Does Free Cost Too Much?

A bunch of bankers got knocked for a loop when they heard from Jim Buckmaster, of Craigslist:

From HuffingtonPost.com:

Jim Buckmaster, the chief executive of Craigslist, caused lots of head-scratching Thursday as he tried to explain to a bunch of Wall Street types why his company is not interested in “monetizing” his ridiculously popular Web operation. Appearing at the UBS global media conference in New York, Mr. Buckmaster took questions from the bemused audience, which apparently could not get its collective mind around the notion that Craigslist exists to help Web users find jobs, cars, apartments and dates — and not so much to make money.

Wendy Davis of MediaPost describes the presentation as a “a culture clash of near-epic proportions.” She recounts how UBS analyst Ben Schachter wanted to know how Craigslist plans to maximize revenue. It doesn’t, Mr. Buckmaster replied (perhaps wondering how Mr. Schachter could possibly not already know this). “That definitely is not part of the equation,” he said, according to MediaPost. “It’s not part of the goal.”

Whoa! Money isn’t the essence of business? Wow.

I’m just as greedy as the next guy (maybe more so). This is such a foreign concept. Craigslist sounds like a throwback to the days of mainstream socialism.

I’ve never used the site. I have looked. I know lots of people do use it… actually millions use it.

It’s become a vacuum cleaner, sucking money from newspapers. Classified ads were a huge source of income.

I’m all for competitions, but what if removing this revenue makes the newspapers lose their financial viability?

From Will Bunch of the Philadelphia Daily News:

The American newspaper is being assassinated by “a lone nut.”

And we’re going to tell you the name of that lone nut:

Craig Newmark of Craigslist (not pictured above) — a man whose altruistic vision of running a business to NOT maximize profits is now threatening the livelihood of thousands of working men and women across this country, your neighbors who work at and publish your local newspaper, jobs that were once supported by the classified ads that have migrated to the most free (or low-cost) Craigslist.

Will Craigslist inadvertently stop the presses? I don’t want the physical newspaper to disappear from my life. As strange as it seems, it’s totally possible.

I’m all for the Internet and progress through technology… but I’m also all for the newspaper. I have no idea where to stand on this.

Searching For Everything

“Web users are conducting more searches not because they can’t find what they’re looking for,” said Ken Cassar of Nielsen/NetRatings, “but because search as a utility has become deeply ingrained into people’s everyday lives.”

OMG – how true is that? I was thinking the very same thing this afternoon, before I came upon this article on the BBC’s website.

I am off from work tonight. Steffie (home from college) thought it might be nice if we saw “Thanks For Smoking.” It’s a movie I’ve heard about, but know nothing about.

Enter Google. It didn’t take more than a few seconds before I read a review, watched the trailer and found the show times. And now, based on what I’ve found on the net, we’ll be going to a late show.

The Internet really is the information explosion we expected it to be. And, it seems to be getting better, as more and more people and businesses realize what can be leveraged and (new age word alert) ‘monetized’ with the Internet.

That BBC article went on to say, for every search performed on Google, they make 12&#162! That’s unreal from a business model that didn’t exist a decade ago.

More on the movie itself later.