February 29, 2008

Technorati To Launch Blogger Advertising Network

Michael Arrington

49 comments »

Through a variety of sources we’ve confirmed that Technorati is making plans for a major shift in its going forward strategy, and is also considering a number of corporate development transactions.

First, they’ve been pitching venture capitalists on another round of financing. That’s not surprising - their last round, $10.5 million, was in June 2006. The company has raised a total of just over $20 million, and given that they have 25 employees, it’s time for another round. But we’ve also heard that they’ve hired Montgomery & Co. to shop the company to buyers, simultaneous to their funding pitches.

What’s more interesting, though is what we’re hearing on the product front. Technorati, under new CEO Richard Jalichandra, recently changed it site to focus more on its core blogging audience.

That change foreshadows the upcoming shift - which places the Technorati site itself as an anchor in a new blog advertising network.

Advertising networks are popular right now - Glam recently raised $85 million after transitioning, seemingly overnight, from a small web property focused on women to selling advertising for a variety of similarly-focused publishers. And John Battelle’s FM Publishing, an advertising network focused on technology blogs, recently hired investment bank Savvian to help them raise money or sell after turning down a $100 million buyout offer.

Technorati will certainly be competing head to head with FM, although sources say they’ll focus on the long tail of the market as well (FM only takes larger sites). The network will be a self-serve exchange for bloggers (and other publishers) as well as advertisers. Ad units will include both display and text ads, and will allow units to be charged on both a CPM and CPC basis. This self-service model looks a lot more like Adbrite than Glam or FM.

Technorati tags, which are very often used to describe blog posts with keywords selected by the author, would also be a natural way for Technorati to target advertising more effectively.

Technorati has also considered other strategies recently, including a blog rollup. But our understanding is that they’ve gone with the ad network idea, and are currently focusing engineers on finalizing the product.

Will the strategy work? As we’ve argued many times, ad networks suffer from fickle customers. Glam offers partners revenue guarantees based on page views (and lost $3.7 million last year on $21 million in revenue). FM has resisted guarantees to date, but lost high profile partner Digg last year to Microsoft. Others, including us, have simply sold advertising directly while continuing to work with FM. With Technorati entering the market, publishers will have yet more choices. That’s good for everyone except the ad networks competing for their business.

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Comments

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  1. Joseph

    they have a good chance of succeeding if they open up their API more.. its highly restricted right now and I think a lot of traffic will be driven to technoratis sites if they have an unlimited access to their api…

    but not sure if this approach is going to work… they are bound to get list in 450 other ad networks out there.. just get out there, share your data and keep locking customers… thats the way to go..

  2. Don Jones

    Will be nice if they go after the smaller publishers - FM doesn’t even return phone calls or emails…

  3. Marcus

    I agree — open up the API and spread some love. They need to get back in the limelight — They have the access and credibility to do so much more, but it advertising the *only* way to grow? Why not find ways to combine forces with bloggers rather that pitch ads at them.

    Grow the space your in, not fight for space in a crowding marketplace!

    marcus
    http://example.UserVoice.com

  4. Martin Wells

    This is a great move, and (sort of ) obvious in hindsight. RSS search has been nailed by google now, so it’s logical for them to move to monetization of that channel.

    I’m assuming they’re going to aggregate channels to advertisers, and thus provide a jump in return over google and the other networks?

  5. Joseph

    Hi Marcus,

    yea completely agree.. you want to fight the likes of google, yahoo with closed walled garden… totally not happening.. especially now that yahoo is going to open up a lot more… the only way for these guys to expand is be more aggressive and share as much data as they can.. else its a lost cause.. !

  6. Aleks

    How much does techcrunch pay to its analyst? I am just curious. They conveniently turned off comments for that post. I never understood why employers don’t disclose this information, unless it is really low.

  7. Jordan Mitchell

    They’d do well to focus on a behavioral niche in advertising. They have the data.

  8. Michael Arrington

    Aleks - you aren’t the guy for us. :-)

    Salary isn’t disclosed only for competitive reasons.

  9. Kathy

    Great having Richard at the helm.

  10. Yakov

    It’s strange they did not realize that opportunity early on..how is it going to be different from the other networks?

  11. bob cobb

    what post is alek talking about?

  12. Jonathan

    Why are we suddenly linking to crunch base again? It drives me insane! I just want to go to the site not CRUNCH BASE! Please stop ramming this site down our throats.

