What’s going on in the information economy?

Last night, Marketplace shared an interesting – although not at all surprising – statistic:

…the number of movies rented or purchased online will jump by 135 percent this year. But consumers are expected to spend $11 billion buying DVDs and Blu-ray discs this year. Compare that to less than $2 billion they’ll spend on movies over the Internet.

We’re watching more movies (and television) online than ever before. In my own life, it’s a rare occurrence to opt for the 60″ flat screen over my 13″ Mac Air. It should be noted that this is further proof that I am not a man.

Many more of us are opting to watch a majority of our movies on all-you-can-eat-for-one-low-monthly-fee websites like Netflix or Hulu. We’re not purchasing DVDs at the same rate we’re streaming movies.

Ya know how most of us don’t collect CDs anymore? It’s kinda like that.

This is a market going through a drastic shift. This isn’t a trend it’s a complete & utter transformation of an industry.

This is great for consumers right now. Sure, we have our gripes about the quality of what’s available online or the seemingly erratic behavior of some of these companies. But for the most part, we’re in hog heaven. Access, baby. We’ve got access!

Except, according to this same Marketplace segment, the industry isn’t ready for this fundamental shift. What’s new, right? What would be new is if the entertainment industry was actually ready in terms of programming, production, intellectual property, or business model for any of the technological shifts that have of taken place over the last 60 years.

If the industry can’t make the money they need to make in this shift, jobs will be lost, quality could suffer, and studios could close. They’re in search of a new business model. Again.

I know, I know. You thought this was about the information economy not the entertainment industry. What’s the moral of the story?

Don’t let this be you.

Do you want to be the disruptor or do you want to be one of the disrupted?
— Umair Haque

The base price of information today is FREE. And it’s getting cheaper every day.

What used to be a “great value” at $97 is now free.

The information market is as thick as split pea soup. I don’t care how finely you hone the tools you use to sell the information, the first response is and will continue to be, “Is it really worth that?”

And that means for all your brilliance, all your value, it’s harder & harder to justify the price of what you’re offering.

What was today part of a valuable exchange may tomorrow be a tough sell. This isn’t obsolescence. The information is still good. Just not worth as much.

Is that all the genius is worth? Of course not. Once again, it’s an issue of substitutes.
— Seth Godin, What is Bach worth?

Why is this happening?

It gets easier to enter this market every day. More resources for selling information means more people are selling information. It’s a nasty cycle.

To add to that, what was highly prized information even 6 months ago has been read, processed, and released through other products at a cheaper cost. That’s not copyright infringement, it’s how information works. I teach you my idea, that idea gets incorporated into your ideas, you teach your ideas. Rinse and repeat.

This pushes us towards new thinking & innovation. Except when it doesn’t. It’s your job to stay on the cutting edge or risk not only being left behind but left without a penny in the bank.

Complacency is the shortest route to the poor house.

Click to spread the word!

The other thing going on, of course, is inflated supply. With millions of people trying to make a living off their bright ideas, how long can supply sustain a high value? Not long.

The app economy – think micropayments for small pieces of software – has made this work by catering to scale. A dollar here & there times a million is still a nice payout. How different is the information you have for sale? Are you willing or even able to find a million customers?

When in doubt, think beyond the “usual” way things are done.

There is a limitless number of ways to delight people — not an a la carte buffet of pre-approved information marketing tactics or even types of information that are valuable.

All too often I hear “how to” is the only way to sell ideas.

To cut through the clutter and prove the value of what you have to offer, you must step outside of “normal.” And to never forget that “normal” changes every day.

What’s a booming DVD business today could be streaming for free tomorrow.

Meanwhile, those who stay ahead of the curve, who discover new ways of delivering value, who never stop thinking about what their customers need to become fully realized human beings, have opportunities to reap ever more financial wealth from the information economy.

What does that look like?

Just like the entertainment industry is stabbing in the dark with online distribution, information & insight dealers are looking for the next best thing.

I think the key is to not look for just “the next best thing” but “your next big thing.” Big difference. What is based on your experience, strengths, and unique perspective is more likely to have value staying power.

Case in point: People are paying more for my book, The Art of Earning, than they were 6 months ago.

The tide is changing. Are you ready?

Clearly, I believe the information economy is changing. I believe that even 2 months from now the way people buy ebooks, digital programs, and even coaching will look completely different. I am coaching my clients through this shift.

What we’re not doing is falling into existing models. There is no “first you release an ebook, then you release a course, then you offer full access” thing going on here. There’s no “typical life coaching business model” to draw on. That path is dying (or already dead). Hopefully it signed a DNR.

Conventional wisdom is a bad product. What other assets do you have to trade in? Personal access? Personal experience? Personal perspective? Collaborative wisdom?

You’re going to have to think this one out for yourself. You’re going to have to decide what’s valuable about what you do & how that matches your customers (sometimes unperceived) needs. You must see opportunity where before there was none. You’re going to have to make bold statements about what you believe and how you operate.

