Recent Comment
Spotlight
- Reader Michael Megalli writes: It is difficult to engage in genuine conversations with the marketplace when you can't change the reality of how a company does business, what it sells, how it works with partners, etc. [go]
Recent Comments
- John Weir: " Great post John. I'm running some cour ..." [go]
- nmw: " wow -- that almost makes the sohbet spam ..." [go]
- me@home.com: " Hi John, great book. Great blog. Great t ..." [go]
- nmw: " Chris, maybe not on HotBot.COM or Googl ..." [go]
- Chris Kilkes: " An old cliche comes to mind, "what's old ..." [go]
- Sarah Worsham: " Interesting idea, but doesn't seem to wo ..." [go]
- seo results: " Interesting, so kinda like what Ask.com ..." [go]
- nmw: " >> This means than more than a third, if ..." [go]
- Dan Keldsen: " John - we're currently running a researc ..." [go]
- Jim: " Hi John, I have been reading this blog f ..." [go]
- Faisal Segu: " Seems to me we need to connect these "bi ..." [go]
- JG: " Google's new motto: Gaudy and relevant ..." [go]
- JG: " Sooner or later, people will catch on ..." [go]
- prefabrik ev: " Looking a blinking, moving, las vegas st ..." [go]
- JG: " nmw: you may notice that many (indeed ..." [go]
- Teddie: " Interesting. I've presented on the Futur ..." [go]
PERFECT FOR THAT PERSON WITH EVERYTHING
Order 'The Search'
Yup, it makes the perfect gift for that officemate or colleague who you thought had everything....including you! If you order here, I promise to sign it, assuming we can figure out the shipping...
You can also buy the audio version here.
Check my book page for more info.
Blogger's Rights
Top Posts
- The Database of Intentions (or how this all got started)
- From Pull to Point(or the first post where I riff on the "Point-To Economy")
- Google As Builder (or the point at which Google stopped being simply a search engine)
- On Google v. Yahoo
- TV and Search Merge
- On Sell Side Advertising
- Battelle Gets Searchstreams
- Search and Immortality
- Toward the Endemic (on endemic advertising)
More coming soon...
Active Topics
- 35 comments: WTF??!!! (04.17)
- 26 comments: Twitter. Oh God. (04.30)
- 14 comments: The Future of Search Series (05.08)
- 14 comments: The Music In Magazines (05.07)
- 12 comments: Google to Go Big With TV Ads (04.14)
Monthly Archives
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- August 2006
- July 2006
- June 2006
- May 2006
- April 2006
- March 2006
- February 2006
- January 2006
- December 2005
- November 2005
- October 2005
- September 2005
- August 2005
- July 2005
- June 2005
- May 2005
- April 2005
- March 2005
- February 2005
- January 2005
- December 2004
- November 2004
- October 2004
- September 2004
- August 2004
- July 2004
- June 2004
- May 2004
- April 2004
- March 2004
- February 2004
- January 2004
- December 2003
- November 2003
- October 2003
About John Battelle
Searchblog Newsletter
Enter email to subscribe to Searchblog's newsletter:
Calendar
| Su | Mo | Tu | We | Th | Fr | Sa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | ||||
| 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
| 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 |
| 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 |
| 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 |
Syndicate
Powered by
October 26, 2004 10:34 AM
Meeker on Digital World: Blogs, Yahoo Are Winners
Sure, Mary Meeker raised her target on GOOG recently, which her company Morgan Stanley helped take public, but she's seen the future of search, and there's a lot of blogging in it. From her October "Update on the Digital World" (caveat: PDF download):
The Internet has become a leading source for news and information over the past decade, but we believe the emerging acceptance (by users and publishers) of Web content syndication services will drive even broader / deeper usage of the Internet as an increasingly relevant news and information medium. We see three factors that are combining to drive momentum: 1) rising usage of RSS (Really Simple Syndication) by content providers as a standard distribution platform for online content; 2) ramp in the creation of blogs and other user-generated content; and 3) Yahoo!’s easy-to-use integration of RSS feeds (including blogs) that was rolled out in beta to its distribution channel of 25MM+ My Yahoo! users in late September.
