AOL's Free CD Campaign Was Anything But Cheap

vansau

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May 25, 2010
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AOL's Free CD Campaign Was Anything But Cheap



It turns out that AOL spent a lot of money to send you all those free CDs over the years.

Remember how, all the way through the 1990s, America Online bombarded the general public with tons of free CDs promoting its service? My friends and I sure do, as we would often thank AOL for providing us with an enormous set of free coasters for our apartments. It turns out that AOL spent a lot of money on that marketing campaign, which (for a while) was incredibly effective at getting people to subscribe.

A question on Quora.com asked how much AOL spent on the campaign, and former CEO Steve Case was one of the many folks who contributed to the answer. According to Chase, the cost was so great that it equated to spending $35 for each subscriber the service received:

I don't remember the total spending but do recall in the early 1990s our target was to spend 10% of lifetime revenue to get a new subscriber. At that time I believe the average subscriber life was about 25 months and revenue was about $350 so we spent about $35 to acquire subscribers. As we were able to lower the cost of disks/trial/etc we were able to ramp up marketing. (Plus, we knew Microsoft was coming and it was never going to be easier or cheaper to get market share.) When we went public in 1992 we had less than 200,000 subscribers; a decade later the number was in the 25 million range. That helped drive our market capitalization up from $70 million at the time of the IPO to $150 billion when we decided to combine with Time Warner to accelerate our transition to broadband and diversify our revenue mix.

For a while, a lot of people were subscribing with America Online. At one point, the number of total subscribers was reported at roughly 30 million (a bit higher than Case's estimate), though it's dropped a bit since then. As of June 2010, AOL reports that it has about 4.4 million subscribers. Sounds like AOL's marketing department needs to come up with a similar program to get the numbers back up ...

Source: Geek

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UltimatheChosen

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Mar 6, 2009
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Heh.

I remember how my grandparents got quite confused (and a little incensed) when I tried to throw one of those discs out, claiming that they were raised to never turn their backs on something free.
 

Danpascooch

Zombie Specialist
Apr 16, 2009
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UltimatheChosen said:
Heh.

I remember how my grandparents got quite confused (and a little incensed) when I tried to throw one of those discs out, claiming that they were raised to never turn their backs on something free.
How many of those "YOU'RE THE MILLIONTH VISITOR!" scams have they fell for?

Nothing is free, especially in this day and age.
 

mjc0961

YOU'RE a pie chart.
Nov 30, 2009
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Send out AOL on free flash drives! Sure it's probably more expensive for them than CDs, but at least those of us on the receiving end can format the suckers and get some use out of them other than free coasters. :p
 

fix-the-spade

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Feb 25, 2008
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Hmm, perhaps if AOL hadn't started behaving like an extortion racket, they would still have a few more subscribers.

Although AOL: Subscribe or suffer the consequence would make a brilliant spoof.
 

Signa

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I will give them props for getting the internet started. I didn't really know much about the internet until I got one of those disks. Also, that "you've got mail" sound effect became so iconic for a while.
 

Albino Boo

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danpascooch said:
I don't think anyone thinks it was cheap, just that it was stupid.
Yeah it just made them billionaires, I bet he's feeling real stupid right about now .
 

megs1120

Wing Commander
Jul 27, 2009
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Gosh, reminds me of how annoyed I was when they switched from floppies to CDs. Free, easily-formatted floppy disks were a godsend to my geeky little self, always in need of boot disks.
 

Dirkie

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mjc0961 said:
Send out AOL on free flash drives! Sure it's probably more expensive for them than CDs, but at least those of us on the receiving end can format the suckers and get some use out of them other than free coasters. :p
I hardly think you'd be able to use a 32mb flash drive for anything useful these days.
But if you could get a hold of a lot of them, you could use a filesplitter and make a datachain, or memory jenga!
 

dalek sec

Leader of the Cult of Skaro
Jul 20, 2008
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Oh I remember those things... AOL pretty much got my undying hatred because of those frigging things kept showing up in the mail and in my game mags sometimes.
 

manaman

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I had very limited access to a phone line, and no way to get broadband while in the dorms during Tech School for US Air Force. I had a little over a month left at Lackland AFB and figured what the hell, free dial up.

I canceled before I left and figured that was that. Someone down at AOL decided their numbers where not good enough when I called and marked me as a "save" not canceling my service.

Seeing how I shipped off to Ft. Gordon right after that I had no way of knowing until I finally got a statement sent to me three months later that AOL had charged my card four times. The real kicker came when the third time I called the lady finally canceled my service, and gave me a month free to "make up" for the mistake, but also neglected to cancel the service so after that month they charged me yet again. I finally contacted my bank, and the lady I talked to said they had heard the same story multiple times. They did a charge back on all but one of the five charges AOL had placed against my account. That charge AOL refunded on their own.

AOL would likely be dust now if they hadn't merged with Time Warner.
 

natster43

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Jul 10, 2009
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Huh, maybe I shouldn't have been smashing those discs with a baseball bat after all.
 

Digikid

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Dec 29, 2007
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Thank you AOL. They were GREAT for Skeet Shooting.

Maybe if your service did not SUCK so much......
 

Leg End

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Oct 24, 2010
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Protip: Those CD's make awesome frisbees which make cats go fucking insane when they see them flying by.
 

The Rogue Wolf

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mjc0961 said:
Send out AOL on free flash drives! Sure it's probably more expensive for them than CDs, but at least those of us on the receiving end can format the suckers and get some use out of them other than free coasters. :p
You can get bulk-rate USB drives for around $4.50 a pop at their cheapest (that's for 256MB, though, and I don't think ANYTHING has an installation program that small these days). Still, it's not outside the realm of possibility.

What is outside the realm of possibility, however, is that enough people to make it all worthwhile would want to go back to a company whose own broadband president had once declared that "narrowband will be around forever" (she certainly wasn't; she got fired two years later), which accidentally publically posted search results input by 650,000 users... along with their account numbers (which proved to be personally identifiable via cross-referencing), and which has cost Time Warner millions of dollars since the merger.

If we're going to be dragging relics from the 90s back... personally, I'd rather have POGs. Or at least Trapper Keepers.
 

New Troll

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Mar 26, 2009
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I remember making hundreds of "ninja stars" out of those disks. Fun times!

So... maybe to get back to thier roots, AOL should send out 3G USB drives in the mail with two months free broadband?

edit: heh, guess I'm not the only one with the same idea.