  13. quentin tarantula

    Hahahaha. I’m too exhausted today :) I read the title “Techcrunch to Launch a Blogger Advertising Network”. Then i see Mike posted it. I go on reading it, still couldn’t understand.
    When i read this sentence; “That’s not surprising - their last round, $10.5 million,” I thought, Mike should say “our” instead of “their” and go on reading it for 10 seconds more. I need some sleep…Good Night Tech Crunch…

  14. Xavierv

    The focus on the long-tail is a smart one. I wonder if showing Technorati’s ads on one blog will affect this blog’s authority on Technorati. Cause if they just pay bloggers the way Adsense or PPP do, It’s no big catch.

  15. pals

    “Technorati has also considered other strategies recently, including a blog rollup.” this is a great idea.

  16. setbrand

    It is great news for tech bloggers.

  17. Keren Dagan

    Technorati is a great service. It serves us the bloggers, in so many ways (for input, output and connectivity). I personally would like to see them succeed financially.
    I can see few ways that Technorati using the blogsphere “system of record”, serving businesses.

    This guys really know how to store data and prove to understand salability.

    Keren

  18. My Best Blog

    This will be perfect cause I can grab ad tags for my blog easily.

  19. VentureDeal

    This will be good for smaller publishers, if it happens…

  20. Venture Deal

    Wonder what the deal is with the “comment is awaiting moderation” concept…

  21. Venture Deal

    Ah…single “Name” comments get tossed out…

  22. Venture Deal

    Wonder why that is necessary? Spam bots?

  23. Scabr

    Technorati`ad network - good news for bloggers

  24. Terry Ng

    As long as it keeps Technorati in business and helps the company grow, I’m all for it. It’s long been the source for bloggers, and I’d hate to see it disappear over financial issues.

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  26. Voices.com

    Technorati remains as one of three search engines in my Firefox browser for a reason; it’s relevant and produces accurate results on current events and stories.

    Advertisers, myself included, already trust Technorati and will be willing to invest a few thousand dollars on a trial run.

    By using Google Analytics, advertisers will be able to measure the effectiveness of the ads, so the results of the ad networks’ success will be evident in the near term.

  27. Paid Apartment

    I won’t be surprised that Technorati is now diversifying its revenue strategy plan. This may come late as others have cashed in from the highly profitable online advertising industry. I’d be excited to see what’s in there with Technorati in the coming days.

  28. John

    I think there is a great opportunity for someone to come along and really sell ads to the “fat tail” of the blogosphere (eg Those blogs between the top 1000 and the top 20000). That represents as much traffic as the top 1000. So figure out how to group them together into packages for buyers, offer a few standard ad sizes and go.

    Blogads has sort of allowed blogs to self organize and never really offered the popular ad formats. That makes it unpopular for most major advertisers. Plus why haven’t they branched out into PPC text ads?

    Adbrite is the closest to what I’d like to see. But so far no great advertisers and low rates. Google ads show 99% of the time instead.

  29. Chas Edwards

    Chas from FM here.

    First, to Don Jones. I apologize if someone over here didn’t get back to you. Please drop me a note directly (chas at federatedmedia dot net), and we’ll see if we can help you out.

    Second, to Mike. True we “lost” Digg when Microsoft bought up their inventory. But the same day we gained Microsoft as a partner; they’ve contracted FM to do what we’ve always done for Digg — sell the integrated partnerships like Intel’s sponsorship of Images and Arc, Sony’s HDNA Center, and IBM’s Resource Center.

    We’ve also expanded beyond our tech federation of sites. In the women’s interest category we work with Dooce, Celebrity Baby Blog, Make Up Alley and Confessions of a Pioneer Woman, among others. We’re growing our sports, automotive and travel/leisure portfolios, too, and we’re working with top Facebook app developers like Graffiti Wall, Watercooler and Citizen Sports Media.

    Though we do have a soft spot for those first 5 or 6 tech publishers — and you know who you are ;) — who got us off the ground back in 2005.

  30. Steven Finch

    Technorati dont really have a game plan if they stay as a blog search engine. To launch an ad network is the only real way they can leverage their brand at present. Im looking forward to seeing how fast this progresses.

    P.S. Im trying to find an ad network for my site. Would FM be interested?? or should i go with Technorati when they launch?

  31. Robert Parez

    Well i think Technorati plans are good as far as they can gain Financiers confidence for their value of Money.

    I have seen small blogs like http://www.hurricanesoftwares.com etc. go unnoticed with the Technorati’s ranking.

    Rob

  32. Nikon D60

    As long as it keeps Technorati in business and helps the company grow, I’m all for it. It’s long been the source for bloggers, and I’d hate to see it disappear over financial issues.

  33. sony

    looking for it.