RyanHoliday.net - Meditations on strategy and life
  • Home
  • About
  • Newsletter
  • Reading List
  • Blog
  • Best Articles
    • Archive
  • Speaking
  • Books and Courses
  • Contact
Home
About
Newsletter
Reading List
Blog
Best Articles
    Archive
Speaking
Books and Courses
Contact
  • Home
  • About
  • Newsletter
  • Reading List
  • Blog
  • Best Articles
    • Archive
  • Speaking
  • Books and Courses
  • Contact
RyanHoliday.net - Meditations on strategy and life
Blog

Myspace’s Poor Earnings.

Myspace’s Monthly Advertising Figures

Am I the only one who is less than impressed that a site with a 150 million users is pulling a measly $25 million a month? Myspace pulls in roughly 40 billion pageviews a month and they’re barely pulling in $100 million a quarter in revenue? As an advertiser that would make me worry; think about how little an impression is worth on Myspace. Think about how many of those must not even be genuine eyeballs at the screen, but error messages, glitches, landing pages, obfuscation, and poor design. Honestly, I’m surprised that an investor as disciplined and value-driven as Murdoch would accept this mediocrity.

I don’t mean to get into some design digression, but I don’t even remember the last time I looked at someone’s profile. I check my messages, friend requests, bulletins and leave. Which I think serves as a warning to designers, webmasters and owners out there: Value quality over quantity. All we ever hear about Myspace is how many users it has, about it’s stellar growth rate and apparently manifest destiny to rule the Internet. But when you look at the numbers, the site is abysmally dysfunctional. I remember reading somewhere that Weblogs Inc does a million plus in revenue a month, and you know their traffic is nothing compared to the big social networks. But they’ve figured out their audience, and how to market it to them. They ooze efficiency and maximize profits. I think Myspace almost has that old media mindset of believing that hugeness is the only avenue to profit. We all know that The Long Tail disproves that in a very real way. And Myspace is and will pay the price–hits are becoming less and less rational, and all the harder to come by. Like Hollywood they seem to think that a blockbuster is the only reasonable goal, wholly ignoring the fact that perhaps a series of smaller, niche successes might be a better route. I think you need to start looking at the opportunity costs of trying to be THE site on the Internet. The real dilemma that webmasters are faced with are: Is it better to have a plethora of fickle, peripheral users or a core audience of dedicated niche?

I think the answer is the latter. And as Chris Anderson said, the money of the future is then in the aggregation thereof.

Tweet
February 12, 2007by Ryan Holiday
Blog

Recommended Reading

The new Rudius Media Message Board launched yesterday, and along with it came the Rudius Media Writing Forum which Ben Corman is running. It’s going to be sort of workshop for writers looking to grow, readers looking to learn, editors looking for new projects, and so on. One of the first threads up was the Recommended Reading thread, and though I’m too tired to post more on the topic right now, here are some books I put up that have been especially influential as of late…

Continue reading

Tweet
February 11, 2007by Ryan Holiday
Blog

Link Dump 2.8

–20% Borders Coupon

(Always valid, updates weekly. I’ve never paid full price for a book at Borders.)

–Calacanis interview with Business Week

(His take on self-sufficient advertising, Federated Media, Weblogs Inc, potential new media titans)

–The Top Ten Stupid Ways to Hinder Market Adoption

(Ben tagged this to me. Good list of horrible business strategies on the internet)

–Differentiate Your Blog or Die

(How to make your blog sticky, and how to stand out)

–Tragedy of the commons-Collective Action Problems

(Wikipedia. Ruin is the destination toward which all men rush… )

Rudius Press:

(Disclosure: I run PR for these authors)

–Jim Wirt of ColoringBookLand Interviewed by Matt Sorum/Billy Morrison

(Camp Freddy Radio–Dave Navarro’s band–are huge CBL fans, so they did a segment with Jim)

–Eric Schaeffer wants to marry you

(This might be the creepiest, most disturbing interview in the history of online journalism. My soul is crying.)

Tweet
February 8, 2007by Ryan Holiday
Page 293 of 295« First...102030«292293294295»

“If you only read the books that everyone else is reading, you can only think what everyone else is thinking.” - Murakami

© 2018 copyright Ryan Holiday // All rights reserved // Privacy Policy
This site directs people to Amazon and is an Amazon Associate member.