Payperpost: The endgame is on but will they survive?

It seems that the recent announcement at PayPerPost has sparked a real fury on the boards at Izea over the last few months. To recap: PPP has offered a shortened discount period for posts but it seems that the whole thing has gone belly up. Recently PPP increased the price of a post to 50% of the final cost from 35% to recoup some of the increased costs.

This has had the obvious effect of cutting into bloggers compensation, and in some cases raised costs for advertisers lower down the rung. To drum up additional business, Ted Murphy recently launched the new opps for January.

But this has fomented something of a rebellion on the boards at Izea.

mrsmecomber writes: “I’m sorry, I cannot expect to recoup my expenses for blog hosting/image hosting/etc and generate endless streams of posts for 50 cents/$1 each. I would have to write about 20 posts a day (not including the interims) PER DAY to earn $10 here. And please don’t give me the line that the interim requirement will be changed someday in the sweet by and by, etc– I’m talking about NOW, that what is legally required and is very likely to remain the same.”

For more of the discussion check the threads on the boards.

It’s being advertised as a way to “understand how the market operates when arbitrary words/post and $/post floors are removed. Bloggers and advertisers still control whether transactions happen or not, and at what words/prices.” But I find this most puzzling. If you remove the floor, won’t the obvious happen? Advertisers will simply cut their requirements, and those bloggers who don’t mind lower payouts keep taking them. Since the deal making will still go on, there would have to be other variables in the experiment.

Anyway, I’m surprised that they would want to experiment in this way because I can’t see how it would relate to improving things for everyone. I’ve already pulled this blog from PayPerPost, and terminated my account. It just seems a somewhat underhand way to achieve your objectives to cut prices and offerings for your advertisers as well as your bloggers.

Jeff

Friday Video: Coming to America

Neil Diamond’s Coming To America

It seems somehow apropos in this Credit Crunch scenario, but it has a very hopeful tempo and upbeat sentiment!

From Wikipedia’s article.

“America” (also known as “They’re Coming To America” or “Coming To America”) is the name of a patriotic song written and originally recorded by Neil Diamond, released in 1980 as part of the The Jazz Singer soundtrack album. The song was a hit single in 1981, reaching number 8 on the Billboard Hot 100. Although the single version was a studio recording, it sounds live because of crowd overdubs in the song.

Is Payperpost experiencing slow business? Why the $1.00 offers?

Is Payperpost experiencing slow business?

I recently received an email from Ted at Payperpost who writes:

As you know we recently made some changes to the PayPerPost platform. While the feedback regarding our interface refinement has been great, we have also received some concerns relating to our pricing adjustments.

I am sensitive to your pricing feedback and would like to try a new model for a limited time. My hope is that we will find a balance that works financially for advertisers, bloggers and IZEA. With that in mind, we have made the following changes: – Minimum total cost per post reduced to $1.00 – Minimum word count reduced to 25 words with a link only option This is a limited time promotion that starts today and ends at the end of the month.

I’m not surprised at this announcement. I also wonder how long PPP will run these announcements for because of their recent drastic price increases. It’s likely true that PayPerPost’s cost structure was untenable originally.

However, their timing in increasing pricing was just awful. Increase prices as advertisers and everybody else start trimming budgets and spending. It’s also clear that there are competitors out there that offer more for less in advertising and blogging terms. Perhaps Payperpost is now trying to attract advertisers away from competitors.

But there are just too many problems for me working with Payperpost now, and not much upside at all.

You need to be in North America or even Europe to have a chance of good posts; you need some PR; you need to maintain posting even if you don’t get opps; you have to follow the rules for Opps; you have to follow the requirements; you have to include links, codes, word requirements (200 words are increasingly required), style of opp, you have to have Alexa rankings, PR ranking, RR ranking, your own domain name, your own hosting, a decent tack rating, and you have to reside in certain countries, … all to get a share of $5.00 opps that require 200 words or more for a blog with a PR of three! Wow! And that’s if your blog is still considered ‘acceptable after the audit.

Whither now?

It’s a telling sign of where blogging is headed: prices are going down, Payperpost’s share is going up, traffic from India is up (Alexa cites India as the primary source of traffic for PayPerPost) as bloggers there find they have a competitive advantage. But worse seems to be in store: Compete is showing that time on the site is down considerably since last year, as are monthly visits. This means more competition for fewer opportunities.

Competitors abound?

There are indeed many wannabes in the marketplace, and in fact, I’ve been blogging for several of them over the years, and I much prefer PayU2Blog which pays a standard rate per link only, there’s no censorship of content or links provided you have a minimum number of words; and there’s no hassle getting assignments. You either have them or you don’t. If you don’t have them, check back next week.

Compared to the hassle of PayPerPost, it’s seeming a viable even pleasant alternative to Payperpost without most of the downsides. So I’m still sitting on the sidelines with PayPerPost. SocialSpark has no interest at all for me now, more’s the pity.

Any thoughts about these two blogging companies? Owen’s already posted his thoughts, but I wonder what’s going on… Owen…