Cash for content: Introducing Flattr.com

From tip jar to tech we go today, announcing the launch of a fantastic – and, yay, European-driven – website offering a neat way for your audience to show you monetary love for your creative endeavours.

Here’s how Flattr works:

  1. Members pay a monthly stipend – upwards of €2 (it doesn’t matter where you live, since they use fancy pants payments systems – so it truly is global)
  2. Content creators display the Flattr button on their site
  3. When members discover content they love, they hit that magic Flattr button
  4. At the end of the month, that member’s payment is distributed equally among creators whose buttons have been fondled.

It doesn’t get simpler than that.

Will it take off? I sincerely hope so.

There’s a huge hitch that I believe needs to be, um, unhitched before Flattr is widely accepted.

People expect content for free.

In my experience, it’s the older audience that is more prone to donations. @leolaporte has (among other things) a flexible payments tip jar. @GSPN has a Plus membership. Libsyn and Blubrry media storage services offer sponsorship opportunities from advertisers. And predictably – by and large – it’s the advertising that steers monetisation for any ‘live’ media on the web, right now (figures bandied about suggest Laporte and TWiT are mainlining about $2m annually from sponsors such as GoToMeeting and Audible.com).

I truly hope Flattr.com prevails in the battle for content reciprocity.

Do you think it will?

Why networking is your future – today…

I’m winded, genuinely stunned. I think I might have got it wrong about Facebook.

Originally I banished it out of hand to my bin of lost hopes. Consigned it to a place where people go, get lost, and never come back; or at least, not in the same form as they started. A bit like Hadfield, but without the humour.

I now muse on Facebook being a conduit for civilisation betterment. Not by virtue of itself, but as a catalyst for change, engendering a new viewpoint, a transcendent state of mind.

In football, lower league sides are often used as feeder clubs for the bigger boys with cash and talent. Elite youth academy players run out with the minions for some valuable first-team experience, before retracing their steps a couple of seasons on to play in front of a town-size crowd of fans.

To me, that’s a metaphor for Facebook and its role in developing the concept, and impelling the power, of networking.

A few years ago noone outside of the business world ‘networked’ in its truest sense. Networking was all about ill-fitting trousers, bad breath and BNI. Stuffy, stilted get-togethers. False promises of new business passed around with a card and a smarmy smile between the terminally dull and incompetent.

The rules have changed. Look at baby now! Blonde, blue-eyed and ballsy, networking is meaningful conversation and relationship-building for the masses. It’s cool to network. It’s effective, and genuinely develops new commercial opportunities for those so inclined.

There’s huge money and personal gain to be made, not on a Zuckerberg level but nonetheless it’s indirectly attributable to him and his Facebook phenomena.

Facebook has spawned some incredible progeny. Everywhere you look, incredible networks are springing up. Each filling a niche segment, bringing together people united by a common passion. And the community creator often reaps financial spoils from their hard work.

Here’s a trifecta of maybe-not-known-to-you individuals who have nailed it:

Podcast Answer Man. Started as a hobby, and now extended to 25 episodes a week the Generally Speaking Production Network is the work of Cliff Ravenscraft and his bird. It’s an awesome achievement – Cliff has notched about 353 members availing of a Pro membership. They pay $10 a month for added value content. Content, people – content!

Mitch Joel. He’s written books, created a blog loved by thinkers and creators worldwide, and his brand marketing insights challenge and change. He’s done what I perhaps will never achieve: get more than 5 comments on a blog post. Which makes him a hero in my eyes.

Christopher S Penn. Proof that you get what you wish for: he regularly pumped up email marketing titan Blue Sky Factory on his podcast with John Wall, and now look – he’s working there! Chris joins the dots – he interweaves technology with practical applications in a novel twist. Every idea he brings to the table is unique but so quintessentially Penn. And his legion of followers are testament to the fact he knows exactly what he’s doing, and how to make it pay. And when I say ‘pay’…

The world's most expensive Penn?

One pricey Penn. I thought Mont Blancs were expensive!

Three people, three amazing networks.

You’ll see a theme. They all podcast. Podcasting is a way of communicating with your posse on an emotional, informal level. There’s no quicker way to build relationships, to add value to your community. There’s no better way to reach out and build the tribe. Pack the podcast with value-ridden content and you, my friend, are unbeatable.

So you know your target customer, you’ve done the whole Facebook Page thing, got a presence on Twitter, sent a few videos to YouTube to explain what you do, how you do it.

How about taking it to the next level and actually building a castle for your community?

Well, it’s just got easier. A whole lot easier.

Enter BuddyPress a social networking layer sitting atop your WordPress site.

Previously it was difficult for a ‘tard like me to install BuddyPress. But the guys at BP just went into overdrive and unleashed a stupid-friendly update. Jeffro explains it far better than I ever could – but suffice to say, you can now host your own social network easily and with impact by integrating BuddyPress and its new template pack into your existing site.

Today, the opportunities for networking are infinitessimal. Take your niche to new levels and build a community around your passion. It’s the way to be a huge success, and to be empowered by attesting great achievement with others in pursuit of a common goal.

Do you power a network? Do you WANT to power a network? Do you belong to a successful network of tuned-in individuals? What does community mean to you?