The web is shrinking, says Ben Elowitz. Strip out the growth of Facebook and the rest of the web, the "searchable web", shrank by 9% in the 12 months to March 2011.
This is game-changing for publishers, possibly the emergence of a whole new strategy cycle. If all you're doing is optimising pages of content for Google, well...
(1) you're part of a zero-sum game in which every publisher in your category uses the same publicly-available data to chase the same audience as they search on the same keywords;
(2) the stuff you write for Google isn't all that appealing to people so you'll get them through the door and watch them bounce out after they've seen one page; and
(3) that pie you're fighting for a share of is shrinking anyway (hee hee, mixed metaphors are funny).
Continue reading "Optimise what?" »
Three things interest me about the John Snow debacle (if you haven't followed the saga of a Soho pub kicking out two gay drinkers for kissing, summary here), two of them mainly about Facebook.
First, the incident itself seems to indicate that the internet has made the maintenance of private little fiefdoms of bigotry harder than ever. Run a covertly homophobic, racist or otherwise unsavory pub even ten years ago and it was non-trivial for anyone to do much about it. Now that a protest as peacefully whimsical as a kiss-in can be knocked together on Facebook, not once but as often as the pub tries to lock the protestors out, it's much harder. I'm as much a fan of cultural diversity and people being allowed to do what they like as the next virtual federalist, but one of the consequences of freedom, even the freedom to be a bigot, is bearing its consequences - including nationwide calumny and what looks increasingly for the John Snow's current management like financial disaster.
Continue reading "Privacy and publicity" »
So the latest numbers are in for the Times paywall. Now eight months old it deserves, perhaps, to no longer be dubbed an experiment. Charging for people to look at the Times online is now business as usual in the Wapping fortress, and business as usual is doing...ok. Over at Paidcontent there's a copy of the full release and Robert Andrews takes a more detailed look at what the numbers mean.
At the end of the first four months behind a paywall they'd racked up 50,000 actual subscribers (people paying £2 a week) plus 105,000 other "digital purchase events" - people buying a one-day pass. Four more months on, at the end of Feb, they have a total of 79,000 monthly subscribers and a total 222,000 "sales of digital products" - people buying a one-day pass, plus sales of the Sunday Times iPad app. So, as Paidcontent notes, subscription sales have slowed down but sales overall have increased.
Continue reading "News International seeks to establish a print/online equivalence that simply isn't there" »
I've been thinking about the new Internet bubble for a while: today I saw what, for me, clinched it that the bubble is back. Here, in order, are the six signs that we're in a new net bubble.
(1) Hugely improbable specialist etailers like iwantadoor.com advertising (indeed sponsoring) prime-time TV shows. When I saw them appear in the sponsorship slot tonight I immediately knew I was looking at the next Pets.com. That's not a happy connection for any company and it's not a happy moment for our market.
(2) Massive valuations placed on stocks that have never returned a profit. Demand Media (even with all its weird accounting) still wasn't making a profit when it got listed at $2bn. HuffPo just got bought as it went into marginal profitability. People are spending billions to own businesses that have yet to return a penny. That's not healthy, rational investing. That's dumb money hitching itself to a rising bandwagon (yes, I just said "rising bandwagon") and hoping to offload the shares before it falls.
Continue reading "Six signs of a new net bubble" »
So AOL buys HuffPo for $315m, valuing (as Chris Tolles points out) their 26m ComScore users at $12 each. We're not (yet) in the Broadcast.com league but it's still an excitingly bubbly valuation at ten times 2010 revenues, five times even management's own 2011 revenue forecast and god knows what multiple of the presumably nominal profitability they claim the site achieved in the fifth year since it launched.
AOL is betting the farm on monetising professionally-created content via display advertising. That's a big bet, but of course for AOL it's not a new one - acquiring HuffPo is simply a continuation of the strategy that AOL has been pursuing since it parted company with Time Warner. Engadget, Politics Daily, Techcrunch and especially Patch are all long bets on paying writers and then serving display ads over the results, and if that's the strategy this is a smart push for more of the same.
Continue reading "AOL's big bet that advertisers will get a bit (but not a lot) smarter" »
Outrage (and disappointment) is just breaking out over the Facebook "like" button, which allows FB to track not just the browsing habits of its users (which, let's face it, is now most of the online population) but also non-users. According to Arnold Roosendaal's paper (pdf), "the tool is also used to place cookies on the user’s computer, regardless whether a user actually uses the button when visiting a website."
Continue reading "We know that it's a crocodile" »