- Needs: IBM PC, DOS 2.0 or better.
- Registration fee: $25.00
- Registration benefits: Printed manual with command
- examples not found in the software, master disks,
- bonus utilities. Shareware disks of other products.
- Look for: DOSSUM20.ZIP on BBSs; DSUM02.ZIP on
- CompuServe in CIS:IBMSYS forum LIBrary 1 (or
- contact userID 75655,210 for assistance).
- Download size: 150k (about 11 minutes with a 2400 baud
- modem)
- Description:
- DOS Summary is a hypertext tutorial and reference
- product which covers all DOS commands and drivers
- through MS-DOS 5.0. Also added are tutorials covering
- memory management and how DOS starts. The program can
- be used in standalone or resident mode. When
- started, you have the option of an alphabetical
- command menu or a menu where commands are grouped by
- function. You may also start the program with a DOS
- command name as a parameter and be taken immediately
- to that command.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 23
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-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 6. Software (Continued)
-
- 6.5 DOS Tutorial Shareware (Continued)
-
- DosEA
-
- For a tutorial on using DOS, try "DosEA", which is a
- six-program hypertext series. Here are short descriptins
- of the six programs in the series.
-
- *************
- ********* DosEA **********
- ** Product Descriptions **
- ** Order Information **
- ****************************
-
- Langin Software offers a series of tutorials and a book
- to help users learn DOS. The tutorials are called
- "DosEA" and are a play on words for a dossier on DOS.
-
- "DosEA 1 -- For Absolute Beginners" is a tutorial which
- demonstrates the hypertext system used in the series.
-
- "DosEA 2 -- What is DOS?" is a tutorial which explains
- the development of DOS.
-
- "DosEA 3 -- 10 Easy Commands" is a tutorial with hands-on
- practice of 10 easy DOS commands.
-
- "DosEA 4 -- Find That Command!" is a utility which helps
- determine the appropriate DOS commands for various
- chores.
-
- "Beginner's Pak" is a package of the first four programs
- in the series (DosEA 1 through DosEA 4).
-
- "DosEA 5 -- All About MS-DOS 5" is a reference of the
- many additions, deletions, and changes in MS-DOS 5.
-
- "DosEA 6 -- Switched on DOS" covers the 238 DOS switches.
-
- "An Easy Course in Using DOS" is a humorous illustrated
- book for those who hate computer manuals.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 24
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 6. Software (Continued)
-
- 6.5 DOS Tutorial Shareware (Continued)
- US$ Price Total
- --------- ------
- DosEA 1 -- For Absolute Beginners 10.00 ______
- DosEA 2 -- What is DOS? 10.00 ______
- DosEA 3 -- 10 Easy Commands 10.00 ______
- DosEA 4 -- Find That Command! 10.00 ______
- Beginner's Pak (DosEA 1-4) 25.00 ______
- DosEA 5 -- All About MS-DOS 5 10.00 ______
- DosEA 6 -- Switched on DOS 10.00 ______
- An Easy Course in Using DOS 18.00 ______
-
- Shipping and handling (US) 4.00 ______
- Shipping and handling (non-US) 5.00 ______
-
- TOTAL ______
- Prices subject to change without notice.
- Credit card orders: -- Mastercard -- Visa
- -- American Express -- Discover
- Phone: 713-524-6394 * These numbers *
- Toll free: 800-2424-PsL * are for *
- FAX: 713-524-6398 * ordering *
- CompuServe: 71355,470 * only *
- ----
- Mail:
- PsL
- P.O. Box 35705
- Houston, TX 77235-5705
-
- The above numbers and address are for the Public
- (software) Library and are for ordering, ONLY. For
- information about dealer pricing, volume discounts, site
- licensing, shipping of product, returns, latest version
- number or other technical information, see "Langin
- Software" below.
-
- Cash orders: Send check or money order to Langin
- Software at address shown below. Non-US payments should
- be drawn on US bank. Traveller's checks accepted.
- Canadian postal money orders accepted. Include your Name
- and Address and disk size.
-
- Mail to:
- Langin Software
- 532 W. 3rd St.
- CENTRALIA, IL 62801 USA
- CompuServe: 73770,615
- Fax: (618) 532-0075
- Voice: (618) 532-4899
-
-
- 25
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 7. Supplies
-
- The following information was obtained from messages on the
- CompuServe ASPFORUM over the years, companies that were at the
- annual Summer Shareware Seminars and from information sent to
- this author by various companies. This list is by no means
- complete and you will need to do your own research to decide
- just where you will obtain your supplies.
-
- 7.1 Diskettes
-
- There are countless suppliers of disks. Many (if not
- most) obtain their disks from Taiwan manufacturers. The
- quality of disks can vary widely from one supplier to
- another. This document will list no disk suppliers as
- they seem to come and go due to the highly competitive
- nature of this market.
-
- Check computer magazine ads and try 500 or so from
- several suppliers. Keep track of the failure rate.
- Switch vendors if the failure rate is more than several
- percent. Pick a supplier that has a good replacement
- policy for bad disks. Make sure they pay the postage if
- they require that you return the bad disks. This writer
- once had 48 disks fail out of one package of 50 disks.
- That supplier got blunt phone calls.
-
- If you pay extra for pre-formatted disks, be sure that
- your duplication software does a CRC check (DISKCOPY /v)
- as even pre-formatted disks can have a bad failure rate.
- You can't afford the returns when you send out faulty
- disks.
