Chris Anderson: Every business model can be a free business model
Posted on 05. Feb, 2009 by Tomas Wennström in bio, Uncategorized
Long Tail author Chris Anderson is soon out with his new book Free. What’s Next got an interview with him at Media Evolution in Malmö.
Hear Chris Anderson talk about:
How “Free” business models are spreading offline
Some of the thoughts in the “Free” blog race
The future of the media industry
How startups will manage in a down economy
How he will market the “Free” book
His contribution to the Lego museum in Denmark (this is cool stuff!)
Host: Kristin Heinonen
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Redesign av Sydsvenskan.se » Blog Archive » Evangeliet enligt Chris
05. Feb, 2009
[…] Anderson prata kan du lyssna på Malmöbaserade podcasten What’s Next som lyckades få en intervju med […]
Renntun.se » Arkiv » Media Evolution-rapport (renntun.se style)
05. Feb, 2009
[…] bättre och mer insiktsfulla betraktelser rekommenderar jag What’s Next-intervjun med Chris Anderson och MJT:s […]
Twingly Blog » Chris Anderson observing the growth of freemium
06. Feb, 2009
[…] is to provide tools for them to stay on the leading edge of innovation on the web. More: Eirikso, What’s Next, Detective Marketing and […]
Veckan som gick gånger två - 5 och 6 at Same Same But Different
08. Feb, 2009
[…] bidrag i bloggstafetten inför Andersons besök. Whats Next gjorde en intervju med Anderson – spana in den! Mattias på Sydsvenskan skriver i Redesignbloggen om evangeliet enligt Chris. Thord Daniel […]
P3 sänder sex timmars special om fildelning | What’s Next
10. Feb, 2009
[…] är bland annat: Vad betyder fildelningen för framtidens informationssamhälle? Är det ett gratissamhälle den kommande generationen förväntar sig? Hur kommer populärkulturen att formas med den nya […]
The Future of Culture - Creative commonage or commercial desert?
02. Sep, 2009
[…] youtube, where films are uploaded to be viewed by anyone. Not in any good quality, but for free. Chris Anderson says in his new book “Free” that with Internet everything goes towards zero in costs. […]