No, you show me the money

So how do you make any money from this Web 2.0 business? Ajit Jaokar has written an inter­esting post on Web 2.0 revenue models. He argues that charging premium fees to a select group of users dis­qual­i­fies sites from being Web 2.0, since the project depends upon mon­et­ising the “long tail”. Similarly, a charged-​​for service does not count according to this defin­i­tion since it isn’t util­ising all of our col­lective intel­li­gence. The remaining list of options for making money is quite short, as you might expect:

I have used inform­a­tion from some excel­lent work done by Dion Hinchcliffe and spe­cific­ally one of his blogs ‘Creating real business value with Web 2.0’

a) The resur­gent adverting model driven by rich media and broad­band. Once dis­missed, the ad
sponsored model is back with a bang! The software industry is about a $40 billion a year industry.
Advertising is worth about ten times as much and its all moving online(hence witness news­pa­pers in
fin­an­cial quagmire).

b) To re-​​emphasise, the mon­et­iz­a­tion of the long tail is critical in a web 2.0 business model

c) Gaining control of a hard to create data source and then being able to suc­cess­fully monetise it(for example: www.craigslist.com)

d) Web services including mashups: amazon.com is the best example. Currently estim­ated to be earning Amazon $211 million a year. The Amazon web services model ‘decent­ral­ises’ the store by con­verting the store itself into an open, easy to use platform.

(NB: This is only a small portion of Ajit’s post, for reasons of space. I recom­mend that you read the whole thing — it’s inter­esting and succinct).

However, I think he’s wrong.

The ad-​​sponsored model may be back with a ven­geance, but the only people making money out of it are Google and Yahoo! investors. The ‘long tail’ with their 1000 visitors will not be able to give up the day job soon on their $5 a week. The vast majority of bloggers are making a lot less than this from advert­ising. The only reason blogs carry Google ads is because they don’t really have a lot of other options. Given that main­taining their blog is driven by other ambi­tions: personal sat­is­fac­tion, com­mu­nic­a­tion with family and friends, personal branding, etc, then this lack of ad revenue is accept­able. But could 99% of blog writers fund them­selves from blogs on their sites? I don’t think so.

Similarly, while I am sure that Amazon makes a lot of extra money from mash-​​ups, but how much are the creators of those applic­a­tions making? I really have no idea, but I suspect they make a lot less than Amazon.

Like a lot of argu­ments, this is all about semantics. Ajit believes that a suc­cessful Web 2.0 business must “monetise the long tail”. Hmm. That seems to restrict Web 2.0 to com­panies that can generate millions of eyeballs at a very low cost. Even then, it is prob­lem­atic. I’m inclined to believe that some of the highest profile, ad-​​funded Web 2.0 prop­er­ties (MySpace, YouTube, any other social networking/​bookmarking site you can mention) is strug­gling to make their ad sales higher than the cost of main­taining their respective networks. I can see that Google, Yahoo! and Amazon are making money from the long tail. But are these Web 2.0 ventures? Or are they tra­di­tional busi­nesses who have adapted very cleverly to the new trends in web traffic? (That was rhetorical ;))

So, the money. Where is it? Well, I don’t really think that bloggers will get anything sig­ni­ficant unless they become part of larger networks like Gawker and Weblogs, with suf­fi­cient funding to employ a sales depart­ment and pitch for display advert­ising. Sorry about that, rest of the blo­go­sphere, but really, who is going to advertise on a site with 1000 views a day except on a CPC basis? Consumer web applic­a­tions like bloglines have an even harder job than bloggers getting display advert­ising, except through virtue of their large user numbers, which means they’ll be receiving the lowest rates ima­gin­able from advert­isers. I’ve spoken to a number of people running such services and a lot of them think that paid-​​for models will (a) give them a sensible revenue stream; (b) make their users value the service more and © create a more attractive model for advert­isers. And social networks and user-​​generated media sites will need to tame the anarchic vibe and stamp down on child safety if they’re to see solid invest­ment from cor­porate advert­isers. Otherwise, they could charge a mem­ber­ship for those who don’t want their crazzzy network pulled into line by the Man.

Does this cross the line into tra­di­tional business rather than Web 2.0 business? Maybe. But if I owned one of these com­panies, that really wouldn’t keep me up at night. Being a Web 2.0 business doesn’t give you a license to run at a loss, I’m afraid to say, so get over it. In any case, as Anthony Mayfield has recently pointed out, many of these ‘wisdom of crowds’ services obey a 1% rule. That is to say, one percent of us make a video, vote for the news, create a blog, while the remainder either comment on it, or digest it as they always did. As Marc Fawzi recently argued against a naive post I made, even Google operates a hier­archy, since only the pro­du­cers and taste-​​makers actually produce any links to anything — again, it’s the 1% that are creating PageRanks, not the 99%. When clever web applic­a­tions harness the intel­li­gence of their users, they’ll only be effective when the intel­li­gence they’re har­nessing is up to the job. Everyone has a right to musical taste, so last.fm will work by including everyone. On the other hand, digg voters are, by-​​and-​​large, tech­no­logy enthu­si­asts, so they’ll produce a front page appealing to tech fans. Fewer people, but the right interests and enthu­si­asms to work for large numbers of bystanders.

To cut to the quick, the Long Tail is source of revenue, not an earner of revenue.

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