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About the Author
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Stowe Boyd is a well-known media subversive, and an internationally recognized authority on real-time, collaborative and social technologies. His new blog is Message.
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April 19, 2004

My Trip To BloggerCon II

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Posted by Stowe Boyd

I had a great trip to BloggerCon II. Aside from the fact that Harvard is not prepared for an overly warm day in April (air conditioning was inadequate for the mob), the event was otherwise great. Saw a lot of existing friends and "equiantances."

The high point of the symposium for me was the session on "The Business of Blogging" (not to be confused with "Blogging in Business"), led by Jeff Jarvis. I was amazed to discover that we at Corante are in the vanguard of bloggers, inasmuchas we are already deriving measurable revenue from ad-based sponsorship (see the right column, if you haven't noticed them already).

My participation in Jeff's session led to several chats, later, with bloggers and reporters about the fact that the new media of blogging is adopting (or absorbing) some of the traditional financial models of traditional media.

Julie Haggerty
[from The New York Times]

But the most talked about route to profit was selling advertisements that pay by the month or by the number of blog visits. Boing Boing (www.boingboing.net), one of the most popular blogs on the Web with its musings by four freelance writers, is considering adding sponsors as a way to offset its server fees of about $1,000 a month.

But observers wonder how advertising - the lifeblood of mainstream newspapers and magazines - will affect the grass-roots-sensibility of Boing Boing and other blogs.

"It all comes down to personal integrity," Mr. Jarvis said. "If you trust and like and read Boing Boing because you trust and like and read it, there is no reason you wouldn't continue to read them because someone is paying for their server."

Bloggers, like Stowe Boyd, who posts at www.corante.com/getreal/, have no problem reviewing products with one hand and soliciting sponsors with the other. Mr. Boyd, who came to the conference from Reston, Va., makes most of his income as a consultant on collaborative technologies, but credits his blog with about $3,000 in advertising revenue each month. "They can't get me to turn around and promote their product," he said. "It's all my agenda."

Before advertisers will flock to blogs, Mr. Jarvis said, bloggers will need to develop data on who is visiting their site, and how often. "I don't want to blow up a bubble here and say this is going to be huge," Mr. Jarvis said." The beauty of it is it is small and it's in the hands of the people."

Henry Copeland, founder of BlogAds, a service that provides classified advertising for Web logs, is even more confident. He predicted that blogs that are making $5,000 a month will be making five or six times that a year from now. Soon, advertisers will be able to say "I want to buy ads on 25 different Web logs in Southern California written by women who drive humvees," and have the perfect audience at their fingertips, he said.

I was unaware that so few bloggers are making money -- in fact, for many semi-successful bloggers the hobby can take a big bite out of their wallet when a spike in readership leads to additional fees from a hosting provider.

Two important outgrowths of the conference for me:

  • Jeff Jarvis' session led to a straw poll suggesting as a next step that we form a 'blogging business association' to establish guidelines, collectively bargain for insurance (and other services), and lobby for the 'blogging fringe' of the media marketplace.
  • I hope to kick off a seminar series (with the sponsorship and support of Corante) to help bloggers turn the corner on becoming a 'professional blogger' -- for which a full definition is still in development. There is no replacement for great content, but content is not enough. I hope to show others how to put the pieces together so blogging can more than just a solitary obsession, and perhaps enough of a paying proposition so you can quit your day job.

For more information on the seminars, or to get information in general from Get Real, please register in the 'Subscribe' box in the left margin.

Comments (6) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Events | Media


COMMENTS

1. Bill Hobbs on April 21, 2004 02:02 PM writes...

Your blog, according to Site Meter, has fewer than 400 visits a day. How do you make $3,000 in revenue from ad sales on such paltry stats? My blog averages more than 1,500 visits a day - and lately above 2,000. Either you're not really making that much off ads, or I'm charging way too little for ads on my blog.

Permalink to Comment

2. Stowe Boyd on April 21, 2004 03:51 PM writes...

Maybe its because I write a blog oriented toward a relatively tightly defined sector of the high-tech industry -- real-time, collaborative, and social technologies -- and I attract readers and influencers interested in that space. I went to your site: I'm not advertising gas grills and mattresses while reporting on mass market, political issues ("how the drycleaning industry is increasingly burdened by government regulations"). If I was in that space, I would have to be attracting hundreds of thousands of readers per month to sell anything.

Permalink to Comment

3. Bill Hobbs on April 21, 2004 09:32 PM writes...

Mattresses? Must have been a Google adsense ad.

Still, my traffic is much higher than yours, and my audience is virtually all conservative and politically active - and my readers include folks in elected office at the state and federal level, even some folks at the Council of Economic Advisers (in the White House). It's not like my audience is trailer trash with no money and no influence. Perhaps what's lacking is proof of my audience demographics.

I have had some success attracting political candidates' ads.

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4. Stowe Boyd on April 22, 2004 07:23 AM writes...

I mistook a vitamins and health supplements ad for a mattress ad. I don't know why.

My point really is that there are a tremendous number of political/op ed blogs, and these may appeal to large readership. MOre specialized trade oriented publications may have smaller, more focused readership (how many people in the world want to sit through a reveiw of three contending file sharing applications?) but that may still be good for a selected market of vendors.

Permalink to Comment

5. Robert Cox on April 23, 2004 10:10 AM writes...

Bill,

I am as mystified as you on how to make money from my Blog. After sitting in Jeff's Blogging fo Dollars session at BloggerCon I came away believing that the first step was to ask the question - why I am not making as much money as someone like Stowe?

I think it is more than just narrowcasting - although that is very important - but also picking up the phone and pitching my site to businesses that would benefit from reach my audience. The truth is I am not sure what to say and most have businesses are not familiar with Blogs.

What really drives me crazy is the lack of standardization on traffic data, and what actually matters to advertisers. Henry Copeland at BlogAds says it's all about passionate communities, Jeff Jarvis says is about reliable data that advertisers can understand, Stowe is advocating narrowcasting - and, to a certain, extend, collaborating within a Corante model. On top of that I tend not to believe a lot of what I hear.

Permalink to Comment

6. Robert Cox on April 23, 2004 10:11 AM writes...

yeech...excuse the typos and sloppiness of the post...I was too lazy to open Word.

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