Categories: Uncategorized

Gawker Media Moves To Monetize Comments

Nick Denton’s Gawker Media empire made a name for itself with snark. Launched in 2003 in New York City, the company has grown from one blog to a company with eight content properties, including Gawker.com, Deadspin, Lifehacker, Gizmodo, io9, Kotaku, Jalopnik, and Jezebel. Although Gawker Media originally monetized based on the article traffic, as most web publishers do, the company is now moving to monetize the comments of its sites. The move does not come as a surprise, considering the major changes that have taken place at the company over the past 18 months. Last year, Gawker Media implemented a complete redesign of all of it’s properties. The sites transitioned from a traditional blog layout to a more advanced, media rich layout that includes a scrolling sidebar and large feature articles. The transition of the sites in February 2011, was met with a major backlash from users, who flooded the comments section with outrage about bugs in the new user experience. Gawker Media’s pageviews fell dramatically from 1.75 million average views a day to less than 250,000, causing a significant loss in revenue. On March 23rd of this year, Gawker Media announced that it was transitioning its commenting system. Commenters would now have to sign in using Facebook, Twitter, or Google. This move also outraged and alienated many loyal readers. It was a signal, however, that Gawker Media was valuing the comments on its sites as more than just increased engagement. Now, all of these moves have become clear. Gawker is moving to monetize comments. “We all know the conventional wisdom: the days of the banner advertisement are numbered. In two years, our primary offering to marketers will be our discussion platform.” notes Denton. Time will tell if Denton’s hunch is right. While it may work for Gawker Media, this model won’t be appropriate for all publishers. Gawker’s sites thrive on link bait and sensationalist headlines. Although many content sites strive to make their posts more snappy to appeal to web readers, new pieces that are not meant to shock will draw less discussion and thus drive less revenue under this new model. Denton’s new model also deemphasizes good writing and instead places the original posts as mere discussion catalysts. Why bother paying writers to create complete posts? Gawker Media could easily turn into a forum free for all if commentors drive more revenue than the writers. Denton’s move to monetize comments may work for a short while, but not every regular commenter is going to be okay with Denton and his team making money off their engagements. After all, Gawker has groomed its community to have an attitude just like the company’s writers.

Techli

Edward is the founder and CEO of Techli.com. He is a writer, U.S. Army veteran, serial entrepreneur and chronic early adopter. Having worked for startups in Silicon Valley and Chicago, he founded, grew and successfully exited his own previous startup and loves telling the stories of innovators. Email: Edward.Domain@techli.com | @EdwardDomain

Recent Posts

HostMilano 2025: AI and Automation Transform Professional Kitchen Operations

HostMilano 2025 concluded its 44th edition on October 26 and remains the premier world fair…

2 días ago

Prezent AI reaches latest milestone following recognition as top software company in 2025

As the new year approaches, the Software Report—a trusted source for market research and industry…

3 días ago

Ness Digital Engineering and Vendavo to usher in new era of AI-led innovation

Now that AI has been on the scene for a number of years, we can…

3 días ago

AI is reengineering orthopedic systems through new multi-layer software architectures

The rapid evolution of orthopedic technology is no longer being driven by devices alone. Instead,…

2 semanas ago

Digital credentialing enters a new phase with the arrival of I.C.E. Exchange 2025 in Phoenix

The credentialing industry’s calendar is turning toward Phoenix this month, where the I.C.E. Exchange will…

2 semanas ago

Tax season gets an upgrade as Deduction raises $2.8M and launches its AI-powered tax agent

Deduction today announced the launch of “Taylor, CPAI,” the first AI tax accountant built for…

2 semanas ago