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<title>When is Right-To-Copy Course Licensing Right For You?</title>
<meta name="description" content="A funny thing happens when customers have sizeable training populations.  Rather than pay per user, many larger and more self-sufficient customers seek to negotiate a blanket license fee for their entire organization.  Here are some guidelines to help you respond.">
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                <td width="1">&nbsp;</td>
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                  <p><span class="default"><b><span class="default">When is &quot;Right-To-Copy&quot; 
                    Course Licensing Right For You?</span></b></span> </p>
                  <p><span class="default">If you're like most training companies, 
                    you don't sell your courseware, you license it. Why? Because 
                    you want to place limits and conditions on the use of your 
                    intellectual property -- and you need more than the simple 
                    copyright and trademark protection you'd receive if you sold 
                    it outright.</span> 
                  <p><span class="default"><span class="default">The most common 
                    condition associated with licensing training materials has 
                    to do with limiting use to one individual, and this is the 
                    way course pricing has traditionally been set. So if a customer 
                    has 271 employees who require training, then they are required 
                    to pony up $250 (or whatever the per user license fee is) 
                    x 271. What could be simpler or more lucrative for you -- 
                    especially if your customer has a huge employee population 
                    to be trained.</span></span></p>
                  <p><span class="default"><span class="default">Unfortunately, 
                    a funny thing happens when customers have sizeable trainee 
                    populations. Rather than pay per user, many larger and more 
                    self-sufficient customers seek to negotiate a blanket license 
                    fee for their entire organization. What's more, what they're 
                    prepared to offer is almost always way less than you would 
                    receive based on your published per user price list and standard 
                    volume discounts.</span></span></p>
                  <p><span class="default"><span class="default">Blanket licenses 
                    go by a number of names. Old-fashioned customers may ask for 
                    a "Right to Print" license. Now that training has gone digital, 
                    the request may be for a "Right to Reproduce", "Right to Copy" 
                    or "Right to Use" license. Or, borrowing from software industry 
                    lingo, the request may be for an "Enterprise" or "Site" or 
                    "Server" license.</span></span></p>
                  <p><span class="default"><span class="default">Whatever you 
                    call it, and as disturbing as it may seem to you, how should 
                    you respond to a customer's request to decouple from per user 
                    pricing? Here are some guidelines to help you decide:</span></span></p>
                  <ol type=A>
                    <li><span class="default">Clarify Motives</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Not every right-to-reproduce request 
                        is a thinly disguised attempt to pay you 10 cents on the 
                        dollar. Ask your customer "why is this important to you?"</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Perhaps your customer is simply 
                        seeking the freedom to put their own stamp on your course. 
                        They want the flexibility to include their own logo and 
                        key message elements -- maybe even a flattering photo 
                        of the CEO!</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Or your customer may be seeking 
                        to integrate your course or elements of your course in 
                        a seamless way with other course content -- or totally 
                        customize some or all of your learning content to their 
                        specific situation.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Another reason why your customer 
                        may be seeking a right-to-copy license is because they 
                        feel your materials are too lavish and they don't want 
                        to pay for fancy packaging. (Check out "Who's Minding 
                        the Store on Course Manufacturing Costs" in the May 9, 
                        1999 issue of Training Business E-Visory located in the 
                        back issues section of our Website.)</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Yet another possible motive is 
                        to avoid the bookkeeping and administration associated 
                        with inventorying course materials and keeping track of 
                        each and every course participant.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Sometimes customers seek a right-to-copy 
                        license because times are good and they want to lock in 
                        their next 2-5 years worth of training needs during the 
                        current fiscal period. Or they may want to even out payments 
                        by paying a fixed amount every quarter.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Once you've clarified your customer's 
                        motives, there's a reasonably good chance you may be able 
                        to respond to their needs without de-coupling from a per 
                        user pricing scheme.</span> 
                      <p> 
                      <p></p>
                    </li>
                    <li><span class="default">Determine Value</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Let's face it, you shouldn't care 
                        how a customer prefers to pay for your intellectual property 
                        so long as you receive adequate compensation for the value 
                        received.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">However, the first thing to understand 
                        is that even if you should decide to de-couple from per 
                        user pricing, training is still a people business -- and 
                        value is always a function of the number of people trained. 
