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A number of websites offer free services, such as OpenID, Gravatar, Twitter, but its not at all clear whether these websites have a profit generating business model. In particular, its not at all clear to me how Sun benefits by sponsoring OpenOffice without actually selling anything.

I have an idea for offering a free service similar to OpenID and Gravatar. I'm exposing some useful data through web services, so that anyone can consume the web services and build on them however they like -- since my content is hosted on other people's sites, its not possible to generate a profit through ads. However, I'm not willing to move forward without a strategy for earning profit.

What kind of business model allows me to give away a product to consumers, yet still earn a profit?

(Wiki'd because its a business question, not a coding question)

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Voted to close. Not programming related. – unforgiven3 Jun 22 at 18:18
FWIW, it's a good question even if it isn't directly programming related – HBoss Jun 22 at 18:52
I think its a good question – Tnay Jun 22 at 19:15
It's not even remotely programming related. Sure, its a good question, but not for this site. – unforgiven3 Jun 22 at 19:17
where on the web i we can ask questions like this ? and get quality responses like here – unknown (google) 14 hours ago

closed as not programming related by Jon B, Aaron Maenpaa, unforgiven3, Jim Puls, Joseph Jun 22 at 18:23

3 Answers

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Probably the most effective way is to give away a "scaled down" version of your service and offer a paid upgrade. Or, in marketing-speak, to offer a free "regular" version and a "premium" paid version (eg. Freemium).

Exactly how the regular vs. premium versions would break down feature wise would be dependent on what your web service is doing of course.

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Definatly the way to go. Consumers have to sign up for a license, and they get X transactions for free a day. This generates a dependency on you and builds your brand. When they are successful and depend on you, they have to pay, but that's ok because they are making money at this point as well. – rie819 Jun 22 at 18:27
It's exactly the same with the OP reference to Sun and OpenOffice. OpenOffice is the free version that they hook you with, then StarOffice is the commercial version if you want the extras like support... – GalacticCowboy Jun 22 at 18:39
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Can it simply be indirect publicity? You surf the site before downloading/using the service so you see the ads, banners, and other [paid] products of the company.

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The two options I see for revenue generation, from your description would be to either include advertising during the sign-up phase and account maintenance, or figure out how to have the other sites using your service provide you compensation.

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