Inbound Internet Marketing Blog

SEO, Blogging, Social Media, Landing Pages, Lead Generation and Analytics

SUBSCRIBE

The HubSpot Inbound Internet Marketing blog covers all of inbound marketing - SEO, blogging, social media, lead generation, email marketing, lead nurturing & management, and analytics. Join 57,702 others and subscribe now!

Subscribe to RSS feed Add us on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter

Get Free Marketing Info!

Get the world's best marketing resources right to your inbox! Join more than 817,000 inbound marketers!

Subscribe by email

Your email:

HubSpot's Inbound Internet Marketing Blog

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

All Aboard! NY Times Walks Away from $10 million and Jumps on SEO Train

 

.


"What wasn't anticipated was the explosion in how much of our traffic would be generated by Google
, by Yahoo and by [other search engines]." - NY Times

Whether you're active in the blogosphere or not, you've probably heard by now that the New York Times is dropping their web charges in favor of the increased web traffic and advertising dollars they will get by offering their content for free.


The New York Times has finally recognized the drastic and powerful effects of blogs, podcasts, and other social media and they're now taking advantage of it. They're scrapping their TimesSelect subscription service - currently bringing in $10 million in annual revenue - and offering free access to (most of) their archives and new articles. Why would such an established news company scrap a profitable program to offer the same content for free?

Because they can earn even more by doing some simple search engine optimization and internet marketing. "What changed, the Times said, was that many more readers started coming to the site from search engines and links on other sites instead of coming directly to NYTimes.com." Read the article Times to Stop Charging for Parts of Its Web Site.

What has changed? Most people's primary news resource is a search engine. Even an established news organization such as the NYT gets most of their traffic by showing up at the top of searches on Google, Yahoo, or MSN. The NY Times really gets it now - in addition to offering their content for free, they also list their most emailed and most blogged articles, and for some articles they even link directly to "What the blogs are saying" about that article, and they have a "share" section with links to Facebook, Digg and Newsvine.

In their letter to TimesSelect subscribers about the decision, they encouraged them to continue to "read our news and opinions - as well as share it, link to it and comment on it" - because the real power is contained in the links stretching across the blogosphere.

The coolest part about this, at least for me, is that it shows how powerful the blogosphere is and what a huge opportunity there is here for small businesses especially. If people are firstly going to search engines for information and click on the top results - then any small business is able to compete on a level playing field with companies ten (or a hundred or a thousand) times bigger.

Other news organizations have been realizing the same thing - LA Times tried charging for web access but abandoned it when it caused a sharp decline in web traffic. And now the Wall Street Journal, with the largest paid online base with about 1 million users generating $65 million in revenue annually for the company, is now talking about removing their charges and making The Journal free online.


Key issues to consider:

1) The New York Times - one of the biggest media brands in the world - is getting more website traffic from SEO and links than from people goig directly to their well known website.

2) Having a strategy to get found on the web is essential for your small or medium business - because you are much less well known than the NY Times!

3) Find out how you are doing in terms of your internet marketing strategy by using this free SEO Tool and learn about what you can do to improve your web presence by attending this free Internet marketing webinar.

 

SEO kit

Posted by Mike Volpe on Fri, Sep 21, 2007 @ 10:49 AM

COMMENTS

Mike, Interesting post - thanks! Do you think this is evidence of a death knell for subscription businesses on the web in general (in favor of targeted advertising), or for just some categories? Any thoughts on what the "equilibrium" situation might be 5-10 years out - where might ad-based businesses thrive, and where might subscription-based ones do well? Also - recall that a ton of business with an advertising revenue model in the 1st internet boom failed. What's different now, that makes it attractive to have an ad-driven business model? More traffic? Some new technology? Are people in 2007 dramatically more clever than in 1999? If it's the traffic, what are the key drivers - is it just the dramatically expanded number of sites on the web, and links between the sites? And so the size and strength of the network actually drives which business model is most profitable? (Yes, I am asking you to explain all the economics of the Internet in 10 words or less.)

posted on Sunday, September 23, 2007 at 9:47 AM by ilya


Ilya -

1) I am sure some businesses will survive on paid content, but they will need to deliver something really special and unique - and will most likely be serving a specific niche with information that is difficult or expensive to obtain or has few substitutes. I think more database-style information will be valuable.

2) I am not sure about an equilibrium. I think most general news sites will move to an advertising supported model. I think some companies will have to drastically change thier business models. Places like Forrester and gartner, which have traditionally charged a lot of money by subscriptions and per report fees for their information, might start to make that content free (or some more of it free) and do a better job of charging for their advice and expertise of their analysts. the overall trend is that content is becoming more of a marketing tool, used in support of selling something else - advertising, expertise/consulting or software, for instance.

3) A number of things have changed since the last boom that makes it different (a) content/websites are cheaper and easier to produce because of a new generation of technology (b) more content is user generated because of web2.0 trends, so that content is "free" to produce (c) more companies, especially established companies, are doing more online advertising, so there is more online ad spending in total

posted on Monday, September 24, 2007 at 9:40 PM by


It's one of the top ranking news websites by traffic. They made a very smart move. Why bother with the issues surrounding the maintenance of paid subscriptions? Now, it's all about ad placement and optimization.

posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 at 2:51 AM by Free News Website


Comments have been closed for this article.