-
- Keep up with what is going on in the computer industry.
- Subscribe to several computer magazines. A lot of folks
- got caught not being able to obtain 3.5" disks in the
- Spring of 1992 when Microsoft had their Windows 3.1 and
- DOS 5 and IBM had their OS/2 major upgrades AT THE SAME
- TIME. Microsoft and IBM gobbled up every 3.5" disk in
- sight. The ASPFORUM was full of panic messages from both
- authors and vendors that got caught. This writer was
- down to only 7 disks while in the middle of a major
- upgrade on a shareware product. Normally, you can get
- almost any quantity in several weeks. So, be aware!
- Don't let your stock of disks get too low.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 26
-
-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 7. Supplies (Continued)
-
- 7.2 Mailers
-
- Consider the following as a starter for obtaining disk
- mailers and other supplies.
-
- Calumet Carton Sterling Disk Duplication
- Company 11495 N. Pennsylvania Ave,
- P.O. Box 405 Ste 204
- 16920 State Street Carmel IN 46032
- S. Holland IL 60473 317-575-3390
- 708-333-6521 FAX: 317-575-3389
- FAX: 708-333-8540
-
- Pack & Wrap Mailers
- 466 Derby Avenue 40650 Forest View Road
- W. Haven CT 06516 Mt. Zion IL 60099
- 800-541-9782 800-872-6670
- 203-389-1983 708-872-4842
- FAX: 203-389-9416 FAX: 708-872-6677
-
- The Sirgo Company Mail Safe
- P.O. Box 58 4340 W. 47th Street
- Schereville IN 46375 Chicago IL 60632
- 219-865-6092 708-872-6677
- FAX: 219-322-5194 800-527-0754
- FAX: 708-872-4842
-
- Quill Office International Media & Supplies
- Products 3501 Coffee Road, Suite 9
- P.O. Box 94080 Modesto CA 95355
- Palatine IL 800-835-5515
- 60094-4080 FAX: 209-571-5757
- 708-634-4800
- FAX: 708-634-5708
-
- 7.3 Label Stock
-
- With font programs, you can make small quantities of
- laser labels at a low cost that look like they were
- custom printed. Nelson Ford feels that Avery Label Pro
- is the best laser label program. Paul Mayer recommends
- CompUSA for laser labels. If there is not one near you,
- you can call them at 817-261-7702 or 800-342-7638. They
- accept mail orders through this number by credit card.
- Prices on 6/1/90 were:
-
- 8-1/2 x 11 sheets (100) $17.99 Stock #853262
- 5-1/4" disk labels (840) $26.49 Stock #853901
- 3-1/2" disk labels (630) $26.49 Stock #853892
-
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 7. Supplies (Continued)
-
- 7.3 Label Stock (Continued)
-
- Avery will send you a sample pack of laser labels for the
- purpose of getting your software to work with them.
- Write to them at 777 East Foothill Blvd., Azusa, CA
- 91702-1358 or call 800-541-5507.
-
- The Computer Label Company, 800-332-4223 (619-322-3030)
- and MEI, 800-634-3478 (614-481-4417) have good prices on
- standard 3.5" by 1" labels. You can also call United Ad
- Label at 800-423-4643 (714-990-2700) and ask for a free
- catalog and sample label kit. They specialize in
- audio/video labels but they do have both pin-feed and
- laser sheet labels for 3.5" and 5.25" floppy disks.
-
- Another good source for labels is Lyben Computer Supplies
- 313-268-8100. They have the Avery labels. They are also
- one of the few suppliers that carry the continuous
- fanfold label stock that can be used for 3.5" disks. The
- labels are 2 3/4 by 1 15/16 inch and are Stock # 0300.
-
- Almost all types of label stock can be obtained from
- Quill (see above for address).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- 8. Trademarks
-
- Generally, if you start using your company name without a (TM)
- notice by the name, you lose the trademark protection. So
- spend the extra four keystrokes and put it on. The trademark
- office requires that you send them copies of artwork currently
- being used with the TM indicated next to your word or phrase.
- The patent & trademark office will then issue you a paper
- telling you that your word or phrase is now a Registered
- Trademark and then you have the right to use the circled R in
- place of TM.
-
- CompuServe has a service called IQuest (GO IQUEST) that will
- allow you to scan the Trademark Data Base for about $35 to
- $150 depending on how many ways you search. The search cost
- depends entirely on the exact mark and goods involved, how
- many "hits" come up in the search, etc. This may a quick way
- to check on whether or not someone else has already registered
- your words. However, the experienced lawyer may well find
- more information than the novice searcher and save you a lot
- of problems later.
-
- The Association of Shareware Professionals currently uses
- Lance Rose for copyright and trademark advice. Lance has
- handled the ASP's lobbying efforts in Washington D.C. and was
- instrumental in having a bill modified that otherwise would
- have virtually eliminated any copyright protection for
- shareware.
- Lance Rose
- 87 Midland Avenue
- Montclair NJ 07042
- 201-509-1700
-
- Lance told us that "properly speaking it's not the words
- themselves that are registered, but the mark at issue for
- specific goods or services. The whole question of
- registration, of course, does not exhaust the issues raised by
- the question of can I use the mark? An unregistered trademark
- won't come up on an IQuest-style search, but the owner of the
- mark can sue someone who starts using it later. In this case,
- neither the registration search, nor registration itself, will
- keep the second user from getting beaten by the first user.
