-
Website
http://www.marketing.fm/ -
Original page
http://www.marketing.fm/2006/08/27/top-us-web-brands-supported-by-user-generated-content/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Spencer Fry
19 comments · 13 points
-
daryn
4 comments · 14 points
-
danreich
5 comments · 2 points
-
jonsteinberg
11 comments · 5 points
-
elgaffney
5 comments · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
The Business Breakfast
2 days ago · 51 comments
-
“Meet Me for Coffee” – Informal Interviews with the Go-Between
1 week ago · 3 comments
-
Disruptive
1 week ago · 4 comments
-
99.99% (or its totally going to happen but isnt signed yet)
3 weeks ago · 6 comments
-
Techies Give Back: Ice Skating Event
1 week ago · 2 comments
-
The Business Breakfast
Eric, I feel the same way. Not only do I feel it's the right thing to do, I see revenue sharing as a great opportunity. Why be a destination when you could be a destination and a market?
It's about empowering people, and creating opportunities - if you're holding all the cards, people won't want to play. :)
I run a social music site at http://www.ArtistServer.com - there's 6,000 songs and 16,000+ registered users. Just a month ago, I added the option for 'upgraded' accounts to use their own Google AdSense codes on all their content pages, or the option of running their own ads. You can read more about it here: http://www.gideonmarken.com/index.cfm/blog/811
I feel if it's their content, and they've upgraded their account, they should earn 100% of the revenue from ads on their pages. After ArtistServer grows a bit larger, I'll then consider revenue sharing for the free accounts too, but on a split percentage.
I'm sure we'll see revenue sharing becoming more common in the next year.
Are you familiar with http://www.revver.com - they have a revenue sharing program.
Have a good one,
- Gideon Marken
I had a chance to checkout your blog, the AS site, as well as some other projects you are working on via MarkenMedia...and I thought I was busy!
I think its great you are allowing your users to profit share with their own adsense code. Have many people signed up? Also, why not still rotate in your own adsense code, at least 5%-10% of the time? There are hosting costs and the admin duties you seem to handle in the forums etc...
I think revenue sharing will become commonplace - and we will start to see more people with the ability to start recieving it, meaning more end users with adsense accounts in the first place. I know of many forums that are currently allowing users to share in their adsense earnings which contributes to the forum community as well as keeps users posting.
I have checked out revver - and I know one famous instance in which the guys who made the now famous "mentos" experiment video - made thousands of dollars via a rev. share. Great example of everyone "getting" a piece.
>>Have many people signed up?
The site has 16,000+ registered users. On average, I'm seeing 450+ new signups, and 3.5 upgrades each month with no advertising. Most signups are standard member accounts, not artist accounts.
>>Also, why not still rotate in your own adsense code, at least 5%-10% of the time?
The option for people to use their own adsense code is only available to those who upgrade. Traditionally, when someone starts paying for a website or service online, ads are no longer displayed on their pages, which means there's no loss in revenue since those pages would not show ads in the first place. Those who continue to use the free account display the site's adsense code 100% of the time. Plus, all content is displayed on common pages throughout the site, which will use the site's own ads. My goal is to grow subscriptions and build community, rather than serve ads.
I only know of a few artists on the site who are using this feature, I was planning on waiting a few months before asking if they would share their data. What's nice about ArtistServer's ad management tool, is that artists can create and use their own ads too. Currently, most artists who can run their own ads turn off the ads off and prefer an ad-free site.
Thanks for replying - I subscribed :)
Gideon
However, the kid on MySpace who posts pics about their last days of summer before they start their senior year?? I doubt it. Their barely wise to creating/uploading content--let alone know that they should make money from it. Plus, I think the majority of users on these sites are simply happy to have a destination to go to, express themselves, and communicate with like-minded folks... and have their 15-minutes of fame.
Maybe in Web 3.0....