If Consumers Will Pay $50 To Remove It, What's It Doing There In The First Place?

from the penny-wise-pound-foolish dept

That didn’t take long. On Friday morning, PC World reported that that it would offer a “Fresh Start” option on certain of its laptops: for an extra $50, Sony would remove all the annoying “trial software” that apparently infests a lot of PC laptops these days (as a smug Mac user, I can’t say I’ve experienced this firsthand). Not surprisingly, the announcement generated a firestorm of controversy, and within hours, Sony’s PR reps rushed out to reassure people that it was all a big misunderstanding. Sony won’t charge for “Fresh Start” after all, and will instead offer it as a free option. But only on certain laptops and only for customers who upgrade to the business version of Vista.

The fact that it thought of offering such a service at all — for a fee or otherwise — suggests that Sony has a rather short-sighted attitude toward its business. PC manufacturers reportedly get as much as $60 per PC in kickbacks from software vendors to put trial software on their customers’ computers. Apparently, in the low-margin PC business, that’s too much cash to pass up. But putting bloatware on PCs is a bad strategy for precisely the same reason that filling your website with intrusive ads is a bad strategy. It might make more money in the short run, but it ruins your brand and reduces the chances you’ll get repeat customers. The reason that customers choose a name-brand PC over a dirt-cheap white-label one is that they want to minimize hassles. A good name-brand manufacturer carefully chooses components that will ensure a hassle-free experience. It would be stupid to pick a flaky graphics card because it’s five bucks cheaper: the angry customers would cost a lot more than five bucks in the long run. By the same token, forcing customers to take software they don’t want is going to cost a lot more in customer satisfaction than it’s going to gain in revenue. Manufacturers should only bundle third-party software that enhances (or at least doesn’t diminish) the value of the product to the end user. (Dell’s contract with Google is a good example of how to do this right.) In the long run, firms that zealously protect the quality of their user experience will do better than those that allow the customer experience to be undermined in order to make a quick buck.

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Companies: sony

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Comments on “If Consumers Will Pay $50 To Remove It, What's It Doing There In The First Place?”

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31 Comments
dUc0N says:

Bloatware Proliferation

I may be off a bit, but I feel it’s also important to note the likelihood that the bloatware packaging started small and then snowballed. It most likely (IMHO) started with AOL saying “hey, we’ll give you $0.50 per CD that you bundle in with your computers,” something that made sense on a large scale. This probably evolved into “$1 to let us sneak a preinstalled trial version onto the desktop,” and it didn’t take long for other companies to jump on the bandwagon.

The point I’m trying to make is that it may not have been a big issue (or may have even been a non-issue) at first, but lately it seems to have gotten much worse. It’s also worth pointing out that there is a sector of consumers that doesn’t mind, as long as these ad revenues are passed on in the form of savings. I’ve seen a few people say they wouldn’t mind an ad splash every time they booted their PC if it paid for their video card, for example. This is a relatively small number of people, though.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Bloatware Proliferation

I like that idea. I would gladly add a bit of time to my boot time if it made a better computer cheaper for me.

I agree. I like adware too because it makes computers and software cheaper and makes me aware of great offers for some really good products. And trialware gives me a great opportunity to try out quality programs that I wouldn’t be able to otherwise. How can you beat that? In fact, I’m just surprised they don’t charge *extra* for all the free stuff they put on computers these days. When I go shopping for a new computer I look for one that has as much free stuff as possible on it. The wonders of marketing!

blue says:

The first thing I do on a new computer is wipe the trial software and bloat. I’ve never had a computer that had an obscene amount of it, so getting rid of it isn’t that big of a deal. I would rather spend a half hour cleaning out the bloat in exchange for the savings. Although it would be interesting to see exactly how much those savings are and how much the manufacturer is paid.

Phil says:

Re: Bloat

Last time I crashed hard (lucky it was S/W and not H/W,that crashed), I get rid of the junk after a fresh reload.

Crashed again and couldn’t recover, kept saying wrong machine (?). Stuck a Linux Ubuntu dick in and in a while after loading was back on line.

When I found that it ran on my old Toshiba 1414-S173, I installed it.
Cr

Steve R. (profile) says:

Only the Computer Itslef

Even though I was not in the market for a new computer, when I was in Best Buy I asked if I could buy a computer without the operating system so that I would be able to install Linux. The salesperson said that was not possible. We should not be forced to pay for unwanted components.

The computer store where I have bought my computers does offer the option of buying a computer with a choice of operating systems, including the no-operating system choice with the appropriate discount.

On a slightly different bloatware topic; last night my firewall reported that an unknown iTunes program was attempting to access the internet. While this program was innocuous it does point to the continued practice for unknown programs to be silently loaded on your computer and to operate without your knowledge.

