By Richard Lowe, Jr. / Published on February 15th, 2008 / Other
There's something about the word "free". I mean, it's very attractive

and for some reason many of us think that "free" also means "quality"

and "desirable" and, of course, "get it now". That's one reason why

you see free stuff all over the web.

Of course, giving away free services and goods has been a way to get

people into a store (or to a web site) for countless ages. I'm sure

that way back in the Roman times they gave away free bread or

trinkets to get people hook people in, just like web sites do now.

But on the web "free" seems to have been taken to ludicrous extremes.

it seems that everyone wants it for "free". A web site has to offer

something, anything, for free to get people to visit. There are

entire companies who are entirely devoted to giving away free things.

Even such giants as "Yahoo" are almost entirely based upon the

concept of free giveaways.

Now that Yahoo has announced that it will start charging for

auctions, the question begs: "is free a thing of the past?" Will

other sites start charging for things that, outside of the internet,

they would normally charge for?

Personally, I don't think this is going to happen. One thing that

makes the internet different from anything we have experienced in the

past is it's vastness. Someone who is surfing the internet literally

has billions (and in a half dozen years more like trillions) of

choices.

On the internet there is no such thing as unique - at least not for

long. How can there be? With so many people (over 300 million last

time I looked), there is such an explosion of creativeness that there

is going to be overlap and similarities everywhere.

What does this have to do with free? Well, when someone visits a

site, especially for the first time, you've got seconds to convince

then to stay and look around. You have to give all of your visitors a

lot of options and things to read and learn about. You must impress

them, and you must do so quickly.

One way to get them to stay for a short while is to give them some

free things. Of course, you can write articles (that's what I do on

my site) which give valuable information. You can give them graphics,

games, plug-ins for their site, free programs, coupons, or anything

else that you can think of (it's probably a good idea to make sure

all of this fits in with the theme of your site - other than that,

the sky is the limit).

Another reason to give out free things is to get people to come back.

That's one of the primary ways that Yahoo and sites like it sell

advertising ... they give away free things (email, calendars,

classifieds and so on) so you will continue to come back to their

sites. They can predict how often people will view those ads (based

upon statistical analysis), and they've got a good idea of what kind

of things you are interested in based upon your actions at their

site. Thus, they can sell advertisers a commodity ... you. Or

rather, your eyes.

That's why free stuff will continue on the internet ... it gets you

there and it makes you come back again and again.

Richard Lowe Jr. is the webmaster of Internet Tips And Secrets. This

website includes over 1,000 free articles to improve your internet

profits, enjoyment and knowledge.

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