‘A whole new frontier for us’: Marketplaces begin to crop up as publishers continue to hunt for new user revenue

By Max Willens

The end of the year has brought a flurry of publishers launching marketplaces.

Leaf Group’s Well + Good launched a shop filled with wellness items including Vitamin D skin cream and bath bombs; Narcity, a local news publisher operating in five markets in Canada, launched a market stocked with wares offered by both local and national merchants; Forbes launched Forbes Global Properties, a separate business that operates as a licensing deal but gives the business publisher a chance to learn about their wealthier readers; Her Campus Media, which operates a number of sites aimed at women, is building a recruiting marketplace that aims to sign up 50 employers over the next year.

These join other marketplace forays including Outpost, the Infatuation’s New York-specific shop for food and classes, and the Complex Shop, which launched late last year and has grown its customer base 20x in its first year, according to a spokesperson who would not share raw numbers.

While advertising remains the principal source of revenue for most of these publishers, many are bullish on their marketplace’s prospects, not just in terms of near-term financials, but in terms of the long-view strategic implications of building more direct customer relationships with their readers. “In the first year I expect it to surpass our affiliate revenue,” said Kate Spies, the gm and svp of Well + Good. “It’s much more effective from a business model standpoint…Moving forward, it allows us to explore white-labeling, to explore a product line.”

Spies would not share specifics about how much of Well + Good’s revenue comes from commerce, but she did say that the growth of the site’s commerce business played a key role in its strong performance in the second half of the year; the site’s revenues were up 39% year over year in the third quarter, Spies said.

In the abstract, many publishers have the raw materials needed to build successful marketplaces: Direct connections to large, engaged audiences with clearly understood needs on one side, and established relationships to advertisers or sellers, many of whom are looking for new sales channels as e-commerce grows more important on the other.

For example, Narcity CEO Chuck Lapointe said Narcity’s editorial team had a list of hundreds of local Canadian merchants ready to recommend to Bonsai, the technology vendor that plugs into the merchants selling on Narcity Market. As the market grows, Lapointe said, the Narcity editors will recommend hundreds more.

But historically, publishers have stayed away from marketplaces because they require skillsets and technology that few have at their disposal. While most of the publishers dipping their toes in these waters already have some experience with affiliate commerce, direct connections to their loyal chunks of readers, and in some cases, a customer relationship, the scope of what’s being asked is very difficult.

“We have a database of people we have a monetary relationship with, but this is definitely a whole new frontier for us,” Spies said.

The Infatuation, for example, chose to hire an outside consultant to …read more

Source:: Digiday

      

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