Considering how many of these companies want to protect their so-called “intellectual property”, if they give this stuff away (install it on your computer without your permission), it should be considered in the public domain. They have no right to pass a usage liability on you if they give you the program without your permission. Its a “gift”.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Only the Computer Itslef

Steve brings up an interesting point:
“Considering how many of these companies want to protect their so-called “intellectual property”, if they give this stuff away (install it on your computer without your permission), it should be considered in the public domain.”

In addition, if they install it without your consent is the EULA binding?

Dan J. says:

Bad business?

Apparently, in the low-margin PC business, that’s too much cash to pass up. But putting bloatware on PCs is a bad strategy for precisely the same reason that filling your website with intrusive ads is a bad strategy. It might make more money in the short run, but it ruins your brand and reduces the chances you’ll get repeat customers.

This is true if, and only if, there are lots of repeat buyers and it’s possible to buy a computer somewhere that doesn’t have crapware installed. High volume buyers are mostly businesses, and business models often don’t have crapware installed on them. The average home user buys a new computer once every few years or so. The bitter taste of dealing with the crapware is fogotten by the time they buy their next computer. Additionally, they tend to be extremely price sensitive. And all of the major dealers of which I’m aware load up their low price, home systems with crapware.

Steak says:

(as a smug Mac user, I can’t say I’ve experienced this firsthand)

No pesky trial software on a mac? You seem to be forgetting about this demon-trial that comes preinstalled on it called “Microsoft Office”. Don’t forget about the crippled version of Quicktime, which encourages you to buy the full version to use “Advanced” features like full-screen video.

Bah, mac users being immuned to trial software. I don’t buy it for a second.

PaulShen (user link) says:

Benefit with No Downside

The reason hardware companies have been allowed to get away with this for so many years is they have the advantage of blaming the OS manufactuer. While this software may drive up complaints to Sony’s support line, they ultimatly fall back on blaming the performance/instability problems on Windows. Because of the complex ecosystem between hardware and OS vendor Sony does not take the entire brunt of the blame but is able to shift the blame to Microsoft. The average computer user blames the OS for software problems, seldom do they blame the hardware manufacture unless there is smoke or a clear hardware problem.

Gunnar says:

If they had just offered the bloated package as a $50 discount and charged a higher base price, they could have avoided the whole PR mess.

I’d gladly take a $50 discount on my computer for a bunch of software that isn’t going to be on the computer after I re-install the OS.

“Even though I was not in the market for a new computer, when I was in Best Buy I asked if I could buy a computer without the operating system so that I would be able to install Linux. The salesperson said that was not possible. We should not be forced to pay for unwanted components.”

You’re not forced to pay for unwanted components. You can pick whatever store you want to buy your computer from.

Anonymous Coward says:

“Manufacturers should only bundle third-party software that enhances (or at least doesn’t diminish) the value of the product to the end user. (Dell’s contract with Google is a good example of how to do this right.”

Huh? Dell most certainly does not do it right. I purchased my very-high-priced XPS gaming system last year, and instead of spending my first evening with it installing and patching WoW, I spent it uninstalling crap.

Not just crap that takes up hard drive space, but crap that is automatically set top connect to the Internet and update itself and God knows what else. Crap that uses a ton of MY system resources. When I got the computer, I had wireless Internet, and I had so much stuff going on at start-up and with the net that I could barely check my e-mail. It sucked! And I know it was Dell.

Furthermore, we use Dells at work and when we buy new computers it’s the same damned thing. I spent forever uninstalling so we can actually use the business machines (purchased with a business account, by the way) that we paid a mint for. Last time we purchased new computers (and we only purchased three) I spent 8 hours removing everything, including drive time to our other store, and it was all overtime hours because I had to get it done before the stores opened the next day. They paid me more than 50 bucks to take it off. I would love the option to pay a bit extra to make up for that revenue and not have to do it at all.

Dell would definitely reap some goodwill from me.

simon says:

well i get payed too

i work on a little tech firm doing mostly pc cleaning jobs (mostly from viruses, etc) and little sales, but one main source of income lately is cleaning bloat ware from new acquired laptops/desktops of brand name (dell/hp/packard bell) you name-it, and more lots want to “get me free of this Vista crap, put me a healthy XP Pro.” so, from my point of view all that they do by this contracts is to give the little guys some work, so thanks 🙂

Paul says:

It is simple math

PC manufacturer gets money for putting software on the PC and they pass this onto you so the PC is cheaper with the crapware on it. Thus if the computer does not come with crapware then it is more expensive.

This is similar to how it is cheaper at some manufacturers to buy a PC with Windows installed than the same PC without Windows.

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