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October 15th, 2006

Giving away cartoons for free

Tim Worstall’s Britblog roundup this week mentioned my gadget cartoon:

Dave Walker sells a cartoon (at least I hope it was sold!) to Gizmodo, where the readers entirely manage to miss the point.

The ‘missing the point’ point was also made by several commenters including Larry and Richard, but it’s the ‘I hope it was sold’ question I wanted to answer.

The answer is, no, I offered this cartoon to Gizmodo for free. Some might raise their eyebrows, but I believe that, on balance, this is a beneficial approach for me.

When I do cartoon that I know will hit the mark for a popular website I often offer it to them for free. I estimate that there a (say) 75% chance they will use it if I make no charge, whereas if I demand money there would be a (say) 2% chance they will use it.

The advantage for me in doing so is that it gets my work out there, I get lots of traffic (technical name for visitors) and links from other smaller sites which follow the big site, which in turn brings more traffic and so on and so forth. There’s a slight boost in advertising money as a result but not a great deal. I also hope that with more eyes looking at my work there is an increased chance that I can pick up another regular cartooning job which is what I really need to do in order to be able to keep doing what I am doing.

The problem of course is that once you start giving things away people are less likely to pay for those things in the future. I think though that in the case of a website like a gadget blog I’m never going to get regular work, not least because I don’t have the knowledge to be able to produce regular gadget-related material.

Knowing what to gie away and what to sell is continually tricky though. I set up We Blog Cartoons with free cartoons for people’s blogs because I am quite a strong believer in offering worthwhile content for people on the internet for nothing. The thinking behind the ‘honesty box’ approach here on CartoonChurch.com is similar. I’m not particularly happy with the ‘members area’ model, where all the good stuff is only accessible once you have paid your money. It seems to me to make sense to have lots of good material on show so that the site is one that people want to tell their friends about.

In theory it should be possible with good content to make quite a bit more money than I do through advertising. I’m not willing to splash obtrusive banners everywhere, but I think I should be able to make a bit more of my living that way if only I could get the ads to work the way they should. But that is a whole other issue.

So, in summary, I’m all for giving away cartoons and things for free on the internet as I think it is a good thing to do and it makes me happy to do it. Any ideas as to how I can continue to do so whilst making a reasonable living would be hugely appreciated.

Oh – please don’t say improve my admin skills and remember to send my invoices out. I know about that already. If you’re waiting for an invoice or some other sort of communication from me it might well be this week. We can but hope.

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6 Responses to “Giving away cartoons for free”


  1. Rhys says:

    This sounds eminently sensible to me, particularly as it has strong echoes of something Tim Worstall asked people to do a year ago. For 2005: Blogged, all the bloggers granted him a non-exclusive, royalty-free license to use their material. He was entirely upfront about this fact in private and also in public. I was more than happy for him to use a few hundred words from Nine Days’ Wonder for free. The book wouldn’t have happened otherwise. As you say, it’s all good publicity and in my case, the chances of me being paid for writing about morris dancing anywhere else were lower than diddly-squat (though obviously, if Penguin Books are reading this, well…)

  2. Tim Worstall says:

    You’re right of course. A slightly throw away remark by me rather than a considered view.
    I do the same with my blog: it’s an advertisement for the fact that I can (to a certain limited standard) actually write. People have and do approach me as a result to offer paid work.

    About increasing revenue from your blog. One tip, have a look in Google Adsense where they tell you where the ‘hot spots’ are to get click throughs.
    Moving my ad strip from top right margin to top left margin moved the click through rate from around 0.2 % to over 1 %. Still not a fortune of course but better at least.

  3. ruth says:

    I know that this doesn’t answer the question you are asking here, but if you were to produce a calendar, I’d buy it!

  4. Rhys says:

    Oh yes, this reminds me that another one of my favourite cartoonists having the surname Walker (and in this case, the first name John) recently asked on his blog how he, too, could justify spending time cartooning. Any ideas, anyone?

  5. ben says:

    i’d buy a calendar too! it’s a great idea.

  6. Mike Newman says:

    How about a bar along the bottom of each cartoon you give away with with an ad Eg.Eat at Joe’s.Yours Mike