And you’re going to have to translate that all into a package that makes sense for your customer.

It’s a tall order.

Are you up for the challenge?

***

We’re having a similar conversation over at Reclaiming Wealth.
Join in and — get this — pick up a FREE book on the intersection of money & meaningful living.

Anyone can write about personal development…

Anyone can write about personal development… anyone can read a few self-help books, change a few habits, and tell you to do the same. Anyone can tell me what I should be doing. Anyone repeat the same old cheers from the sidelines of life, waving tired pompoms in the air. Anyone can string together the language of the genre and tell me to live my best, most authentic, truthy, passionate life.

Then when someone decides to talk about your life in terms of the scriptural narratives that affect your thought & behavior patterns, I stand up & take notice.

Anyone can write about business… anyone can take what the “big guys” say and rewrite it in their own words. Anyone can tell you to hop on social media, build a tribe, create some products, fill a need. Anyone can convince you to tweak this, improve that, try this new application. Anyone parrot the same ideas as the rest of the industry and call it news.

Then when someone decides to examine business in a new paradigm for a new economy, I stand up & take notice.

Anyone can write about creativity… anyone can encourage you to pick up a paintbrush, get your hands dirty, try something new. Anyone can tell you what works for them, what coaxes them out of the box. Anyone can give you their version of The Artist’s Way, tell you to write your morning pages, and pat you on the head.

Then when someone decides to prompt & push you to creative action through the very nature of her prose, I stand up & take notice.

Anyone can let you know they’re going to be at an event & tell you to come find them.

Then when someone creates a whole experience around being “shot in the face,” I stand up & take notice.

Anyone can write about sex. Okay… maybe not anyone…

Then when someone tells personal stories, examines issues on multiple levels, and still gives you enough juicy bits to leave you wanting more, I stand up & take notice.

The barriers to publishing, public discourse, and commerce are lower than they’ve ever been before. If you’ve got something to say, you can say it and find people to read it.

Just how long can you sustain a business based on someone else’s ideas?

I ask — beg, plead — you to consider if what you’re saying is something new, noteworthy, or innovative. Are you just looking to put your spin on established truth? Or are you daring to push the boundaries of something, anything in pursuit of new truth?

You simply can’t compete with those who have already said what you have to say.

You won’t outspend them (they already made the big bucks), you won’t outproduce them (they’ve been at it for years), you won’t outangle them (they’re already top of mind).

So say something new. Say the thing that’s been on your mind — and frightening you to death — for so long. Say the new realization you had yesterday and ask for help working it through. Say something that goes against or beyond what we already “know.”

Watch how people follow you.

It’s not as dirty as it sounds…

Instead of “targeting” your customers, “attract” them. Use your entrepreneurial wiles, not a bow & arrow.

Flirt, seduce, beguile your way into the private quarters of those you love. Those you want to serve. Those to whom you have something to offer.

Know your own magnetism. Feel into your allure. Become keenly aware about what makes your irresistible. Create a bond between you & your mate.

Relish the back & forth of mutually beneficial performance. Ahem, value.

Marketing isn’t about the pick up. Business isn’t about the one night stand.

Where are the strong men? FREE teleclass

My friends and I are often left wondering: where are the men? Whether it’s at home, at the office, on the ‘net, or at events, there often seems to be a bevvy of intelligent, ambitious women and a real dearth of engaged, driven men.

We wonder if it’s the crowds we run with, the economy, or our locale. We theorize that men have been getting mixed messages for so long that they don’t know how to respond anymore. We question whether the fact that women now make up a larger part of the workforce means that men are truly succumbing to stronger women or whether they just feel lost in a sea of change.

Even though I might have had playground fantasies about a world where women rule the world, I don’t actually wish for men to be absent from society. I want to see men with nuanced understandings of women, balanced perspectives on men’s role in society, and, above all, respect for all those around them. But I want to see strong men, nonetheless.

Any economy where an entire gender is on the outs is an economy that isn’t functional and certainly not sustainable.

The emergence of the You Economy seems to be skewed in favor feminine energy. It’s our tendency towards intuition, connectivity, creativity, and nuance that allows us to thrive in this environment.

But it’s certainly not only the realm of the feminine. What do men have to offer in the You Economy? And how can women better collaborate with men to realize a more whole future?

I’m talking to Andy Fogarty, founder of the Masculine Evolution, about this very subject. I’m interviewing him in an hour-long teleclass on Monday, March 19, at 8pm EST. I’m asking:

  • Where are the men?
  • What’s the disconnect between what men have and what they really want?
  • How do men & masculine energy differ from women & feminine energy? What can we learn from these differences?
  • What should strong women know about collaborating with strong men?
  • This is a polarizing topic — what’s your advice for a strategic niche launch?

