.. so what is a “social media proprietor”? And how is s/he different from a blogger?

Dunno, don’t ask me. Google it….
uh oh, we are both in trouble. The only response from Google on “social media proprietor(s)” are MY presentations. So either they don’t exist, have another name or … I’m the first one to document them. heh. Moving right along…

Social media proprietors focus on a number of things that bloggers may not:

  • advertising – display, banner, those little boxy things.
  • classifieds – jobs is popular, the rivers of gold running to social media.
  • merchandising – any old crap – t-shirts, cups, toilet paper
  • mulitple revenue streams and always thinking about monetization and the bottom line.
  • employing staff – blogger for hire, paid on page views
  • raising capital – the art of getting other people to show that they value your/staff pixel scribblings.

Here are some examples:

ADVERTISING:
Oh look, this is the fallback for everyone at first. This is THE standard way of monetizing your blog. I ran courses a couple of years ago at the University of Sydney on “how to make money from writing/blogging”. Advertising was always the popular choice, probably also the laziest for any would-be social media proprietor. Heh.

Michael Arrington of TechCrunch started as a lawyer then became a blogger and now makes $2.5 million per year, has a $100 million valuation, classifieds and job boards, $12,000 per month display advertising, Crunchgear (merchandising) and blogger staff.

I have a bunch of stuff on this at Social Media Monetization and Revenue post.

EMPLOYING STAFF
Gawker Media have one manager (is that an ‘editor’ role?) for every 50 blogger. They pay on page views:

“for Gawker writers, a million pageviews a month to an individual writer’s blog posts will now net that writer $5000. Just back in January, a million pageviews would have gotten a writer $7,500. The reduced pageview rate means that writers must do more—or, of course, more popular!—work to even receive the same rate of pay.”

In depth analysis from Jason Calacanis (Netscape founder) on Nick Denton of Gawker’s model.
Thanks to Hugh Martin for sending me the link. I’m not sure that Hugh will agree with something I wrote ages ago: that MSM journalists should have collaboration and views written into their KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) by heritage media proprietors.

In spite of the fact that said newspaper journalists often don’t blog or believe in collaborative journalism (make blog readership part of their KPIs). (more from 2006/07)

We buy the Saturday paper, but we don’t consume the whole paper. Sports, Politics, Business, Crossword, the funnies, appeal to different people. Online we can know down to the second how long someone spent on a page. Different, no?

RAISING CAPITAL
Giga Om have just raised some funds:

From time to time, I have shared with you the steps we’re taking to build Giga Omni Media, the 27-month-old company behind this and the other publications that make up the GigaOM network. Today, I am thrilled to announce the start of our company’s next phase.

We have just raised $4.5 million, led by new investor Alloy Ventures, an early-stage venture capital firm with over $1 billion under management. True Ventures, our primary investors thus far, also participated in the round. The round was blessed by our angel investors, Rakesh Mathur, Venky Harinarayan and Anand Rajaraman as well. As part of the funding, Alloy Ventures general partner Ammar Hanafi will join the Giga Omni Media board. (more)

Bloggers are starting to look a lot like heritage media. *thoughtful* And Giga-Om had health issues from the stress of running his media empire.

Do Nick Denton or Om Malik have a ‘classical’ journalist/editor background? I don’t think they do, do they?

I wonder when Darren Rowse, from ProBlogger, will/has become Australia’s first social media proprietor? Or maybe it’s Duncan Riley from the Inquisitr. Or… ?

Incidentally, I’m distinguishing between blogger social media proprietors and say, online citizen newspapers like Norg‘s from Bronwen Clune and Korea’s OhMyNews. They follow an open newspaper format – less reliant on regular bloggers, more like a forum of submitted news. Also, there is less of the citizen editor role in blogger SM Proprietor sites than in vote sites like Bronwen’s and Digg.

Not sure where to place WotNews - Plugger as it was before – aggregated from blogs, no payment back to submitters, but they did sell to Wotif. Hmmm…. this breaking down of models and then trying to find similar models to compare old and new is not as easy as it looks. :(

Final Word: Passionate bloggers often volunteer their time and knowlege for intangible rewards such as leadership and recognition. Social Media Proprietors on the other hand, always know the bottom line of running their Empires. Ka ching!

 

Want a list of Australian CEOs that are on Twitter? Scroll to the bottom. Business Week have a piece on each CEO that uses the so-called ‘microblogging’ service Twitter. I don’t like the term micro-blogging when applied to Twitter as it’s less of a one-to-many asynch depth of content site like a video blog or a multimedia blog and more of a few-to-few synchronous chat channel. Tweets From the Chiefs The best chief executives are nothing if not efficient, and what’s more efficient than 140-character memos? Microblogging site Twitter is the latest tech tool to enter the C-suite. Whether they Continue Reading…

 

Clipping: Heritage Media have a cake fundraising day. Revenues are tight. I made Duncan Riley giggle the other night by calling Mainstream Media or Old Media or print/tv/radio media “Heritage Media”. It’s not my term – but I forget where I heard it first. But it stuck. (Duncan Riley’s Forget MSM or Old Media, Heritage Media is the Term post) It actually is quite nice – one thinks of listing The Australian and Fin Review on a heritage National Trust list, volunteers manning (personning?) the desks and strict injunctions against changing anything – the masthead, the font, the bylines. Perhaps Continue Reading…

 

Four stories of chandelier anyone? First of all, 2webcrew live podcast with comments channel is about to start. I’m usually on there, but all this travelling has meant I’ve not been able to do it for 3 weeks, but still, they are doing a fabbo job! Duncan Riley from TechCrunch, Cameron Reilly from The Podcast Network and Bronwen Clune of Norg Newspapers. And the usually assorted wierdos and geeks. Background first, then Day One. And day two is about Women and Identity in Saudi Arabia. Day Three and Four have been similar to each other. You might like to know: Continue Reading…

 

*drum roll* PRREEEEEEsenting *ta da* Laurel Papworth (me), Duncan Riley (TechCrunch), Bronwen Clune (Norg Media) and Cameron Reilly (The Podcast Network or TPN) 2Web Crew #11 – 2007 wrap-up Join Techcrunch’s Duncan Riley, Norg’s Bronwen Clune, World Communities’ Laurel Papworth and TPN’s Cameron Reilly for a round up of the apps and services that rocked our world in 2007. Download The Show Bronwen, Duncan Riley invited me to join him, Laurel Papworth and Cameron Reilly for a regular podcast on the Web 2.0 scene. We talked about the apps that rocked our world in 2007 – which for most of Continue Reading…

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