Your Ad Here

What happens first: Team USA wins the World Cup or people start paying for online news?

Would you pay for access to The Huffington Post? The Guardian? Or, gasp, CrunchGear? People in the news business are trying to figure out how to get by, let alone make a profit, and a recent Pew survey suggests that people have no idea what’s going on. Six in 10 Americans now get at least part of their news online, but the question remains: are people willing to pay?

Just thinking as the everyman, I’d have to say, “Oh, boy…” People are pretty used to reading Reuters and AP and the rest of them online for free, so to all of a sudden ask people to pay for that? Difficult.

Ad revenues declines in 2009 for the first time since 2002, and while that may be partially blamed on the recession, it’s not good news regardless. And that’s when sites can convince advertisers to pay up in the first place! People using ad blockers are ruining sites’ ability to go to advertisers and say, “See, we have X-Amount of readers ready to look at your ads!”

I say: you wanna block ads, be my guest. I’m not gonna tell you how to live your life. But when Ars Technica, which is about as user-friendly as you can ask a site to be, starts saying, “Guys, come on, you’re hurting us…”

The Pew survey basically says nobody has any idea what’s going on. Nobody has figured out how to get people to pay for online news. Remember that Newsday experiment, flawed though it might have been? Yeah.

So, will anybody figure out how to make online news “work” anytime soon? Not bloody likely.

Keep in mind I have no idea how online sales or advertising works—I don’t even know what our traffic is!—, so whatever.

Chanting “USA! USA!” over and over again means you’re a patriot.



  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • email
  • PDF
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • RSS

This post is tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Reply





  • NASA activates Robotnaut 2 on board the ISS, watch it live (video)NASA activates Robotnaut 2 on board the ISS, watch it live (video)

    You've already seen it unboxed on board the International Space Station, and you can now watch because the crew of the ISS activates Robotnaut 2 and begins to place it through its paces. The robot was turned on prior to eleven o'clock Eastern, but there's still plenty more to work out -- head on past the break for the live stream. Naturally, you may as well stay alongside of the… »
  • Sony prepping power outlet that demands payment, identificationSony prepping power outlet that demands payment, identification

    We're already counting down the times until these bad boys find themselves on your local cafe and airport terminal. Sony is operating on power outlets which might be capable of identify a user and determine their permissions at that distinctive socket. With the short tap of a card, phone or other NFC device your authentication info is passed to a server over the powerline itself. The… »

Categories

Subscribe

Enter your email address: