Hello all,
I was wondering if someone could answer this question I have. How much does it cost to run Livejournal -- or rather, why does it seem more costly to run than Blogspot?
I've been looking at some of the past entries and the community's memories, but I don't see anything closely related. I know that there are some people here who work or
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So, when someone on Blogspot puts ads up on their blog? Google makes money from that, because it's Google ads they put up. (Maybe other ad services are allowed; I don't know.) Google makes an unknown percentage off of the revenue of those ads.
Google is also a huge company with tons of capital; it's easier for them to absorb the freeloaders. Blogger doesn't have to be profitable. Many of Google's services are not.
SUP does not have that luxury with LiveJournal if it expects to make good profits; LJ originally started a business out to sustain itself, and now it's been bought out by businesses backed by investors that want a real return. Sufficiently monetizing it for that purpose has been the challenge and comes with culture clashing effects.
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Additionally, Google withholds that money until an AdWords account makes a minimum $100. Many accounts take ages and ages to reach that amount, and Google can hold onto that capital until then--which has value in and of itself, especially spread over a lot of people.
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I have a blogspot (or three), the one that I used to use a lot and get decent traffic to for awhile had a bunch of ads on, easy install scripting for adsense, all within the help menu. Took me 18 months to make enough to get a cheque.
Google has masses of server space all over the world, and they want people to put up websites with content to voluntarily plaster ads on that they've brokered. The cost of running Blogspot is minimal compared to the overall operation, it's just one more source of page impressions.
LJ is a separate, stand alone business, it needs to cover its cost in house, completely different model.
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Not that I have any real idea, I'm just guessing. But I thought the OP raised an interesting question.
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However, one reason that Livejournal could cost more than Blogspot is that there's a lot more technical complexity in Livejournal. Livejournal has to manage friends and communities and userpics and scrapbook items and private messages and so on. Any one user's account interacts a lot with other users' accounts, and not just in a read-only way. The database has to handle those connections smoothly. Blogspot's accounts are much more ( ... )
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That's rich. I'll have to pull that one out sometime.
"Why does my cat need expensive medication?"
"WHY DO YOU HATE AMERICA?"
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I guess I'm not sure how your usage syncs up with his?
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For Google, Blogspot is more strategic investment, they have enough cash to pay for it. So, their approach to the matter is different.
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LJ was making money before it was sold to 6Apart. Paid accounts more than covered the cost of free accounts (with invite codes). The problem isn't "how to make a blogging service not lose money," but "how to make back our investment capital in X months, and start making real profit." We don't know what X is. Nor how much investment capital is involved. But they don't matter--what matters is that LJ isn't being run to "make money," but to "make lots of money quickly."
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http://www.news.com/2100-1032_3-5074041.html
Pro accounts used to have more features than plain, free ones:
http://web.archive.org/web/20021023010215/http://pro.blogger.com/
http://web.archive.org/web/20021013204721/pro.blogger.com/about/faq.pyra
(I saw a screenshot of the old-timey Blogger interface while looking for this info. That brought back lots of memories :D)
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