What Works

How do you know what content should be free? And, what should be paid for?

This month, we’ve been talking all about building an audience and/or finding customers—as well as how those two things are different.

And one of the things a conversation about audience-building always comes back to is content.

What kind of content do you create? Where do you share it? Who do you create it for? And on & on…

The big question I get repeatedly, though is: How do I know what content should be paid for and what content should be free?

And I get it!

There’s a whole industry out there that appears to be helping you sell content–whether as ebooks, online courses, membership sites, Patreon incentives, or paid newsletters.

But what I’ve learned is that we are never really selling content. Or information. Or even ideas.

We’re always selling an experience. We craft an experience of content that facilitates transformation–and that’s really what people buy. Because the info is out there, right?

Even if your product is quote-unquote only an online course with no feedback, no live calls, no engagement from you, it’s still an experience. Because you’ve crafted each module and what order they appear in, you’ve chosen the course platform, you’ve designed the way you’re delivering the information–all to facilitate change. That’s an experience.

I want to share a clip of The What Works Network Insider Hour from this month where I share how I approach this question specifically in my own business and, specifically, how my thinking has changed over the years.

I get into my overall strategy for content as it relates to our product and I talk about how that approach ties into our sales process, too.

Show Notes








How do you know what content should be free? And, what should be paid for?



This month, we’ve been talking all about building an audience and/or finding customers—as well as how those two things are different.



And one of the things a conversation about audience-building always comes back to is content.



What kind of content do you create? Where do you share it? Who do you create it for? And on & on…



The big question I get repeatedly, though is: How do I know what content should be paid for and what content should be free?



And I get it!



There’s a whole industry out there that appears to be helping you sell content–whether as ebooks, online courses, membership sites, Patreon incentives, or paid newsletters.



But what I’ve learned is that we are never really selling content. Or information. Or even ideas.



We’re always selling an experience. We craft an experience of content that facilitates transformation–and that’s really what people buy. Because the info is out there, right?



Even if your product is quote-unquote only an online course with no feedback, no live calls, no engagement from you, it’s still an experience. Because you’ve crafted each module and what order they appear in, you’ve chosen the course platform, you’ve designed the way you’re delivering the information–all to facilitate change. That’s an experience.



I want to share a clip of The What Works Network Insider Hour from this month where I share how I approach this question specifically in my own business and, specifically, how my thinking has changed over the years.



I get into my overall strategy for content as it relates to our product and I talk about how that approach ties into our sales process, too.
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What is What Works?

"Work" is broken. We're overcommitted, underutilized, and out of whack. But it doesn't have to be this way. What Works is a podcast about rethinking work, business, and leadership as we navigate the 21st-century economy. When you're an entrepreneur, independent worker, or employee who doesn't want to lose yourself to the whims of late-stage capitalism, this show is for you. Host Tara McMullin covers money, management, culture, media, philosophy, and more to figure out what's working (and what's not) today. Tara offers a distinctly interdisciplinary approach to deep-dive analysis of how we work and how work shapes us.