It seems crazy to me that Reddit can't figure out a way to become profitable. Facebook is hilariously profitable on a fairly similar business model for example. It's not like Reddit is without ads, nor are they lacking in data they could sell (albeit not as high of quality as Facebook or Google). They even sell "Reddit gold" for real money.
Maybe they have exceptionally high operating costs? Or are they just really bad at selling ad space? I get that there are some advertisers that don't want to go on there because they are afraid their ad will show up next to a picture of a naked lady (which is something Reddit could control pretty easily), but Reddit is so big that it seems pretty hard to ignore.
I can answer this as an advertiser. Most reddit users don't log in or subscribe to subreddits, and thus reddit has a very small targetable userbase. Like, if I want to serve an ad to business owners, I can serve it to subscribers to /r/smallbusiness but that audience exhausts very quickly.
All of FB's users are logged in and can be targeted by interest.
Can you not pick specific subreddits to advertise in (or have your ad appear next to on the home page)?
Seems like your userbase self-segments pretty quickly on Reddit, although it's no doubt a fulltime job for several engineers to keep up with the classifications on subreddits.
I guess the biggest problem is that so many users don't log in and just browse the default, which is pretty generic. Reddit could track the not-logged-in users and what they click on like Google, but that's a fair bit more work.
genuine question. is reddit good place to advertise a B2B software? my startup offers B2B warehousing/ecommerce solution and I never thought about reddit in that way even if I visit its front page daily.
You might get some brand awareness if you target specific subs (devops, etc), but I'd imagine the decisionmakers in companies that need what you're providing are not spending their time on subreddits, and the non-decisionmakers probably have adblocking on.
Thats just my perception though - also that reddit as a whole is very lowest common denominator tech/business wise.
Reddit seems to have a huge but very fragile audience. Monetizing the site would introduce changes that might drive off the users much the way Digg did.
Reddit's data isn't that valuable (as you cannot key it back to a real human), a huge swath of their users adblock, and it has tons and tons of pornographic content which - and i do not necessarily agree with - will lower ad values. The current path to monetization Reddit is trying is making their data more valuable via more detailed user profiles and chats, essentially creating a pseudonymous social network and hoping itll take off like FB.
However, I think the real money would be for them to be more like Craigslist. Subreddits could pay to upgrade to become more feature-rich "Classified"-like pages whose posts could then be further boosted (re: upsell for ad team) across other subreddits.
Users react with hostility to forced social media / redesigns geared to ad revenues. They like new features that are actually useful and enhance the experience.
Maybe they have exceptionally high operating costs? Or are they just really bad at selling ad space? I get that there are some advertisers that don't want to go on there because they are afraid their ad will show up next to a picture of a naked lady (which is something Reddit could control pretty easily), but Reddit is so big that it seems pretty hard to ignore.