While Google’s search engine and advertising tools set the pace for new ways of searching information, we believe that Yahoo! may be setting the pace for new ways of serving information...
It usually takes years for new technologies to develop. Then, a very easy-to-use way to use the technology is launched and—seemingly overnight—related products become mainstream. Two recent examples include the Web browser, which brought the Internet to the masses, and the Apple iPod, which is doing the same with digital music. Today, this type of mainstream push for delivering syndicated news and information to consumers may be driven by Yahoo!’s newly redesigned My Yahoo! personal page...
....In our experience, if there is value in something that is also easy / friendly to use, people will use it. Consider iTunes for legal music downloads or TiVo for digital video recordings—in both cases, a clean interface and intuitive controls spurred adoption. The simplification of blogging tools, such as those offered by Blogger.com, has allowed anyone with an opinion and an Internet connection to become a publisher, journalist, and editor (our humble definition of a blogger)...Despite all the noise and random content in blogs, many bloggers have become sources for breaking news, fresh ideas, and expert commentary....
...And if there are hundreds or thousands of thought leaders and motivated, interested parties on the Internet with the ability to publish news or insights into any number of local or global issues, then it is safe to say that these blogs often become both the first source of news, a vital proving ground for authors and a source of potential community for other interested parties. For example, you’re probably going to get far more Boston Red Sox specific-content from a blog about the Red Sox made by a die-hard fan than you will from a random sports page, especially if you’re after opinions and community.
Mary then goes on to note that with blogs, the Power of the Tail comes into play (see Tim and my presentation regarding this and other trends at Web 2.0):
The mainstreaming of Web syndication technology such as RSS through easy-to-use and popular services such as My Yahoo! could create a new business model / revenue stream for companies such as Yahoo!, as well as independent freelance Web journalists / content providers. We believe that blogs represent the traditionally hard-tomonetize tail of content, and the barriers to monetization are slowly being overcome. ... By integrating blogs with search, and by making it easy for end-users to find and add blogs, Yahoo! is playing a key role in driving blog readership and RSS usage among endusers.
Meeker then shows us another chart, which makes the "more music, less Britney" point:

This is another way of saying that the internet lets thousands of "bands" flourish, each supported by their own economies of scale.
Which is why I'm interested in and excited by Feedburner, Kanoodle, AdBrite (recently renamed from MarketBanker), and the like. In her report, Mary talks a bit about the potential for all this to mean money to someone (after all, she's a Wall St. analyst) and she concludes:
We believe syndication technology is one of the tools that through a virtuous cycle should propel Internet leaders such as Yahoo! further into the forefront of all media, albeit slowly and steadily. High-quality, unique, and cutting-edge content is critical for the growth of any medium. We believe advertising and fees for syndicated content present a potential business opportunity for the Internet leaders and content providers.
...We would like to think that the popularization of syndicated content could further fulfill some promise of an engaging, useful and vibrant user-generated medium on the Internet. This does not suggest the endof mass media, either broadcast or narrowcast, but it could represent significant changes in consumption andmonetization. If the Internet is a marketplace of ideas, then the best ideas should float to the top, with traditional mass media perhaps serving as a tool for legitimizing/establishing discourse. The driver for Yahoo!, eBay, Google, Microsoft and Amazon.com’s Internet successes has been their never-ending quest tocreate the perfect, seamless user experience—in other words, they do right by their users. What open syndication shows is that by doing right by their users and independent publishers, they also have the potential ability to do right by investors, in our view.
I think Mary outlines trends in this space well, her report is a must read for all of you interested in the business implications of blogging. Her conclusion: This blogging thing, it got legs. And that's a fine way to end my 1,000th post here on Searchblog.