- They will want a copy of your package and need to know the
- first sale of the product with the "trademark" used."
-
- It can pay to shop around for a lawyer. ASP members have
- reported paying $200, $700, and over $1000. However, the $200
- is impossible these days as the filing fee is now $200.
-
- For information about Trademarks call the Dept. of Commerce at
- 703-557-3158 for a copy of Basic Facts About Trademarks.
-
-
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-
-
- 9. Collecting Shareware
-
- You need to build a list of the types of shareware you wish
- for your catalog and you need to collect a list of author
- addresses. Where do you get your shareware disks?
-
- o From another disk vendor
-
- o From BBSs
-
- o From large local User Group
-
- o From a CD-ROM
-
- o FROM THE AUTHOR DIRECTLY
-
- Guess which this writer considers the best source? You are
- right, the authors. You get the latest and greatest version
- and will probably be placed on the author's mailing list for
- updates and new products. Further, you won't infringe on the
- "library" or "compilation" copyright of some other vendor.
-
- If you have no collection at all, you may want to begin
- creating your subject and author list by purchasing many disks
- from several other disk vendors. ONLY use these disks to get
- the addresses to contact the authors.
-
- You must look in the authors documentation to learn of any
- copying restrictions stated by the author. Under the
- copyright laws, you may be prevented from distributing
- additional copies without getting permission from the author.
- Some authors place no restrictions on copying and others have
- very strict restrictions. YOU must determine this from
- examining the authors files. SOME authors require special
- written permission and SOME require royalty arrangements from
- rack and CD-ROM vendors even if they sent you the evaluation
- disk in the first place.
-
- If you are into BBSs, this may be a good source. Be SURE you
- use BBSs that are properly networked with the authors and
- other BBSs so that you will be downloading current versions of
- the shareware. Local isolated BBSs may have very old versions
- and the author addresses will be out of date. Again, examine
- the disks for any author imposed copying restrictions. Also
- look for vendor and BBS files that are not part of the authors
- system that you will want to remove.
-
- User Groups may also have out-of-date versions and care will
- need to be taken. Again, use this as a source to build your
- author address list so you can contact the authors.
-
-
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 9. Collecting Shareware (Continued)
-
- CD-ROMs are very expensive to create and some are updated
- infrequently. Further, you may not know if the CD-ROM
- producer made any effort to contact the authors to get either
- permission to distribute or the latest version. Before you
- even consider using a CD-ROM for your source of author
- addresses, examine the date stamps on the shareware executable
- program files (.EXE). If they are older than one year, you
- know this will not be an up-to-date source of addresses.
-
- After you have created a draft of your catalog, and made your
- author address list, contact the authors to obtain the
- shareware.
-
- If you are a RACK or CD-ROM vendor, let the author know that
- when you write to them. If you ALSO are a catalog (printed or
- on-disk) vendor, let them know that too. SOME authors will
- require special permission and SOME may require royalties for
- you to place their copyrighted shareware on racks or CD-ROMs.
- They may or may not require this special contract or royalties
- for your catalog operation. These special requirements are
- the AUTHOR's requirements, not requirements of the ASP or any
- other trade organization that this author knows of. The ASP
- takes NO position on any of these special author requirements
- or any royalty requirements and offers NO opinion except to
- warn the vendors that the author's copyrights are legally
- enforceable.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
- 10. Providing Technical Support
-
- Hopefully you will have customers that have purchased disks
- from your library collection. Note that they are buying your
- library and disk copying services - NOT the right for
- unlimited use of the shareware.
-
- Many of your customers will be first time shareware users.
- They will not know how to do a DIRectory of the disk to look
- for README type files and how to copy them to their printer.
- YOU MUST provide some type of instruction to allow YOUR
- customer to figure out how to find the author's installation
- instructions. If the author placed no installation
- instructions on the disk either place your own instruction
- file on the disk, or don't carry that disk in your library.
- Develop a sheet you can send with each order that will give
- the novice user getting started instructions.
-
- Don't get excited, you are not expected to provide support on
- the author's programs, just on the package YOU sold. They
- have to be able to install the author's stuff so they can
- contact the author for support on the author's programs and
- documentation. You are responsible for only the front end of
- the installation so the user can get to the author's
- instructions. Some authors provide little or no instructions
- on getting their shareware installed and only a dedicated
- computer nerd could do it. Just don't sell these disks.
- Don't let the author's problems become your problems.
-
- If you wish to add a general purpose Help program to the
- shareware disks in your library, take a look at the following:
-
- Product: Simply Help!
- Author: SimpleWare, 709-489-3757
- Version: 1.0 (01-07-91)
- Needs: IBM PC, DOS 2.1 or better. 384k RAM, hard disk
- recommended.
- Registration fee: $35.00
- Registration benefits: Latest version with shareware
- notices removed. Support by
- mail.
- Look for: SIMHLP10.ZIP on BBSs (call 709-489-6018 to
- download it at no charge).
- Download size: 285k (about 21 minutes with a 2400 baud
- modem)
- Description:
- Create stand alone help systems or add help to any
- program. Editor has pull down menus, dialog boxes,
- mouse support, on-line help, block operations, line
- drawing, import/export, reports, and many more. Edit
- your file and instantly RUN it to see the results.
-
-
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-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 10. Providing Technical Support (Continued)
-
- Simply Help! (Continued)
-
- Compiler creates EXE files or TSR files with your
- choice of hot key. A library for QuickBASIC 4.xx is
- included. Applications include TSR help for existing
- programs, catalogs, readme files, manuals, on-line help
- for QuickBASIC programs.
