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| How To Prevent Content Value Gouging Posted: 07 Mar 2013 03:30 AM PST What are the incentives to publish high-value content to the web? Search engines, like Google, say they want to index quality content, but provide little incentive to create and publish it. The reality is that the publishing environment is risky, relatively poorly paid in most instances, and is constantly being undermined. The PactThere is little point publishing web content if the cost of publishing outweighs any profit that can be derived from it. Many publishers, who have search engines in mind, work on an assumption that if they provide content to everyone, including Google, for free, then Google should provide traffic in return. It's not an official deal, of course. It's unspoken. Rightly or wrongly, that's the "deal" as many webmasters perceive it. What Actually HappensSearch engines take your information and, if your information is judged sufficiently worthy that day, as the result of an ever-changing, obscure digital editorial mechanism known only to themselves, they will rank you highly, and you'll receive traffic in return for your efforts. That may all change tomorrow, of course. What might also happen is that they could grab your information, amalgamate it, rank you further down the page, and use your information to keep visitors on their own properties. Look at the case of Trip Advisor. Trip Advisor, frustrated with Google's use of its travel and review data, filed a competition complaint against Google in 2012.
Similarly, newspapers have taken aim at Google and other search engines for aggregating their content, and deriving value from that aggregation, but the newspapers claim they aren't making enough to cover the cost of producing that content in the first place:
Of course, it's not entirely the fault of search engines that newspapers are in decline. Their own aggregation model - bundling news, sport, lifestyle, classifieds topics - into one "place" has been surpassed. Search engines often change their stance without warning, or can be cryptic about their intentions, often to the determent of content creators. For example, Google has stated they see ads as helpful, useful and informative:
And again:
And again:
However, business models built around the ads as content idea, such as Suite101.com, got hammered. Google could argue these sites went too far, and that they are asserting editorial control, and that may be true, but such cases highlight the flaky and precarious nature of the search ecosystem as far as publishers are concerned. One day, what you're doing is seemingly "good", the next day it is "evil". Punishment is swift and without trial. Thom Yorke sums it up well:
There is no question the value of content is being deprecated by big aggregation companies. The overhead of creating well-researched, thoughtful content is the same whether search engines value it or not. And if they do value it, a lot of the value of that content has shifted to the networks, distributors and aggregators and away from the creators. Facebook's value is based entirely on the network itself. Almost all of Google's value is based on scraping and aggregating free content and placing advertising next to it. Little of this value gets distributed back to the creator, unless they take further, deliberate steps to try and capture some back. In such a precarious environment, what incentive does the publisher have to invest and publish to the "free" web? Content DealsGoogle lives or dies on the relevancy of the information they provide to visitors. Without a steady supply of "free" information from third parties, they don't have a business. Of course, this information isn't free to create. So if search engines do not provide you profitable traffic, then why allow search engines to crawl your pages? They cost you money in terms of bandwidth and may extract, and then re-purpose, the value you created to suit their own objectives. Google has done content-related deals in the past. They did one in France in February whereby Google agreed to help publishers develop their digital units:
This seems to fit with Google's algorithmic emphasis on major web properties, seemingly as a means to sift the "noise in the channel". Such positioning favors big, established content providers. It may have also been a forced move as Google would have wanted to avoid a protracted battle with European regulators. Whatever the case, Google doesn't do content deals with small publishers and it could be said they are increasingly marginalizing them due to algorithm shifts that appear to favor larger web publishers over small players. Don't Be Evil To Whom?Google's infamous catch-phrase is "Don't Be Evil". In the documentary Inside Google", Eric Schmidt initially thought the phrase was a joke. Soon after, he realized they took it seriously. The problem with such a phrase is that it implies Google is a benevolent moral actor that cares about......what? You - the webmaster? Sure. "Don't Be Evil" is typically used by Google in reference to users, not webmasters. In practice, it's not even a question of morality, it's a question of who to favor. Someone is going to lose, and if you're a small webmaster with little clout, it's likely to be you. For example, Google appear to be kicking a lot of people out of Adsense, and as many webmasters are reporting, Google often act as judge, jury and executioner, without recourse. That's a very strange way of treating business "partners", unless partnership has some new definition of which I'm unaware. It's getting pretty poor when their own previously supportive ex-employees switch to damning their behavior:
Some may call such behavior a long way from "good" on the "good" vs "evil" spectrum. How To Protect ValueBottom line: if your business model involves creating valuable content, you're going to need a strategy to protect it and claw value back from aggregators and networks in order for a content model to be sustainable. Some argue that if you don't like Google, then block them using robots.txt. This is one option, but there's no doubt Google still provides some value - it's just a matter of deciding where to draw the line on how much value to give away. What Google offers is potential visitor attention. We need to acquire and hold enough visitor attention before we switch the visitors to desired action. An obvious way to do this, of course, is to provide free, attention grabbing content that offers some value, then lock the high value content away behind a paywall. Be careful about page length. As HubPages CEO Paul Edmonds points out:
You should also consider giving the search engines summaries or the first section of an article, but block them from the rest. Even if you decide to block search engines from indexing your content they still might pay others to re-purpose it:
You still end up facing the cost of policing "content re-purposing" - just one of the many costs publishers face when publishing on the web, and just one more area where the network is sucking out value. Use multiple channels so you're not reliant on one traffic provider. You might segment your approach by providing some value to one channel, and some value to another, but not all of it to both. This is not to say models entirely reliant on Google won't work, but if you do rely on a constant supply of new visitors via Google, and if you don't have the luxury of having sufficient brand reputation, then consider running multiple sites that use different optimization strategies so that the inevitable algorithm changes won't take you out entirely. It's a mistake to think Google cares deeply about your business. Treat every new visitor as gold. Look for ways to lock visitors in so you aren't reliant on Google in future for a constant stream of new traffic. Encourage bookmarking, email sign-ups, memberships, rewards - whatever it takes to keep them. Encourage people to talk about you across other media, such as social media. Look for ways to turn visitors into broadcasters. Adopt a business model that leverages off your content. Many consultants write business books. They make some money from the books, but the books mainly serve as advertisements for their services or speaking engagements. Similarly, would you be better creating a book and publishing it on Amazon than publishing too much content to the web? Business models focused on getting Google traffic and then monetarizing that attention using advertising only works if the advertising revenue covers production cost. Some sites make a lot of money this way, but big money content sites are in the minority. Given the low return of a lot of web advertising, other webmasters opt for cheap content production. But cheap content isn't likely to get the attention required these days, unless you happen to be Wikipedia. Perhaps a better approach for those starting out is to focus on building brand / engagement / awarenesss / publicity / non-search distribution. As Aaron points out:
A lot of the most valuable content on this site is locked-up. We'd love to open this content up, but there is currently no model that sufficiently rewards publishers for doing so. This is the case across the web, and it's the reason the most valuable content is not in Google. It's not in Google because Google, and the other search engines, don't pay. Fair? Unfair? Is there a better way? How can content providers - particularly newcomers - grow and prosper in such an environment? Categories: |
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