Indians ready to pay for only 'quality' online content: Nielsen

Starts 3rd October

Vanita Keswani

Madison Media Sigma

Poulomi Roy

Joy Personal Care

Hema Malik

IPG Mediabrands

Anita Kotwani

Dentsu Media

Archana Aggarwal

Ex-Airtel

Anjali Madan

Mondelez India

Anupriya Acharya

Publicis Groupe

Suhasini Haidar

The Hindu

Sheran Mehra

Tata Digital

Rathi Gangappa

Starcom India

Mayanti Langer Binny

Sports Prensented

Swati Rathi

Godrej Appliances

Anisha Iyer

OMD India

Indians ready to pay for only 'quality' online content: Nielsen

MUMBAI: Nearly nine out of ten Indians believe that free content on the internet should remain free in the future. However, three fourth of the Indians are willing to pay for the content if the quality is significantly better than what is currently free online, according to a survey conducted by The Nielsen Company.

As per the survey, 70 per cent Indians are willing to pay for online content if they get the right to copy it and share it with others. 63 per cent will pay if the payment system is easy to use and 61 per cent Indians are willing to pay for the same content online if the costs are comparable to what they currently pay off-line for it.

Nearly, seven in 10 Indians (69 per cent) would rather pay for individual pieces of content instead of subscribing to the entire website. Three-fourth of the consumers will stop using the website if they have to pay for the content because they can find the same information on a free site. 
 
Said The Nielsen Company associate director - Nielsen Online Karthik Nagarajan, "Internet is a huge space and content is available for free at the click of a button. Out there exists immense quantity of information but most of it lacks in quality, and this stress on quality by consumers will be a major factor in driving consumers to pay for online content."

The Nielsen survey polled more than 27,000 consumers in 54 countries globally and examined consumer attitudes to paying for online content. Results show that 29 per cent Indians have already paid for books, while 19 per cent have paid for online magazines, and 18 per cent have paid for music.

When asked on what they would consider paying for in the future, half the Indian consumers said they were prepared to pay for books (50 per cent), magazines & music (both 47 per cent), and professionally produced videos, including current television shows (46 per cent). Many consumers also indicated they would consider paying for theatrical movies (45 per cent) and games (44 per cent).

When it came to news content online - perhaps the most hotly debated of any of the paid-for content model discussions, just ten per cent of Indian consumers said they had previously paid for internet-only news, and 12 per cent had paid for newspaper content online in the past. Asked whether they would consider paying for online newspapers or internet-only news sources in the future, nearly half said they would not (both 49 per cent).

Conversely, a majority of consumers in India are not prepared to pay for consumer-generated-content such as blogs (70 per cent), social communities (61 per cent), and consumer generated video (60 per cent), although interestingly Asia Pacific consumers are more willing to pay for consumer-generated video than any other region. Radio and podcasts also fared poorly in the study with 66 per cent Indians not willing to pay for news/talk radio and 60 per cent not willing to shell out for podcasts. 58 per cent Indians will also not consider paying for music on the radio.

The Nielsen survey highlights a growing acceptance amongst Indian consumers for the need for some form of paid-for content models - nearly half the Indian consumers (48 per cent) concede that quality of content on the internet will decline unless companies can charge for it.  
 
More than six out of ten (66 per cent) Indians will also accept more advertising on the internet in the future to support the cost of content. However, consumers drew the line at combining online advertising with paid-for content, with more than half the consumers (54 per cent) saying that there should be no advertising on the internet content that they have paid for.

Interestingly, nearly eight in ten (78 per cent) Indians feel that their existing off-line subscriptions to services such as newspapers, magazines, radio or television should extend to the online medium. A majority of Indians (60 per cent) also believe that content on the internet should be supported by a combination of advertising and content fees.

Said Nagarajan, "Consumers have a much higher propensity to pay for content which they know has been professionally produced such as music, movies, games, but are reluctant to pay for online content that has been generated by fellow consumers, such as blogs, etc. Considering the fragmented attitude of consumers to pay for online content, the content providers will have to offer multiple options to entice the choosy consumers."