WSJ on blogads

by henrycopeland
Sunday, March 14th, 2004

A nice article about blogads in the Wall Street Journal this morning. My favorite quote comes from Markos Moulitsas Zuniga: “I even get some money over to the college fund for my baby.” Here are some excerpts:

Blogs Grow Up:
Ads on the Sites
Are Taking Off


The Chandler campaign is evidence of the latest step in the evolution of the Internet. Blogs, once derided as solipsistic exercises by self-important nobodies, are starting to go commercial as their readership grows.

The trend is in its early stages; big advertisers like Coke and Procter & Gamble aren’t yet hawking their wares on blogs. Indeed, much of the advertising is found on politically oriented blogs, which are experiencing a spike in readership from the presidential election. Many people wonder if the blog ad boomlet will outlast the election.

But other Internet institutions have had similarly modest origins; recall that eBay started out as a place to trade Beanie Babies and Pez dispensers. And it’s no surprise that as blogs grow in popularity, they are beginning to attract advertisers. Indeed, the entire Internet has been experiencing an uptick in ad revenue, with advertisers beginning to open their wallets again for the first time since the collapse of the dot-com bubble in 2000.

Typical of the new breed of “bloggerpreneurs” is Markos Moulitsas Zuniga, who runs Daily Kos, a liberal political blog. Mr. Moulitsas says he initially wanted to keep his blog ad-free, as a way of preserving his independence.

But in December, he had to buy new server computers to keep up with growing traffic, and he started taking ads to pay the bills. Business was so good that in three months he was able to double his ad rates. Now, he’s bringing in $4,000 a month.

“That is phenomenal to me. I even get some money over to the college fund for my baby,” says Mr. Moulitsas.

Still, blog ads are in their infancy and the operators of these sites face big hurdles in luring more of them, ad experts say. “Over 90% of the business of Internet ads [goes to] 20 large, established news media like nytimes.com and WSJ.com. Honestly, the blogs haven’t hit the radar yet,” says Stu Ginsberg, public-relations director at the Interactive Advertising Bureau, a trade group for Web sites that take ads.

Yet the blog ad trend is far enough along that at least one company has sprung up to serve the market: Pressflex LCC. The Chapel Hill, N.C., company’s Blogads service connects advertisers with a network of bloggers, charging 20% for its efforts. So far, it says it has placed ads on about 200 blogs.

“They said nobody would want to advertise on personal diaries. Even my wife thought I was crazy,” recalls Henry Copeland, who founded the company in 2002. Now, he has three programmers working for him in Hungary.

Still, only the top blogs can snare ads from mainstream companies. Most others have to content themselves with ads from candidates, with conservatives typically advertising on conservative blogs, and likewise for liberals.

Other blog ads are for somewhat quirky products, such as a CD with humorous Christmas songs sold by Paul Libman, a Chicago composer. It’s an effective medium, Mr. Libman maintains; thanks to $450 in blog ads he sold 1,000 CDs during the holidays, twice as many as earlier seasons.

“I don’t think that the bloggers realized how much these ads are worth,” he says. “Next year it will be much more expensive.”

Indeed, the topic of blog ads, and how much they are worth, has become a theme in the discussions that bloggers have about their work on their own blogs.

One Response to “WSJ on blogads”

  1. Bob King Says:

    I think as blogads are tried more and more, people will understand that they are in fact a genuinely new advertising medium. They are interactive, with feedback, and placing an ad on the front of a typical blog costs less than a 12th page display ad in a mediocre newspaper. And that comes with ZERO feedback.

    Personally, were I setting up a commercial local news portal, I’d use you to handle my advertising. As I run a not-yet-commercial global news portal, the decision was simple and easy for me: what minimises my effort, maximises my return AND which has the potential of being a form of content?

    But for political campaigns, in particular, it’s a godsend.

    First, you can track issue interest by blog. You can actually update your ad in real time - and if the blog is like mine, Graphictruth you can even have a staffer dump press releases or even - goodness gracious - interact with the blog owner and readers in close to real time.

    I don’t think there’s any advertising forum like it - and one important aspect of it is that while it’s editable, it’s also circumscribed. A candidate ( or any advertiser, for that matter ) HAS to make their point very quickly and succinctly.

    But I return to the statistics. How many other ad buys tell you how well they worked? An old advertising truism is that “one out of every two advertising dollars is wasted. The trick is knowing which dollar.”

    This is the only ad forum I know about with any widespread exposure that allows you to adjust your aim. That is completely priceless.

    BTW, I’m looking forward to larger format ads, paid content placements and more.

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