                        So the trick is figuring out what sort of factor to use.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">For instance, let's suppose your 
                        customer has 2500 employees who could conceivably be trained 
                        during the period they are seeking to license your courseware. 
                        Together you develop the following scenario:</span> 
                      <p> 
                      <table width=360 border="0">
                        <tr> 
                          <td class="default">&nbsp;</td>
                          <td width="28%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center><b>Number of<br>
                              employees</b></div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="30%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center><b>Likelihood of<br>
                              being trained</b></div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="29%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center><b>Weighted #<br>
                              of trainees</b></div>
                          </td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr> 
                          <td width="13%" class="default">&nbsp;</td>
                          <td width="28%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>500</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="30%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>100%</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="29%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>500</div>
                          </td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr> 
                          <td width="13%" class="default">&nbsp;</td>
                          <td width="28%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>1,000</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="30%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>50%</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="29%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>500</div>
                          </td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr> 
                          <td width="13%" class="default">&nbsp;</td>
                          <td width="28%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>500</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="30%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>25%</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="29%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>125</div>
                          </td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr> 
                          <td width="13%" class="default">&nbsp;</td>
                          <td width="28%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>500</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="30%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>0%</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="29%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>0</div>
                          </td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr> 
                          <td width="13%" class="default">&nbsp;</td>
                          <td width="28%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center></div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="30%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center></div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="29%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center></div>
                          </td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr> 
                          <td width="13%" class="default">TOTAL</td>
                          <td width="28%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>2,500</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="30%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center></div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="29%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>1,125</div>
                          </td>
                        </tr>
                      </table>
                      <span class="default"><br>
                      Therefore, should your customer want to purchase a right-to-copy 
                      license, your go-in position might be the amount you would 
                      charge for 1125 users under your standard per user method 
                      -- less your standard volume discount and any savings you 
                      would realize from not having to provide physical training 
                      materials.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">But, life isn't usually this easy.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Suppose your customer wants to 
                        substantially customize 50% of your course content, and 
                        leave the rest on the cutting room floor. If this is the 
                        case, it may make sense to factor the weighted number 
                        of trainees by the percentage of your content the customer 
                        is actually benefiting from. Let's say you and your customer 
                        agree on a content usage factor of 40%. Given this scenario, 
                        you'd complete your per user pricing equivalent as follows: 
                        </span> 
                      <p> 
                      <table width=360 border="0">
                        <tr> 
                          <td>&nbsp;</td>
                          <td width="28%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center><b>Weighted #<br>
                              of trainees</b></div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="30%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center><b>Course content<br>
                              utilization</b></div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="29%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center><b>Weighted<br>
                              trainee value</b></div>
                          </td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr> 
                          <td width="13%">&nbsp;</td>
                          <td width="28%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>1,125</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="30%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>40%</div>
                          </td>
                          <td width="29%" class="default"> 
                            <div align=center>450</div>
                          </td>
                        </tr>
                      </table>
                      <span class="default"><span class="default"><br>
                      <span class="default">If you and your customer can't agree 
                      on how many employees will actually wind up benefiting from 
                      your courseware and what percent of your course content 
                      will actually be utilized, consider accepting your customer's 
                      estimate. Remember that constantly evolving business conditions 
                      mean that many training intentions never bear fruit. So 
                      there's always a chance your customer is paying you for 
                      training that will never take place at all!<br>
                      </span></span> </span> 
                      <p></p>
                    </li>
                    <li><span class="default">Evaluate Threats</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Try and feel out your customer 
                        as to what they will do if you aren't able to work out 
                        a mutually satisfactory right-to-copy license arrangement. 