- Posted by John Battelle on October 26, 2004 10:34 AM
TrackBack
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Meeker on Digital World: Blogs, Yahoo Are Winners:
» Presentations from Web 2.0 from Alex Moskalyuk Weblog
John Battelle points to presentations from Web 2.0 conference.... [Read More]
- Tracked on October 26, 2004 3:32 PM
» Mary Meeker uses Topix.net? :-) from Topix.net Weblog
John Battelle pointed out the latest Digital World report from Mary Meeker, where she outlines the developments of RSS, Blogs, and online advertising. This is a good read for anyone interested in the web-publishing business, whether you are a self-publ... [Read More]
- Tracked on October 27, 2004 2:52 PM
» Google Buys Keyhole & Updates Backlinks, MSN Search Personalization, Spamming RSS from SEO Book.com
Google recently did a backlink update and purchased the image mapping company Keyhole. Ask Jeeves reported expected quarterly results and lost 20% of their market capitalization. MSN search to offer search result personalization sliders. Spam finds its... [Read More]
- Tracked on October 28, 2004 6:16 AM
» Update from the Digital World from unmediated
Morgan Stanley´s latest report covers Weblogs, RSS and Yahoo: "In our experience, if there is value in something that is also easy / friendly to use, people will use it. /../ The simplification of blogging tools, such as those offered by Blogger.c... [Read More]
- Tracked on October 28, 2004 9:29 AM
» Update On The Digital World from Inside Plants Live
John Battelle's Searchblog reports on Mary Meeker's research report Update On The Digital World(a PDF file). It's a worthwhile read that includes up to date information about blogs.... [Read More]
- Tracked on October 28, 2004 1:48 PM



Comments
1000 posts! Congrats!
This is very good news for bloggers, but I'm not so sure it's good news for Yahoo! and cohorts.
Case in point, I switched from My.Yahoo to MyWay to escape the advertising on Yahoo!. Essentially, I moved (as a consumer) from the Yahoo business model to the Google business model.
My next step, with RSS and all the tools that are evolving, is to quit MyWay for an RSS constructed page. I won't need a Yahoo! or a MyWay to contruct the page for me. And it will be a page that has advertising that I want - not advertising that is foisted on me - if it has any advertising at all.
We shall see what business models emerge in the environment I envision, but I wouldn't bet on Yahoo! or MSN or Google.
I'm betting on Quinset.
Cheers!
Jim Bursch
jimbursch.com
Woot on 1,000 posts!
Jim switched away too soon. Yahoo has heard the 'call of the consumers' on the open content model. The latest version of My Yahoo! allows me to add as many RSS feeds as I like.
Currently, I have fourteen (14) RSS modules and four (4) Yahoo provide ones - and I have one advertisement to look at. I find that business model quite compelling compared to paying for the RSS reader FeedDemon @ 29.95 USD a pop.
Yes, I said FOURTEEN RSS modules (including Battellemedia).
Move your bet Jim. ;)
And Yahoo... bring on the personalized text ads.
Good day,
- mike
Google's Now Worth More Than Yahoo
Bill Burnham has a different perspective:
"Why is Google worth more than Yahoo, despite generating 10% less in revenues? Two simple reasons: Growth and margins. On the growth front, Google's Q3 revenues grew 15% sequentially compared to Yahoo's 9% growth. On the margin front, Google's operating margins (less the one-time legal settlement with none other than Yahoo) were 26% in the quarter compared to Yahoo's 19% operating magins. As the old maxim goes 'Wall Street Pays For Growth' and Google is clearly growing faster at higher margins than Yahoo.
The big question now is whether or not Google can sustain its premium valuation to Yahoo. Detractors might point out that Google is more vulnerable than Yahoo because Google's revenues are highly concentrated in search advertising, however the other side of the coin is that Google has plenty of opportunity to expand outside of search and into many of the paid subscription services that Yahoo and other internet portals now offer.
With its recently launched G-Mail service and rumors of an IM client and other portal staples forthcoming, I suspect that Google has a lot of incremental growth opportunities ahead of it that will help it sustain its growth. Indeed, at current growth rates Google will surpass Yahoo in terms of quarterly revenues by Q1 05 and they will do this despite the fact that they remain largely a one-trick pony. That's quite a pony!"
http://billburnham.blogs.com/burnhamsbeat/2004/10/truth_will_out_.html
Leave a comment