Home Publishers How Ziff Davis And Black Enterprise Bring In Revenue With Commerce Content

How Ziff Davis And Black Enterprise Bring In Revenue With Commerce Content

SHARE:

Staying alive is an ongoing struggle for media companies.

To stave off revenue decreases, which have averaged a 9% decline every year over the past six years, according to Brian Wieser’s Madison and Wall Substack, publishing has tried assorted tactics. From paywalls to a clumsy scramble toward video, publishing is trying to make its $18 billion business survive and remain relevant.

In recent years, publishers have turned to commerce media, which entails building direct relationships with retailers and brands as they create commerce-related content.

“Our bread and butter is still going to be display. But year over year, the commerce business has been increasing,” said Ryan Chong, senior director of ad operations at Ziff Davis, at a panel at the AdMonsters Ad Ops event last week with Black Enterprise that delved into how publishers are doing their latest pivot to capture more ad revenue.

What’s on offer

Ziff Davis runs properties such as PCMag, Mashable, IGN and Lifehacker, as well as shopping sites Offers.com and BlackFriday.com. Together, its sites pocket $1.4 billion a year in ad revenue, though its Q1 2023 revenue declined 2.5% YOY.

Affiliate links and branded content are Ziff Davis’s main commerce products. But the real opportunity is in branded content that tells a story, said Chong, which they can sell at a premium price.

Mashable has a dedicated team of editors who write articles about the best daily deals. Ziff Davis generally uses deal-specific writers, separate from the regular editorial page. It also disallows advertiser influence, “so there’s still that editorial integrity,” Chong said.

Similarly, Black-owned publisher Black Enterprise includes sponsored articles that sit on a subdomain of the site. A white-label company writes those articles. And the publisher, billed as a Black Forbes or Fortune, also sends out newsletters every Saturday with five commerce-branded content slots, said Justin Barton, the publisher’s SVP of digital strategy and partnerships.

Data mania

As a review site for consumer electronics, Ziff Davis gathers a lot of data already, Chong said. But commerce content allows the company to retarget readers who are ready for a purchase and track whether they click on purchase links. Branded articles are “more of an awareness play,” he added.

“You’ve got to analyze the data and make sure you’re getting good conversions and providing the right compass,” Chong said. “And if not, optimize, optimize, optimize.”

For Black Enterprise, collecting intent data and other first-party data, such as customer email addresses, isn’t just useful for the content and advertising sides of the business. It also informs what sorts of virtual and in-person events will resonate for future planning.

For instance, after receiving a flood of mortgage-related inquiries, Black Enterprise decided to develop and sell sponsorships for a mortgage wealth and real estate summit.

Commerce content can also bring in new users, which is a mixed bag for Black Enterprise. More conversions and purchases are positives. On the other hand, SEO-focused content might prompt “general market people” to visit the site and consume content, Barton said. These users could dilute its predominantly Black audience.

The importance of preserving its Black consumer focus is also why Black Enterprise is steering clear of using generative AI to write commerce (and other) content. Although AI programs could theoretically produce reams of content more efficiently than human writers and shore up revenue for the publisher, Barton doesn’t see AI as being able to supplant the human element.

“Can it have the voice that we’re looking for that speaks to our ways? A little bit, but not there yet,” Barton said. “It always has to have some human interaction or touch to it, to make it authentic to what we do.”

Must Read

multiple sets of eyes

Amazon DSP Adds Adelaide’s Pre-Bid Attention Targeting

Advertisers can target high- and medium-attention ad inventory in Amazon DSP while filtering out low-attention placements and made-for-advertising sites.

Marketers Are Getting Used To AI In The Ad Stack

Marketers and media buyers are gradually getting more comfortable talking about ad campaigns they’re testing on large-language models like OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

For Video Publishers, Performance And AI Go Hand In Hand

In Connected TV Ad Land, proving performance is the priority for video advertisers. To drive more demonstrable reach and results, publishers are trying to expand their reach while wringing more data and AI features into their offerings. 

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Independent Ad Tech Is Reframing Itself Around Cloud Hardware

Nowadays, programmatic vendors, and SSPs in particular, are carving new paths of differentiation based on their type of adoption of cloud infrastructure.

Ad Performance Hinges On Kicking Fragmentation’s Butt

As performance takes center-stage in more advertising discussions, demands to solve fragmentation and cruddy measurement are reaching a fever pitch.

AdExchanger's Big Story podcast with journalistic insights on advertising, marketing and ad tech

AI Off The Rails

A word of caution to digital advertising companies, as they go all in on AI algorithms: They need to build these solutions with ownership, governance and accountability from the start – or AI could sink them with a single mistake.