Eight big Slovenian publishers are about to start charging for parts of their online content all at the same time, using a single payment kiosk that was pioneered in Slovakia and could soon be expanding elsewhere.
The Piano system will let customers pay €4.90 per month (or €1.99 per week, or €48.90 per year) to access to the gamut of competing sites, which are eight newspapers, two magazines and one pure-play news site.
The scheme begins fully on February 20, following soft introduction of an access wall minus fees on January 20. Piano hopes to sign up one percent of Slovenia’s 1.3 million internet population.
Publisher participants include Slovenia’s largest news house, Delo, which will require Piano membership for 10 to 15 percent of its content including exclusive stories, interviews, opinions and features.
Like in Slovakia, publishers are not requiring payment for all content. Delo will publish two versions of its articles. To non-subscribers, the proportion of articles inside the pay quota will remain a “nevertheless complete, self-sufficient, meaningful whole”, CrnkoviÄ promises, saying premium versions will merely include extra bells and whistles.
Still, CrnkoviÄ adds “Piano is just the first phase of the monetisation of digital content”. Later in 2012, Delo will add a further payment option that more closely resembles the New York Times’ metre and will allow tablet access.
Hold-outs from the scheme include the Finance.si business daily, the Pop TV broadcaster, the Telecom ISP’s news portal, and public TV and radio.
On May 2, 2011, nine major Slovakian news and magazine publishers plugged parts of their sites in to Piano. Piano claimed to hit its subscription target within two days.
Despite claiming it took €40,000 in its first month, it is not clear exactly how many subscribers Piano has in Slovakia. The company claims success in what is a small population and a small internet market.
Seventy percent of subscription revenue goes back to publishers, balanced according to audience. Piano’s Slovenian fees are costlier than in Slovakia.
In September, Piano took €300,000 in first round funding from local VC Monogram Ventures to try international expansion.
Bella also now tells paidContent: “We are in the process of raising a series B investment that would cover costs to start up in several dozen countries in the next few years. However, we generate enough revenue that we can launch a few more countries in 2012 without a second round of investment.”
We first wrote about the startup in November 2010.
Piano’s Slovenian participants
- Delo d.d. – Delo (daily broadsheet), Slovenske Novice (daily tabloid)
- Dnevnik – Dnevnik (daily broadsheet)
- ÄŒZP VeÄer – VeÄer (daily broadsheet)
Žurnal Media – Žurnal 24 (daily free paper)- Primorske Novice – Primorske Novice (regional newspaper)
- Gorenjski Glas – Gorenjski Glas (regional newspaper)
- Skupina Krater – Dolenjski List (regional daily), Ekipa (daily sport paper), Moj Mikro (IT magazine), Auto Bild (car magazine)
- Report – PozaReport (tabloid news site)
- Nevtron & company Racunalniske-novice (IT magazine)
NB. Zurnal did not yet sign.