Blog Network to Sell For $20 Million Plus
Victor Cheng writes "Blogs are big money. The Weblogs Inc Network is apparently about to be sold for over $20 million to AOL, an individual blogger is making over $400,000 per year from his living room, a blogger writing about shoes is claiming a six figure income and blog networks are starting every second day with hopes of making it big. It looks like it might be time to dust off the old blogspot blog again."
And pay umpteen-thousand dollars for an engineering education, just so I could make less money than a manager at McDonalds :(
Anybody else depressed that people make a lot of money doing stupid things?
-Jesse
Nothing says "unprofessional job" like wrinkles in your duct tape.
an individual blogger is making over $400,000 per year from his living room
Sadly, most of that will now go towards his bandwidth costs.
People write about things that interest people, and then make money off of advertising!
I'm sure this has happened before, but I can't quite place it...
My Journal
Today they're a fad. 10 to 20 years from now we can look back and call it a trend.
When it started, Amazon.com was part of the WWW fad, they're just the 5% that stayed around long enough to be a trend.
XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
It may just be me, but does anyone else lump these "I make huge bank with my blog" stories up there with those "get-rich quick" schemes on late-night TV, by those seedy looking guys with wet spiky hair, wearing golf shirts and khaki shorts, sitting in canvas director's chairs?
/rolls eyes
Some guy claims he makes $400k, so Hmmm.....I guess he does, case closed?
VOTE!
Many will fail. There was already a casualty this week, as Webby Media shut down just nine days after launching. Their business plan: give away 100% of ad revenue to bloggers. Doh!
There are now blogs emerging that do nothing but cover these blog networks, like the newly-launched Blog Network Watch or Blogebrity.
RichM
Data Center Knowledge
To those of you who think blogs are just junk, you don't know what you're talking about.
There are junk blogs (like those countless BS myspace ones) and there are awesome ones. Slashdot is a great one. Gizmodo is another. "Blog" is just a new way of creating articles, in which anyone can now do online easily.
I remember a few years back there was this newsletter that this one guy would publish once every week. It was really great because the guy would talk about new webmaster tricks submitted to him, or other ramblings about that particular niche. I would wait in anticipation for every new issue that comes out. It's not readily evident, but that was a really early version of blogging, just done in a more manual way.
Don't just quickly dismiss the whole concept of blogs.
eTrade SUCKS
The point: I'd bet that that only a dozen or so bloggers make a decent income, thousands make a little money and millions make nothing from their blogs. As with any fame driven industry, if a person thinks that they can be one of the top 10 blogs in the entire world, then they should go for it. If they can't be top 10, then they should NOT quit their day job.
Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
I can stay home and write stupid shit that nobody cares about, so where's my six figure salary?
I think the money comes when one writes stupid shit that people do care about.
I am not sure why this is hard to understand. Your comment could also apply to novelists, and in fact the ratio of six figure salary earners to everybody else is probably much the same in that profession.
The type of blogging you're referring to is just one of many possibilities. Those blogs are often egotistic, tired windows into an uninteresting life. The blogosphere is a big place. There are a ton of high quality blogs written by subject matter experts that are updated on a regular basis for a wide variety of topics. Some of these are both well written and often incredibly informative. I often scan a list of ones related to technology, investing/trading, books/publishing, wine, etc. The signal to noise ratio may tend toward the low side, but there are many interesting areas to explore in blogs. The idea of a blog as a personal diary of life's travails is one tiny piece of what they actually are.