-
- You MUST register Simply Help! if you are going to place
- ANY files created by Simply Help! on any disk copies you
- sell.
-
- You can have an instruction on all disk labels to show how to
- run your help program created with software like "Simply
- Help!" Or, you can print the instruction on the disk sleeves
- or an instruction sheet sent with each order. You can't
- expect your customers to be computer experts.
-
-
- If you are going to survive in this business, you must list a
- daytime support number. You may only need to tell the first
- time user to read your instructions on starting shareware. If
- you get too many calls, your instructions are inadequate and
- you must improve them. If you do not provide a "real live"
- support person, your customers will go elsewhere and you risk
- going out of business.
-
- Too many shareware vendors think that this business is an easy
- fast buck venture. They think they can make big money
- operating evenings out of their home. Like the authors, you
- can start that way if you are willing to have the money come
- in slowly at first. Eventually, you will need at least one or
- two people working full time reviewing new disks and handling
- technical support. You will need another person to handle the
- orders.
-
- This is a tough section for many folks wanting to get into
- this business. However, it is good advice gathered from many
- sources and is intended to help you decide if you want to
- invest further in shareware vending.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 11. The Association of Shareware Professionals ("ASP")
-
- The Association of Shareware Professionals ( ASP is a
- Registered Trademark ) started with an organizational meeting
- hosted by Nelson Ford (PSL) on February 27, 1987 in Houston
- Texas. Successful authors such as Jim Button (PC-File), Bob
- Wallace (PC-Write) and Marshall Magee (Automenu), along with
- major disk vendors like Public (software) Library (PSL),
- Public Brand Software, PC-SIG, BBS operators, CompuServe
- sysops and many others participated in this meeting.
-
- These people could have adopted the attitude that they were
- already successful enough without such an organization, but
- they did not. They paid their own way to the Convention even
- though they were the featured speakers! Button was elected
- the ASP's first (and second) Chairman of the Board of
- Directors. Magee became the first President. None of these
- are "honorary" positions; they involve a great deal of time
- and effort.
-
- The ASP also owes thanks to the sysops of IBMNET on
- CompuServe. Sysops Conrad Kageyama and Don Watkins were at
- the Convention and arranged, on the spot, a place on IBMNET
- for the shareware authors to meet electronically and continue
- our plans. We have been meeting there daily ever since in
- what must be a record for longest continuous business meeting.
-
- The ASP has grown into a group of shareware Authors, Shareware
- Publishers, Disk Vendors, Bulletin Board Systems (BBS), User
- Groups, Press members and others working together to improve
- the image and marketability of shareware as an alternative way
- of purchasing high quality software.
-
- The shareware marketing concept is just a different way of
- marketing software. It is quite different from other forms
- that usually include the Software Manufacturer, Distributors
- and Retailers AND a LOT of expensive advertising and mark-ups
- that often cause prices in the $500-$1000 range.
-
- The shareware channel consists of 4 distinct groups:
-
- 1. The shareware Authors who write and hold the copyrights on
- the software. Some authors have shareware Publishers to
- handle the marketing.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 11. The Association of Shareware Professionals (Continued)
-
- 2. The disk copying services (Vendors) which build and
- maintain collections of shareware and public domain software,
- thus providing a convenient source from which users may obtain
- software for evaluation. The disk Vendors charge for the
- disks to make a profit while covering library, advertising and
- other costs. User Groups contribute to shareware
- distribution and are usually not-for-profit providing low cost
- disk copies for members.
-
- 3. Bulletin Board Systems (BBSs) which help to distribute
- software by maintaining libraries of downloadable programs.
- BBSs also provide a means for users to communicate with each
- other, recommending programs, providing technical assistance,
- reporting problems, and more.
-
- 4. The software user who is the underlying reason for the
- existence of groups 1, 2 and 3.
-
- What are the benefits of being an ASP member?
-
- 1. Author and Publisher members benefit by the user's
- recognition of the ASP MEMBER logo. Author and Publisher
- members benefit from the experience of other members. They
- work together to help each other with programming, marketing
- and support issues. Members help each other find better
- sources of supplies, to promote each others products, to pool
- their buying power to obtain better prices, and more. Author
- and Publisher members benefit from ASP public relations
- efforts. Author and Publisher members receive a subscription
- to ASPects, the ASP newsletter.
-
- 2. Disk Vendor members benefit by the user's recognition of
- the ASP Approved Vendor logo. Author and Publisher members
- are encouraged to send updates and new programs to ASP
- Approved Vendors and to allow ASP Approved Vendors and User
- Groups to distribute their products without requesting
- permission from the author or publisher. Vendor and User
- Group members benefit from the public relations efforts of the
- ASP. Vendor members receive a monthly catalog listing ASP
- member products and current version numbers. Lists of ASP
- Approved Vendors are made available publicly and users are
- encouraged to look for ASP Approved Vendors as the best source
- of high quality, up-to-date shareware. Vendor and User Group
- members receive a subscription to ASPects, the ASP newsletter.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 11. The Association of Shareware Professionals (Continued)
-
- 3. BBS members benefit by the user's recognition of the ASP
- Approved BBS logo. Author and Publisher members are
- encouraged to provide updates to ASP Approved BBSs either by
- mail or by uploading directly. BBS members benefit from the
- public relations efforts of the ASP. Lists of ASP Approved
- BBSs are made available publicly and users are encouraged to
- look for ASP Approved BBSs as the best source of high quality,
- up-to-date shareware.
-
- The ASP is a team of Authors, Publishers, Vendors, BBSs and
- User Groups working together to improve the image of shareware
- as a respectable alternative to high priced retail software.
- ASP members work to educate the public, to let users know that
- shareware is available for them to actually use and evaluate
- before making a decision to purchase.
-
- How do I join the ASP?
-
- Join the team today! To obtain your free ASP Membership
- application kit, write, call or FAX the ASP and ask for the
- Vendor Application Kit.
-
- Association of Shareware Professionals
- 545 Grover Road
- Muskegon MI 49442-9427 USA
-
- FAX: 616-788-2765
- Voice: 616-788-5131 (8:00 A.M to 5:00 P.M. USA Eastern)
-
- If you join the ASP as a Vendor Member, your address will be
- published to all of the ASP authors and the authors are
- strongly urged to send the ASP vendors their disks. It is the
- author's responsibility to send you their disks. Each month,
- many ASP authors that are sending out major upgrades or new
- shareware products to the ASP disk vendors join together to
- send their disks. The authors drastically reduce their
- postage costs by combining all of their disks for the month in
- one box to each vendor. Further, PSL (who performs this
- service) will optionally copy and label the disks for the
- authors. This popular service has resulted in anywhere from
- 10 to almost 50 disks a month being sent to the ASP vendors.
-
- Included each month is the latest on-disk ASP Official Catalog
- listing over 1,000 shareware products produced by the ASP
- authors. The ASP Vendor members also receive the ASP's
- monthly (approximately) newsletter and can use the ASP
- trademarked logo in their catalogs and advertising.
-
-
-
-
- 36
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 12. Summer Shareware Seminar (SSS)
-
- Many ASP members as well as non-ASP shareware authors,
- vendors, BBSs, User Group representatives and others also
- attend the annual 2 1/2 day Summer Shareware Seminar hosted by
- Public Brand Software in Indianapolis, Indiana each June,
- usually the weekend (starting on Friday) just before the NY-PC
- Expo. Contact Bob Ostrander at 317-856-6052 for more
- information. This annual event is an excellent opportunity to
- "rub elbows" with lots of other shareware folks.
-
- Here is the CompuServe message announcement for the 1993
- Summer Shareware Seminar:
-
- #: 205638 S10/Member to Member [ASPFORUM]
- 11-Sep-92 00:29:16
- Sb: 1993 SSS
- Fm: Bob Ostrander(SCoop/PBS) 72241,455
- To: All
-
- I signed the contracts today with the Adam's Mark for the 1993
- Summer Shareware Seminar (that means you all had better darn
- well show up).
-
- The bad news is that it is a week earlier (than the weekend
- before the PC-Expo NY). Sorry, but this is evidently a bigger
- convention town than we had realized. (PC-Expo is June 29 -
- July 1).
-
- TENTATIVE schedule:
-
- Thurs June 17 evening SSSASPirilla Gettogether II
-
- Fri June 18 day - "Marketing through
- Shareware" sessions
- \ Distributor sessions
- (Vendor, BBS, UG)
- \ Exhibit area open
- evening - Hosted reception
- \ fun and games
- \ Exhibit area open
-
- Sat June 19 day - "Marketing through Retail"
- sessions
- \ Newcommers sessions
- \ Exhibit area open
- evening SIA awards banquet II
-
- Sun June 20 morning Misc. sessions
- afternoon ASP luncheon II
-
-
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 12. Summer Shareware Seminar (SSS) (Continued)
-
- The main addition will be an organized Exhibit area during the
- entire day Friday and until 5:00 Saturday. If we forgo rods
- and curtains we should have room for about 40 exhibitors. One
- or two day rentals will be reasonably priced and aimed at the
- "little guys" who want to sell stuff as well as just for
- authors, disk vendors, etc to show off our wares. Hopefully it
- will function as a focus for "schmoozing".
-
- Also, I intend that the "Packaging" session will return. The
- thought is, at this time, that a day be devoted to "Retail"
- selling (ie Packaging, Royaltyware (traditional retail), Rack
- vending, Contracts, Advertising).
-
- As usual, the heavy planning will start in January with
- detailed announcements mailed out in March. ALL SUGGESTIONS
- ARE WELCOME! There's time to work in special events and your
- favorite sessions. Just let me know.
-
- Bob
-
-
-
- DO contact Bob at 317-856-6052 and get on his mailing list for
- the 3rd annual SSS 1993.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 13. Services
-
- NOTE: The information in this section is subject to change at
- any time. This information was put together several years ago
- and these price structures change often. Contact the
- telephone carrier for the latest arrangements and prices.
- Your Yellow Pages should list the long distance carriers that
- serve your local.
-
- 13.1 Telephone
-
- AT&T has a low cost 800-line service called the
- Ready Line which is relatively inexpensive. For
- about 23 cents a minute out of state, about 35 cents
- a minute in state (for Texas), you can have a fancy
- 800 number just like the big boys. Most of the good
- acronyms are already gone, but you should still be
- able to come up with something. At the PsL, our
- number is 1-800-2424-PsL, which we think is easy to
- remember. However, we were not able to get anything
- like 800-PsL-DISK or 800-SHRWARE, which would have
- been better. Another shareware distributor has the
- number 800-IBM-DISK, but IBM clamped down on them
- for trademark infringement and they no longer
- advertise the number that way, so we suggest that
- you not waste time trying to work "IBM" into your
- acronym. The Ready Line 800 number is assigned to
- your regular telephone number, so you do not even
- have to get a second line, unless you just want to
- be able to know for sure if someone has dialed the
- 800 number.
