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- Public (software) Library
- December 1993 Monthly CD-ROM
-
- =====Programmer Letter
- from Nelson Ford
-
-
- ===PsL Programming CD-ROM
-
- If you are reading this but did not get this file from your own copy of
- PsL's December 1993 CD-ROM, you are missing out on a valuable resource.
-
- In the summer of 1993, PsL began issuing a Monthly CD-ROM with all the
- new programs which we received during the most recent 30 days which
- passed our testing -- usually 600-700 programs a month.
-
- Starting with the December CD, we began adding a section of PsL's huge
- disk-based shareware library to the CD each month, with Programming
- being the first section to be featured.
-
- If you do NOT have the CD, call 800-2424-PSL or 713-524-6394 to order
- your own copy. Single issue price is $29.95 or sign up for the monthly
- subscription at just $19.95 per month plus shipping - billed monthly,
- cancel any time.
-
-
-
- ===Programmers Marketing Co-Op
-
- Bob Ostrander, former owner of Public Brand Software, has announced the start
- of a service for shareware programmers in which he will use his extensive
- contacts in the computer industry to seek out new marketing opportunities
- for his clients.
-
- Examples of these opportunities include retail publishing contracts, bundling
- contracts, free or low-cost mass distribution opportunities, cross-licensing
- and sales agreements with other shareware authors, overseas marketing agent
- contacts, and more.
-
- There are no up-front fees for this service for programmers. Instead, Ostrander
- takes a 4%-10% commission on contracts which his service sets up.
-
- I would hesitate to recommend such a service if anyone but Bob Ostrander were
- doing it, but Bob has 8 years as a leader in the shareware industry during which
- time he has become one of the most respected men in the industry.
-
- Programmers wanting more information can contact Bob Ostrander at
- 5437 Honey Manor Drive, Indianapolis, IN 46221 or by calling 371-856-6052.
-
- Deals like the following are a little more questionable.
-
-
-
- ===Would You Sell Your Program For $.40?
-
- There was a big ruckus on the ASP forum on CompuServe a few weeks ago.
- Programmers were complaining about a company who offered only pennies (in
- effect) in royalties to market their registered shareware programs as
- Low-Cost-Retail software.
-
- I just got a letter from a different company, Software Concepts, with the
- same type of offer. They want to market my CardShark Hearts program as LCR
- through stores for $9.95. This must be a fully registered version with "no
- mention of shareware or registration fees on the program disk."
-
- That is the retail price that the store gets. Software Concepts only gets
- $4 per disk and the author (me) only gets $.40 per copy sold.
-
- The letter says (without mentioning specific programs or people) that "some
- of these authors received more than $2,000" in the first month of
- distribution. (In talking to someone from SC, it seems that this was really
- an amount earned by one company who had several products in the rack, not
- for just one program.)
-
- CardShark Hearts won $3000 in prizes in a WinTech Journal programming
- contest. I got a $5000 advance to do a modified retail version for a major
- game publisher. The shareware version continues to pull in a pleasing
- number of registrations each month at a registration fee of $25 (plus
- shipping).
-
- Given the success CSHearts has had thus far, does it make sense for me to
- accept $.40 for the same program that I'm getting $25 for from other
- customers?
-
- The answer is "Yes" if this is money that I would not have gotten
- otherwise.
-
- But what if someone who was thinking of registering saw the product in a
- store and bought it there instead. If that happens les than once for every
- 70 times someone buys it in a store without having seen it before, I still
- come out ahead (70 x $.40 = $28 versus a "lost registration" of $25).
-
- What if a customer sends me $25 plus $4 shipping and then sees the same
- program on a rack for $9.95? Experience tells me that the customer will
- either get mad and not do business with me (and PsL) any more, or they will
- call up and demand a refund of the difference. If that happens less than
- once in 40 times, I come out ahead (if I refund the $15 difference).
-
- Ironically, the more successful this company's marketing is, the more
- likely it is that one of the above scenarios will actually take place.
-
- So I called Art Christner at Software Concepts to ask about giving them a
- limited version of CSHearts and putting an offer in an "About" box for
- customers to call me for an advanced version. (Essentially, I would drop
- back to version 1.0 in features for their racks, but without the version
- 1.0 bugs. <grin>)
-
- Art resisted the idea a little because they don't want a really crippled
- version, but he ended up saying that it would be ok to offer a more
- advanced version as long as their version is fully functional and
- worthwhile.
-
- Since Apogee software invented the idea of "give away the first level and
- sell the higher levels" and has gotten rich with it, it seems like this is
- a good way to go with these kinds of offers.
-
- As soon as this month's PsL News and CD are done, I'm going to look at
- modifying CSHearts to send to Software Concepts.
-
- So what if the deal bombs and I don't get $2000 a month? If I just get $50
- that I would not have gotten otherwise, I will use it to go out to dinner
- and toast the wonders of shareware which let you make "money for nothing".
-
-