                        Then come up with your own sense of your customer's options 
                        and alternatives in conjunction with your account salesperson.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">If you conclude your courseware 
                        is uniquely suited to your customer's needs and they would 
                        be hard pressed to come up with a substitute, then you 
                        are in a pretty good negotiating position.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">On the other hand, sometimes customers 
                        ask for a right-to-copy license when they have been paying 
                        you in a per user way for years and have acquired enough 
                        subject matter expertise and instructional design savvy 
                        (they think!) to easily develop their own course.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Or your customer may have sourced 
                        15 comparable suppliers who are eager to give away their 
                        courseware if it means getting a toehold in the account.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">In either of these situations, 
                        logically factoring your standard per user pricing in 
                        order to arrive at a right-to-copy price is not likely 
                        to clinch the deal. So you will need to add additional 
                        value to help you justify your price -- or you will need 
                        to satisfy yourself that there are excellent strategic 
                        reasons for caving in. Otherwise, your wisest move is 
                        to pass.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">A while back a customer offered 
                        to pay one of my clients $250 -- a measly 50 cents per 
                        user -- for a perpetual right-to-copy courseware license. 
                        "What will you do if we don't go along with your offer?" 
                        my client asked. "Then we'll just keep on copying your 
                        courses for nothing, like we've been doing all along" 
                        responded the customer.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">If you're up against a blatant 
                        or implied threat to illicitly copy your material, your 
                        CEO should have a courteous but frank discussion with 
                        your customer's CEO on copyright infringement and its 
                        consequences. In my experience, most senior people are 
                        honorable folks who will take action on your behalf to 
                        nip any potential abuses in the bud.</span> 
                      <p> 
                      <p></p>
                    </li>
                    <li><span class="default">Stay Connected</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">When customers seek right-to-copy 
                        licenses, there's a temptation for training companies 
                        to "take the money and run." Nothing could be a bigger 
                        mistake.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Let's assume your customer is seeking 
                        to license your courseware because they want to substantially 
                        customize it and integrate it with other learning content 
                        in developing an enterprise wide curriculum. Offer to 
                        help! After all, nobody knows your content better than 
                        you do, and you may well be able to persuade your customer 
                        that paying you to do the work is more cost effective 
                        than trying to do it themselves.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Also offer to help your customer 
                        repackage your product to put their own stamp on it -- 
                        or to help them better manage and administer training 
                        delivery.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">By the way, don't try to frighten 
                        customers into handing over their courseware customization 
                        needs to you by making Chicken Little pronouncements like 
                        this:</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">"Unsanctioned efforts to modify 
                        our courseware will void any performance guarantees and 
                        could lead to general loss of brain function among trainee 
                        populations."</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Customers will perceive this as 
                        an insult and question your commitment to making the modifications 
                        they need.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Finally, even if your customer 
                        is adamantly self sufficient and doesn't take you up on 
                        your offer to help, be sure to check in regularly on how 
                        the training effort is going. Why? Because sooner or later 
                        your customer is going to be in the market for a new training 
                        solution. And you want to be in the picture to provide 
                        it.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">One way to make this happen is 
                        to schedule periodic program reviews as part of the original 
                        license agreement.</span> 
                      <p> 
                      <p></p>
                    </li>
                    <li><span class="default">Plan for Contingencies</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Don't enter into right-to-copy 
                        courseware license agreements that don't offer you the 
                        ability to periodically recalibrate or, if necessary, 
                        end the relationship. Why? Because circumstances can change.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">For instance, you will need to 
                        negotiate in advance what happens should you update your 
                        courseware during the license term. Is your customer entitled 
                        to the new material? Don't be too quick to say yes. Obsoleting 
                        your own courseware is an excellent way to remedy a right-to-copy 
                        deal that's gone sour -- or strike up a new deal that's 
                        more in your favor.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Also try and negotiate some sort 
                        of inspection process to help you monitor how widely your 
                        customer is using your material and how well they are 
                        abiding by any contractual limitations. Try and frame 
                        this as a benefit to your customer and, indeed, use this 
                        occasion to offer suggestions as to how your customer 
                        can get more value out of your intellectual property.</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Do be wary about offering right-to-copy 
                        licenses of an unrestricted and perpetual nature based 
                        on loose language and trust. What happens when your trusted 
                        client leaves for another company? Suppose your customer 
                        is acquired by a foreign firm that has a casual regard 
                        for copyright and trademark conventions? Suppose your 
                        customer decides to go into the training business and 
                        sell a thinly disguised version of your own course against 
                        you!</span> 
                      <p><span class="default">Finally, only diamonds are forever. 
                        So do be sure that your right-to-copy license has a termination 
                        date and that any options to renew are at your discretion.</span> 
                    </li>
                  </ol>
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