Andy and I both realize that there is room for much more than traditional masculine/feminine roles. Set aside questions of gender, non-gender specific roles. Andy’s niche audience is men who identify with traditional male energy & patterns of behavior but feel like there is something missing from their actualization. I’m interested in shedding light on this group and a woman’s ability to collaborate with them in the You Economy.

Want to join us? Click here to register.

How to craft a meaningful life (and business!): Interview with Ryan Nicodemus

Every craft needs a special set of tools. What kind of tool do you need to craft a meaningful life?

The guys, Ryan Nicodemus & Joshua Millburn, at TheMinimalists.com use “minimalism” as a tool for more meaningful living. While minimalism has become quite the trend, with everyone & their kid brothers selling their stuff and flying around the world with all their worldly possessions tucked inside a backpack, The Minimalists take a more measured, intentional approach to minimalism.

Don’t get me wrong, they’re not wishy washy! No, they’re just oozing with purpose.

Ryan & Josh have a new book out, Minimalism: Live a Meaningful Life, which lays out their philosophy alongside practical advice that’s helpful whether you choose to label your lifestyle “minimalist” or not. The book is at once personal and authoritative.

If you’re looking for big ideas on jump-starting the way you live, this is the book for you.

I had the pleasure of talking with one-half of The Minimalists, Ryan Nicodemus, about their purpose, the book, and the business of being a minimalist.

Listen below. Or download the 20 minute MP3 here. (right click then “save as”)

[audio:http://taragentile.s3.amazonaws.com/InterviewRyanNicodemus_TaraGentilecom.mp3]

Here’s what we talked about:

  • How do you define minimalism outside of absolutes?
  • How do you discover for yourself what is “unnecessary” or “excess” in life?
  • How do you know when a “should” is worthy of becoming a “must?”
  • How do you manage a life of work-life integration instead of work-life balance?
  • Why has The Minimalists brand spread so quickly in a saturated market?
  • Does writing about minimalism and living a meaningful life have a shelf life? What’s next?

Pick up Minimalism: Live a Meaningful Life at Amazon, exclusively for Kindle.

PS Look for many more interviews here in the coming weeks! I’m calling them “Stories from the You Economy.” Who would you like to see me interview?

$27 Nail Polish, Priorities, and the Luxury of Scarcity

Recently, over at Design*Sponge, Grace posted about a high-end designer showroom she visited near her home. In between the racks of pricey designer goods, she found something in her budget.

It was nail polish. The nail polish was $27 a bottle.

An unsuspecting commenter made an off hand comment about “budget” nail polish at $27 a bottle and how “successful” a woman must be to afford such a luxury.

Grace saw an opportunity:

“Comments that make women feel bad or guilty about being financially successful ultimately keep us trapped in a place where we don’t feel comfortable to demand higher salaries, raises or ask for freelance rates that are fair.

I don’t think we need to applaud or approve of perceived “extravagant” purchases all the time (though it’s important to note that just because someone buys a $27 bottle of nail polish it doesn’t mean they don’t cut back and conserve in places others might not), but I think female business owners deserve the right to enjoy the fruits of their labors.”

Grace believed (and I concur) that the comment was just a joke. But I think we all realize the Truth of these type of jokes. We make jokes and laugh at them because we’re uncomfortable.

I’m sure $27 nail polish made a lot of people uncomfortable.

But the problem with the jokes, as Grace rightly states, is that they create an atmosphere of shame around money & what we spend that money on.

Because we’re already uncomfortable about talking money, those off hand comments only silence us completely.

Silence is the enemy. Not money. Not even a bit of luxury.

Ultimately, spending money is about priorities.

Your every day purchases — and especially those luxurious little splurges — reflect your personal priorities. Those priorities are dictated by values and personal preferences. They’re dictated by what you perceive as “needs” and “absolutely hafta haves.”

We assume others priorities are the same as ours. We assume we know what others spend their money on. We assume that people that make the same amount of money we do live life with relatively similar lifestyles.

These assumptions are all false.

What I have learned over 3 years of growing a business, learning how to make more money, discovering how to lose more money, and launching new products & services with regularity, is that I can never truly understand how others will prioritize spending the money they earn.

Who’s to say that people won’t spend their hard earned benjamins on your crazy idea? Who’s to say that people won’t pay what you need to charge for your creation?

This isn’t about $27 nail polish. It’s about creating the success & multidimensional wealth you need to make the choices you want to make while empowering others to do the same. Give people a chance to choose you.

But what really gets me, is how easy it is sit back and say, “Not me!”

Living with scarcity is a luxury.

It is easy to sit back & make off hand remarks about other people’s spending priorities. It is easy to assume that what you have is all you will ever have. It is easy price your products or services in a way that doesn’t challenge your customers — or you.

It is easy to play the game you’ve been taught to play.

I dare you to discover abundance.

I challenge you to work towards financial candor.

I am pushing you to discover the means to splurge on what you truly love.

Will you?