Most people who run a website face a dilemma. How much time can they devote to their website? It is clear that a full-time teacher will have little time to produce new online materials. This is a particular problem for those teachers with family commitments. Time spent on the website is to a certain extent, time taken from the family. One justification that a person can make for this “stolen time” is that it produces money for the family budget. This is how I justified the considerable time I spent in the past on writing history books and articles on education. However, people with websites have found it difficult to turn this time into money.
I started my website in September, 1997. The following year I was employed by the Daily Telegraph to write reviews of educational websites. Most of these were produced by teachers. Understandably commercial companies were uninterested in producing free materials for teachers and students to use.
Recently I reread these early reviews. I discovered that most of these teacher websites have disappeared. I suspect the main reason for this is that the teachers could not find the time to create and maintain their websites. Others were still in existence but are now subscription websites. This was inevitable after the introduction of the government’s e-learning credits. This has enabled teachers (and commercial organizations) to charge for their services. This government initiative has resulted in a decline in the amount of free material available.
The idea of the government paying people not to produce free material was always a daft one. It would have been far better for the government to have paid those talented teachers to provide free materials. This material would then have been available to the whole online community. Instead, the material is only available to those who pay the subscription charges. Everybody else no longer gets to using the materials.
There is also a long-term problem associated with this disastrous government strategy. What happens when e-learning credits comes to an end. Will schools still subscribe when it has to come out of its normal budget? The answer to that is probably no. That is what happened when the government introduced special schemes to fund software in the 1980s. In fact, the end of the schemes resulted in many commercial software companies going out of business. The same will happen to those companies providing subscription charges today.
Before e-learning credits there was some discussion about software being developed that would allow website owners to receive “micro-payments” from visitors. The idea being that the internet providers would bill people for visiting websites. This money would then be passed onto the website owners. However, this idea never came to fruition.
What therefore can a website owner take in order to make sure that his or her online materials remain free at the point of delivery?
One way of financing a website is to receive sponsorship from a commercial organization. I was lucky enough to find a company in 1997 to pay for all my internet costs in return for me placing their logo on my home page. Although this has been useful, it does not solve the problem of paying for the time it takes you to produce the content on your website.
The only other way for a website owner to recover the cost of their time is to carry some sort of advertising. This often involves a scheme where the website owner gets a small commission on items sold. Probably the best example of this is Amazon. However, rewards are not great. In my case it has over the years worked out as £1 per 100,000 page impressions.
A more profitable way of raising money is placing an Ask Jeeves search-box on your website. The good thing about this scheme is that you can make money from providing a service for your visitors. Although you only get a small amount per search (1.5 pence) it builds up if you have a busy website. In my case, over the last couple of years I have received about £100 per 100,000 page impressions.
However, I believe a recent development has made it possible for someone to make a reasonable living from producing free online educational materials. This is Google Ad Sense. These scheme delivers relevant ads that are precisely targeted - on a page-by-page basis - to the content people find on your site. I have been running Ad Sense for a couple of months and so far it appears to pay about £125.00 per 100,000 page impressions.
By adding both Ask Jeeves and Ad Sense to every page of your website, it is now possible to make a good living from producing free online materials. My prediction is that we will eventually see a decline in the subscription site and an increase in the number of teachers producing free resources.
