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Variety.com Publishes; Epic Fail: The Rise and Fall of Demand Media

Posted on the 04 December 2013 by Worldwide @thedomains

Variety.com just published a cover story on Demand Media, Inc. (DMD) and its less than flattering.

The article entitled Epic Fail: The Rise and Fall of Demand Media starts out:

“Take note, Twitter: Not every tech company has a happy ending after a ballyhooed IPO.

Just look at Demand Media, the Santa Monica, Calif.-based firm some thought would revolutionize content production. Not long after the company went public in January 2011, its market capitalization soared to more than $2 billion, sending the then-5-year-old firm’s value briefly past that of the New York Times Co.”

“Compare those heights with where Demand finds itself today, having plummeted to roughly a quarter of its peak value.”

“Revenues for the most recent quarter were down year-over-year for the first time since that IPO. Co-founder Richard Rosenblatt is no longer CEO as of October”

“The chief exec’s role will be tough to fill given how steeply Demand has declined over its seven-year run. Changes in Google’s search algorithms have twice hammered the young company in recent years, leaving its few brands that managed to get significant marketplace traction, including eHow.com and Livestrong, hemorrhaging traffic.”

“The free fall of Demand serves as a cautionary tale for hype in the Internet age: No company burns so hot that it can’t cool off.”

“Early on, Demand used eNom’s 1 million generic domain names (such as “3d-blurayplayers-com”) to serve up relevant ads to people searching for specific topics. These “domain parking” pages were immensely profitable, generating north of $100,000 per day, according to a former Demand exec who requested anonymity.

“That’s $35 million-$40 million per year without doing any work,” the exec said.”

“But the tactic was fundamentally a bait-and-switch. Users landed on the pages expecting to find information on a subject and instead found an ad. To try to drive up traffic, Demand shifted its strategy, populating the sites with thematically related content. ”

“Demand then continued to build out the content-farm strategy, treating the domain-name registration business as largely separate from the content-production arm. Paying contributors comparatively little — usually less than $20 for a single article or video — it built up a stockpile of content against which it sold targeted advertising.”

“By April 2011, third-party measurement services were reporting that the Google changes had reduced traffic to Demand sites by as much as 40%. Demand issued a statement that the reports “significantly overstated the negative impact” of the change, but the stock took a dive — plummeting 38% over two weeks — from which it has not recovered.”

“While still the 25th most popular site on the Internet and on mobile in the U.S., Demand is bleeding out fast.…


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