-
- An AT&T competitor, Sprint, has cheaper rates,
- although only time will tell if their service will
- match AT&T's. Sprint's rates are as follows:
- $10/month Rates vary with distance and total number
- of hours: 0-5 hours: $.2125-$.23 5-25 hours:
- $.195-$.205 25-75 hours: $.1775-$.19 75-150 hours:
- $.1775-$.1875 Call 800-347-3300 to order service.
- (Rates above are as of 1990 and are subject to
- change.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 13. Services (Continued)
-
- 13.2 Credit Card Merchant Accounts
-
- MasterCard & Visa
-
- MC/Visa Merchant accounts can be very difficult for
- mail-order merchants to get, more so in some parts of the
- country than in others. If you have had a business
- checking account for your business for several years, get
- to know your branch manager well. Try them first.
-
- If that fails, your next step should be to check ALL your
- local banks. It's possible that many of the local banks
- are processed by the same clearinghouse who sets the
- rules for member banks about acceptance of mail-order
- merchants.
-
- American Express
-
- While MC/Visa are the big guns, American Express is worth
- contacting after you get your Master/Visa account.
-
- 13.3 A Banker's Perspective
-
- Following is a document prepared by Eric Isaacson that
- may help you convince your bank that someone in the
- shareware business is worthy of consideration for a
- Merchant Account:
-
- -------------------------------------------------------
-
- Shareware Marketing of Software: A Banker's Perspective
-
- by Eric Isaacson
-
- Copyright 1991 Eric Isaacson.
-
- All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted to
- shareware businesses and members of the banking industry
- to freely copy and distribute this unmodified work
- between and among themselves.
-
- Your comments are welcome! Send them to:
-
- Eric Isaacson Software
- 416 E. University Ave.
- Bloomington IN 47401-4739
- (812)339-1811
-
-
-
-
- 40
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-
- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 13. Services (Continued)
-
- 13.3 A Banker's Perspective (Continued)
-
- The Purpose of This Booklet
-
- In the past ten years a new approach to marketing
- computer software has emerged: shareware. Shareware is
- relatively small compared to the overall software market,
- and it is very different. It has been poorly understood
- by bankers wishing to evaluate shareware businesses.
- This booklet explains the shareware business from the
- banker's point of view.
-
- Why Software Is Different
-
- A computer has two components: the hardware and the
- software. The physical machinery comprises the hardware:
- the main box, various disk drives and circuit boards
- mounted inside, and the keyboard and monitor connected
- via cables. Computer programs comprise the software: the
- operating system, the word processor, the spreadsheet,
- the accounting package, the database manager, etc.
-
- The marketing of computer software poses unique problems.
- The value of software is intellectual: it comes from the
- hundreds-to-thousands of hours spent preparing the
- program and making sure it works perfectly for all users.
- The price of the floppy disks that carry the software is
- tiny compared to the intellectual value. This makes the
- computer software industry similar to the video-movie
- industry: both have problems with unauthorized copying.
- But the problems of computer software are worse: first,
- most computers have the built-in ability to duplicate
- software using just one machine. Duplication of movies
- requires two tape decks placed next to each other.
- Second, copies of software are perfect duplicates of the
- original. With videotape, there is significant and
- annoying degradation when copying is attempted.
-
- To combat unauthorized copying, some software publishers
- attempted to make their software difficult to copy. This
- "copy protection" was common in the early days of
- personal computing. But publishers have never succeeded
- in devising a protection scheme that doesn't annoy the
- legitimate purchaser of the program.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 13. Services (Continued)
-
- 13.3 A Banker's Perspective (Continued)
-
- Today almost all computers have high-capacity ("hard")
- disk drives onto which all software is copied. If a user
- can't copy the software to the hard drive, that user
- isn't likely to buy the software. Copy-protected
- software has almost disappeared from the marketplace.
-
- Other software publishers have taken the completely
- opposite approach to the problem: they market their
- software as shareware.
-
- What Is Shareware?
-
- Shareware is the opposite of copy-protection. Rather
- than trying to prevent copying, the software publisher
- actually encourages the user to make copies and "share"
- the program with anyone interested. Complete
- documentation is placed onto the floppy disk along with
- the program. In the documentation there is an
- explanation of shareware. Anyone who receives a copy of
- the program is encouraged to try out the program. If
- they like it, they should send payment (usually called a
- "registration") for the program directly to the
- publisher. Thus the ability to make perfect copies of the
- program becomes a tool for marketing the program.
-
- Note that shareware authors retain a valid copyright to
- the program. The author establishes the conditions under
- which the program may be copied. The author may also
- establish a specific amount of time for evaluation of the
- program, beyond which the user is legally required to
- either pay the registration fee or stop using the
- program. The validity of a shareware program's copyright
- has been tested and approved by the courts: a Missouri
- shareware author successfully sued a Texas distributor
- for violating his conditions for copying. Also, a
- shareware author was invited to testify before a U.S.
- Congressional committee evaluating software copyright
- law, and the law was reworded to recognize explicitly the
- existence and validity of shareware.
