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- Public (Software) Library
-
- The Great "Disk Fee" Fallacy
-
- A lot of people, including users and programmers, have no idea what
- costs and work are involved in providing a software library service.
- As a result, some programmers specify that no group can distribute
- their program for a disk fee or they may set a limit of anywhere from
- $3 to $10. So what does shareware distribution cost?
-
- In 1983, a blank formatted disk cost a minimum of $3. The equipment
- for copying the disks cost many times more than it now does too. So
- the actual cost of making a disk copy, including time and depreciation
- of equipment, was probably about $4. On a disk fee of $5, that left $1
- to invest in getting more software and keeping the library organized.
-
- Of course, in 1982 through most of 1984, the quantity of good
- PD/shareware programs was very small and the programs were simple, so
- the acquisition and maintenance costs of the library were pretty low.
-
- Today, a disk with tyvek sleeve and label costs as little as $.25 and
- equipment is also a lot cheaper. The current total cost of making a
- disk copy is only about $.75 to $1.00, leaving $4 out of a $5 disk fee
- for other costs:
-
- The Costs
-
- Order Processing:
-
- As the number of orders increases, the economics of providing disk
- copies changes. We used to be able buy disks for $3 and sell them to
- local members for $3.50 because we were making the relatively few copies
- on equipment we had purchased for other purposes and doing the copying
- while watching TV or reading, so time and depreciation was "free".
-
- As volume increased, we had to hire people to answer the phone and take
- orders, to pick up the mail and process the orders, to make the copies,
- to verify the copies and compare them against the orders, package the
- orders, weigh and stamp them and take them to the post office, often to
- wait in line a long time.
-
- All these staff people had to have equipment purchased for them:
- computers, desks, chairs, office supplies, folding machines, postage
- meters, scales, and on and on. In addition, you have to have space for
- these people to work in.
-
- While the cost of disks have dropped, they must be ordered in large
- numbers and stored. Ordering disks, mailers and other supplies,
- checking shipments, storing, dealing with bad inventory (on nearly
- every order), etc., takes a lot of time.
-
- People want to order by phone and that means taking credit cards and
- paying a percentage of revenues to the card companies. Bad checks,
- refused COD orders, "lost" or damaged orders, bad disks, and staff
- errors also contribute to high overhead. Where we used to be able to
- take orders on our relatively inexpensive "personal" phone line, now we
- must pay for multiple "business" lines and 800 numbers, as well as an
- expensive telephone system.
-
- Printing costs for free newsletters, flyers, and catalogs are another
- big expense.
-
-
- User Support:
-
- Users don't like to read. All the information we can give a user is
- already committed to writing somewhere, yet we get calls all day, every
- day from people who want us to listen to a recital of their personal
- wants and needs and recommend the perfect program for them.
-
- Or they call to tell us that they have tried typing READ.ME and "it
- won't come up - what should I do?" Or they have never heard of the DIR
- command. If you are a shareware author and don't get a lot of these
- calls, it's because we are fielding them for you.
-
-
- Advertising:
-
- A lot of shareware authors seem to have recently discovered that the
- libraries that advertise have the greatest distribution, and the
- greater the distribution, the greater the number of shareware payments.
- (Hey, Fluegelman was right!) So authors who a year or two ago didn't
- like the idea of distributors advertising now are encouraging them to
- do so.
-
- Advertising is extremely expensive. As of 1/89, a one-third page,
- black and white ad in PC magazine on a 12/year frequency rate is over
- $7,000. That is over $84,000/year for one ad in one magazine. If the
- authors whose programs are listed in these ads tried to buy that same
- space themselves, most of them would probably be bankrupt in a year.
-
-
- Library Maintenance:
-
- This includes (1) acquiring new programs and the latest versions of old
- programs as soon as they become available, (2) testing the programs for
- quality and to see if they run or if they have hidden bombs or are
- really crippled demos, (3) reviewing the documentation for copyright
- restrictions and writing the authors, (4) comparing the programs to
- others, (5) writing reviews to inform users about the new programs and
- updates, (6) organizing the software in the library by subject matter,
- (7) updating catalogs, (8) going back over old programs from
- time-to-time to make sure they are still of value, (9) investigating
- users' bug reports.
-
- In my opinion, for all of this to be done well, there should be one
- experienced, knowledgable librarian for every 200 disks. Unfortunately,
- I don't know of a single library with the funds available to pay enough
- to attract the qualified people to work for them. PSL tries to solve
- this problem by having librarians who do the work in their specific
- area of expertise at their homes in their spare time. We pay them a
- very large percent of the revenues for each disk sold from their area.
-
- Even with this financial incentive, it is extremely difficult to find
- someone who both wants to be a librarian and has the time and determi-
- nation to follow through. (If you are interested, call me.) We have
- had countless individuals apply, get the disks from us to work on, and
- we never hear from them again. Our most recent attempt was with a
- gentleman who agreed to work on the programming disks. He has had them
- since October 1988 and when we later contacted him for a progress
- report, he said he hoped to be done by March 1989. Of course, during
- the time from October to March, we have added dozens of new programming
- files, so he is way behind even before he finishes. He admitted that
- when he agreed to take on the job, he had no concept of how much work
- was involved. (March has now passed and we haven't heard from him.)
-
- Anyone who thinks that being a shareware distributor is just "easy money
- made off the sweat of others," as one programmer put it, is welcome to
- join us and rake in some of that "easy money".
-
-
- The $3 Disk Guys
-
- In the April 1989 issue of PC Computing, we counted seven full-page ads
- for shareware distributors, all within about a dozen pages of each
- other. Most of these are selling the disks in the range of $2-$3.50.
-
- Most of these will probably disappear in a year or two, unless they
- have someone with deep pockets backing them up. It seems highly
- unlikely that all of these companies, whose ads and shareware
- collections seem to be clones of each other, can each get enough
- business to survive. (We have a file drawer full of materials from
- distributors who have come and gone over the years.)
-
- To anyone with the money to spend on advertising, shareware distribu-
- tion must look like easy pickings. All they have to do is buy the
- disks from another cut-rate distributor for $2 a disk, copy the other
- company's ad, and they're in business. Most of them don't know what
- they are selling and don't care.
-
- The $3-guys have only a fraction of the number of programs PSL has.
- Most do not bother with programs that are too small to be on a disk by
- themselves. Or at best, they may have a few utility or games collec-
- tions that never get updated. Most do not test the programs or write
- to the authors, violating many copyrights. (Some even show pictures of
- pirated programs in their ads.)
-
- A few programmers, no doubt influenced by this influx of quick-buck,
- cut-rate distributors, say that distributors who charge more than $3 a
- disk cannot distribute their programs. Ironically, the programmers who
- track where shareware registrations come from always find that they do
- not come from these cut-rate guys, but from groups like PSL, PC-SIG and
- Public Brand who charge $5 or more per disk.
-
- People who are too cheap to pay for value received from a shareware
- distributor are not likely to pay for value received from a programmer.
-
-
- We hope that we have not offended anyone by our straightforward talk.
- If you have any comments about the subject, we would like to hear from
- you.