A New Model For Getting Rich Online
Investors Not Needed, Just a Site With Ads
By Yuki Noguchi
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 28, 2006
For hundreds of thousands of people, the dream of making an
Internet fortune works like this: Earn pennies at a time in
exchange for allowing
Google Inc.
or
Yahoo Inc. to place advertisements on a personal or
small-business Web page.
Take Andrew Leyden, former House
Commerce Committee counsel and founder of a dot-com venture
that failed, who started PodcastDirectory.com, a search
engine for podcasts. As the site's popularity rose from a
hundred hits a month in 2004 to nearly a million now, Leyden
started making the equivalent of an entry-level government
worker's salary -- $30,000 to $40,000 a year -- simply
because people clicked on ads. That allowed him to work at
home in Chesapeake Beach, Md., trying to make more money by
attracting still more traffic to his site.
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"I went from literally 26 cents a week or something like
that to several dollars an hour," he said, by using Google's
AdSense software, which solicits bids from marketers who, in
turn, pay to run ads on his site. "I get paid while mowing
the lawn. I get paid while cleaning the garage. I get paid
driving my wife to her office, buying groceries, seeing a
movie, playing video games, or just surfing the Internet.
That's really the nice thing about AdSense: No matter what
I'm doing, people keep clicking and I keep getting paid."
A decade ago, the Internet dream was to score through
venture-capital financing and by raising cash in public
stock offerings. Now, people with creative ideas can get
rich relatively quickly by permitting advertisers to
piggyback on any Web site that attracts a lot of viewers.
Technology can direct ads to more and more specific
audiences, rewarding entrepreneurship on the smallest scale
-- even Web pages filled with obscure and homemade content.
"We have a segment of customers called hopeful hobbyists"
who have Web sites devoted to anything they might care
about, from crochet to sailing, and who hope to eventually
make enough money to quit their day jobs, said Willam
Johnson, vice president of Yahoo Publisher Network, which
launched a test version of its software last year.
David Miles Jr. and Kato Leonard, two 20-year-olds in
Louisville, say they collect $100,000 a month from their
year-old site, Freeweblayouts.net, which gives away designs
that people can use on MySpace social-networking pages. One
couple blogged about their home reconstruction and made
money to help pay the mortgage on their new house. Jock Friedly's business, Storming Media LLC, allows users to
download public documents; he used the money his Web site
made on ads for new online ventures.
Companies like Google, in turn, also find profit in such
sites. In the second quarter, Google got $997 million, or 41
percent of its revenue, through the network of Web sites
that host ads through the AdSense system. Its software, like
Yahoo's, prices ads based on popularity. When users click
the ads, the software keeps detailed records, including the
number of page views and the amount of commission the site's
host earns from the ad -- all of which Web site owners can
keep track of by logging on to their accounts. Every month,
Google pays publishers by check or direct deposit.
Ad publishers must be approved through Google, to ensure
that the ads don't subsidize pornography or gambling, or
contain material that is racist, violent or related to
illegal drugs. Among other things, Google says it watches to
make sure people don't inflate their revenues by clicking on
their own ads -- a practice known as "click fraud" that has
plagued online marketing.
The popularity of making money this way also has led to
creation of "made-for-AdSense" Web pages that contain little
content and lots of ads,
which critics say clutter the
Internet and divert online searches.
The system depends on the cooperation of advertisers, who
have to see that their money is well spent, said Jennifer
Slegg, an online publisher
who is a consultant on AdSense
and Yahoo Publisher Network, and who makes roughly half her
income from AdSense ads.
"I hear tons of stories about people who were facing
bankruptcy but now are able to pay off their houses in
full," she said.
The biggest moneymakers tend to be people who started
sites to document their passions. Matther Daimler, 28,
developed an obsession with finding the most comfortable
seats on the long airline flights he took for business. He
would look at a better-situated traveler and think: "He has
more legroom. I want that seat next time."
In 2001, he took to cataloguing on his
SeatGuru site all the seats on his usual United Airlines
flight, rating them for best legroom, the most recline,
access to video and audio entertainment, and proximity to
different types of laptop power sources. Soon, at the
request of people who read his site, he started taking
information on other flights. He now keeps track of seats on
34 airlines.
Daimler and his wife now work full time on SeatGuru, which
gets 700,000 visitors a month. About half of the site's
revenue comes through AdSense -- $10,000 to $20,000 a month
-- and the rest comes from ad deals that Daimler makes with
companies directly.
Tracking clicks and the money they
earn itself has become a passion for Leyden. "In the middle
of the night I'll wonder how much I made," he said, so he'll
check his page's status every 15 minutes.
The money that comes in acts like microfinancing for many
sites, said Kim Malone, director of AdSense. "We're enabling
creativity, 5 cents at a time."
Friedly, for example, started his company in Washington in
2001 to make it easier for contractors, scientists and
researchers to find, download and purchase public documents.
He reluctantly signed up to put ads on the site. "I was
skeptical because when you sell something, you want to focus
on the product, not refer people to other Web sites," he
said.
But with more than 10,000 hits a day, the income started
adding up. "I was surprised by how much we made. It was an
excellent supplement to the business, because we didn't have
to do a lot."
Friedly has since started PatentStorm LLC, a site where
businesses can search patent records, without outside
investment. "In essence, Google has turned into a venture
capital or an angel investor in my business."
But if Google giveth, it also taketh away, Friedly said. As
people put up more sites that compete with his for traffic,
the number of hits on his main site has declined.