-
- Shareware is still a small segment of the whole software
- industry, but it is growing rapidly. Annual revenues
- connected with shareware are estimated to exceed $100
- million in 1991.
-
-
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 13. Services (Continued)
-
- 13.3 A Banker's Perspective (Continued)
-
- The Shareware Author's Business
-
- Most businesses publishing shareware consist of a single
- person: the author of the program. Many authors develop
- programs on evenings and weekends, while retaining a full
- time job weekdays. The author invests mostly time and
- not money: a good program takes many hours to prepare,
- but it takes at most only a few hundred dollars to
- market.
-
- Marketing a shareware product consists simply of placing
- it into the shareware distribution stream -- transmitting
- the program to free or low-cost dial-up computers called
- "bulletin-board systems", transmitting or sending it to
- nationwide services like Compuserve and Prodigy, and
- sending copies to companies that catalog and distribute
- shareware. If the product is good, enthusiastic users
- will spread it themselves, so that an initial
- distribution of a few dozen copies will proliferate into
- many thousands of copies. A significant number of those
- thousands result in registrations (money) sent to the
- author.
-
- What are the advantages and disadvantages of shareware
- marketing? The disadvantages are that a program takes
- time to build up sales volume, and the volume will
- usually be much smaller. Also, a program must be very
- good to succeed as shareware. It might be possible, via
- skillful marketing and advertising, to fool the public
- into buying a mediocre program when it's shrink-wrapped
- on a store shelf. But the user can try out a shareware
- program before buying it -- if it's mediocre, the user
- won't use it and hence won't register it.
-
- The advantages of shareware are low risk and low
- overhead. Through traditional (non-shareware)
- distribution channels, it takes from $200,000 to $500,000
- to properly launch a software product. Markups must be
- granted to both retail outlets and their supplying
- distributors, so that the publisher might get only 15% of
- the retail price, and the author even less.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 13. Services (Continued)
-
- 13.3 A Banker's Perspective (Continued)
-
- Some shareware programs fail: they aren't good enough to
- generate registrations. But the author doesn't thereby
- go bankrupt. He or she simply loses the modest,
- out-of-pocket initial disk-and-postage investment.
-
- There are hundreds of shareware authors who make enough
- money from shareware to substantially supplement their
- regular job income. About 50 authors are making a living
- from shareware receipts, and have gone full-time with
- their shareware business. Many of them can make a
- handsome profit without even needing to hire anyone else
- to help out.
-
- Some shareware businesses grow into full-fledged
- companies, with dozens of employees and multi-million
- dollar annual sales. To reach that level, the author
- typically supplements the shareware marketing with
- traditional advertising and dealer distribution. But
- even for those companies, the risks are low because the
- author moves into traditional distribution only after the
- product is generating significant revenue through
- shareware marketing. The expansion is financed via
- existing profits, rather than venture capital.
-
- Shareware Businesses and Banking
-
- Shareware marketing is completely unique -- the only
- other business with its try-before-you-buy philosophy is
- Public Television; but Public Broadcasting stations do
- not enjoy the low overhead that shareware authors do.
-
- The uniqueness of shareware makes it poorly understood in
- the banking industry, especially those handling
- credit-card merchant accounts. Shareware has some of the
- characteristics bankers normally associate with poor
- risk: payments are made almost entirely by mail or
- telephone, and all but the largest shareware businesses
- are operated out of the author's home.
-
-
-
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-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 13. Services (Continued)
-
- 13.3 A Banker's Perspective (Continued)
-
- In reality, however, shareware authors are ideal
- credit-card merchants from the banker's point of view.
- Unlike other mail-order businesses in which the customer
- doesn't see the product until it arrives, with shareware
- the customer already has the product. If the customer
- isn't happy, he or she simply stops using the program,
- and never pays the author in the first place. If the
- customer wishes to defraud the author, he or she simply
- uses the program and never contacts the author. Thus,
- all of a shareware author's paying customers are both
- happy with the product and honest enough to pay for it.
- The level of customer complaints and chargebacks is close
- to zero. Credit-card fraud for shareware is
- non-existent.
-
- If a banker knows about shareware, he or she should
- welcome a shareware author's business. How can a banker
- identify a bona fide shareware business? To start, the
- banker can ask the author for a copy of the program. If
- the banker doesn't feel "computer-literate" enough to
- verify that it's a genuine, non-trivial program, he or
- she can ask for references. Many shareware authors are
- members of the Association of Shareware Professionals
- (ASP). The ASP screens applications for membership, to
- ensure that only legitimate authors of non-trivial
- shareware are admitted as author-members. The ASP would
- be happy to verify any claims of membership -- they can
- be reached at (616)788-5131, weekdays 8--5 eastern time.
- Other prominent authors have chosen not to join the ASP,
- but their programs are listed in the catalogs of
- shareware distribution companies such as Public Brand
- Software, P. O. Box 51315, Indianapolis, IN 46251; or the
- Public (software) Library, P. O. Box 35705, Houston, TX
- 77235.
-
- Shareware Distribution Companies
-
- Bankers should be aware of another major component of the
- shareware industry, distinct from the authors: the
- shareware distribution companies. These companies take
- advantage of the fact that copying of shareware is
- allowed, by providing a cataloguing and distribution
- service of shareware disks. Customers of distribution
- houses are sent lists of available programs, for which
- they can pay a copying fee of between $1 and $5 per disk.
