« Multitasking on Apple mobile devices | Main

Business models

A lot of companies have business models different from our expectations.

Some big examples are Gillete, in the business of selling razor blades; HP, in the business of selling ink and toner cartridges; Or even McDonalds, which lives of the rents it collects from his tenants, the restaurant franchisors.

I'm a very happy user of the Dropbox service, but I don't get their business model.

Their core technology is the sync engine, the best I ever used, not because of its speed, but because of the transparency and simplicity of the entire process: you drop your files in that folder, and all your devices will get it.

But all their marketing for both free and payed accounts is based on storage space, a commodity.

I pay for a lot of online services. Some, like Github and Flickr, I don't even needed to do so, because their free versions would be enough for my usage. But I keep paying because I want those companies that are providing me with a valued service to prosper and succeed.

I cannot do the same with Dropbox, although I probably use them more than any other service. Their focus on pricing their solution on something that is a commodity, and not their core technology, devalues my opinion on them, and prevent me from giving them my money.

I would gladly pay them for the sync service itself, without any server-side storage, because thats the part that nobody else was able to provide to me yet, in the same simple and efficient way.

But I can't: for some reason, they sell you storage, and you get this sync service for free. The only thing I can do is to use their votebox and hope to see a plan focus on sync, not storage space.

I really don't get their business model...

Contacts

melo@simplicidade.org (XMPP/email)
+351 302 029 050 (voice)
melopt (Skype)

IronMan challenge

Iron Man badge Are you ready to be an Iron Man? Join the challenge and find out! (what is the meaning of this little man?)

Moosaico

Junta-te!

Recent Comments

Powered by Disqus
Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Powered by
Movable Type 3.2