-
-
-
-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 13. Services (Continued)
-
- 13.3 A Banker's Perspective (Continued)
-
- There is no business arrangement between authors and
- distribution houses: authors neither receive any
- royalties for disks sold, nor do they pay anything for
- the publicity given them. Customers understand that they
- are not paying for the software, but merely for the
- distribution service. Most shareware authors allow
- distributors to handle their programs, because it spreads
- their programs even further.
-
- From a banker's point of view, the shareware distribution
- houses are closer to traditional mail-order businesses.
- Their profit margins are much lower than authors',
- because their overhead relative to revenues is higher.
- They must advertise in order to build business. Some
- distribution companies haven't charged enough for disks
- to cover their overhead costs, and have thus gone
- bankrupt. But others, such as Public Brand Software and
- the Public (software) Library, have built solid,
- profitable, multi-million-dollar companies from shareware
- distribution.
-
- A banker wishing to evaluate a shareware distribution
- company can use many of the usual criteria: length of
- time in business, size of business, profit sheets, etc.
- There are a couple of pointers specific to shareware
- distribution that can enhance the evaluation: first,
- companies should be charging at least $3 per disk in
- order to be profitable. There can exist "Mom and Pop"
- outfits, run out of homes, that make some money charging
- less; but if they try to expand into real businesses,
- their overhead almost always overwhelms them. Second, a
- banker can check the distributor's integrity by asking
- for a catalog and for advertising copy, to make sure that
- they are adequately explaining to the customer that they
- are a shareware distribution service and are not selling
- the software itself. If the customers understand what
- they are getting, the level of complaints and chargebacks
- will be much less than that of the average mail-order
- business; if they don't, it will be as much or greater.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- 13. Services (Continued)
-
- 13.3 A Banker's Perspective (Continued)
-
- For More Information
-
- The booklet "Shareware `Try Before You Buy' Software" by
- Rob Rosenberger describes shareware from the consumer's
- point of view. You may purchase it by sending $4.95 plus
- $1.75 S+H to Paradise Publishing, 3111 S. Valley View
- Blvd. Suite B-105, Las Vegas, NV 89102; or calling
- (702)253-1940. For free catalogs listing the best
- available shareware programs, you can write to Public
- Brand Software or the Public (software) Library at the
- addresses already given, or call them at their respective
- numbers: (800)426-3475 and (800)242-4775.
- -------------------------------------------------------
-
- End of Eric's article.
-
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- 47
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- Shareware Vendor's Guide - Copyright 1992 by the ASP
-
-
- Index
-
- 1.2m Disk Problems . . . . 13 Rack Vendor Definition . . 3
- 800 Numbers . . . . . . . . 39 Registering Shareware . . . 11
- American Express . . . . . 40 Registration Incentives . . 12
- ASP . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Shareware Compilation
- Catalog . . . . . . . 9 Copyrights . . . 9
- Association of Shareware Shareware Copyrights . . 5, 8
- Professionals . . 34 Shareware Definition . . . 4
- Banker's Perspective . . . 40 Shareware Description . . . 11
- Catalog Software . . . . . 16 Shareware Registration . . 11
- Catalog, ASP . . . . . . . 9 Simply Help Shareware . . . 32
- Catalog, On-Disk . . . 12, 16 Software . . . . . . . . . 16
- Checking Account . . . . . 10 Catalog . . . . . . . 16
- Collecting Disks . . . . . 7 Compression . . . . . 18
- Collecting Shareware . . . 30 Duplication . . . . . 20
- Compression Software . . . 18 Summer Shareware Seminar . 37
- Computer Equipment . . . . 13 Supplies
- Copyright Disks . . . . . . . . 26
- Compilations . . . . . 9 Label Stock . . . . . 27
- Shareware . . . . . 5, 8 Mailers . . . . . 27, 28
- Credit Cards . . . . . . . 10 Technical Support . . . . . 32
- Definition Trademarks . . . . . . . . 29
- Freeware . . . . . . . 4 Tutorial Software
- Shareware . . . . . . 4 DOS Summary
- Description Of Shareware . 11 (Hypertext) . . . 23
- Disk Collection . . . . . . 7 DosEA . . . . . . . . 24
- Disk Mailers . . . . . 27, 28 Vendor . . . . . . . . . . 3
- Disk Organization . . . . . 8 Vendor Advertizing . . . . 9
- Disk Suppliers . . . . . . 26 VENDOR.DOC File . . . . . 8, 9
- Disk Vendor Definition . . 3 Virus Scanning . . . . 8, 22
- Duplication Software . . . 20 Virx/Virex-PC Scanners . . 22
- Duplicators . . . . . . 14, 15 Visa Card . . . . . . . . . 40
- Federal Tax I.D. . . . . . 10 WATS Lines . . . . . . . . 39
- Fluegelman, Andrew . . . . 4 Word Processor . . . . . . 12
- Freeware Definition . . . . 4
- Help Software . . . . . . . 32
- High Density Disk
- Problems . . . . 13
- Integrity Master
- Anti-Virus . . . 22
- Label Stock . . . . . . . . 27
- Letterhead . . . . . . . . 9
- Library Collection . . . . 7
- Logos . . . . . . . . . . . 9
- Mailers, Disk . . . . . 27, 28
- Market Niche . . . . . . . 6
- Master Card . . . . . . . . 40
- Merchant Accounts . . . . . 40
- Niche, Market . . . . . . . 6
- On-Disk Catalog . . . . 12, 16
- Rack Vendor . . . . . 3, 7, 11
-
- 48
-