Recently, Northern Colorado Writers Director Kerrie Flanagan asked me about blog networks. A blog network is a group of blogs and bloggers writing under a common banner, similar to writers working for a newspaper. While most of a network’s bloggers aren’t employees (though the site’s editors may be) usually there are contractual agreements between the network and the bloggers, and editorial requirements like posting so many times per week with a minimal word count. Some of the biggest blog networks are b5media, Gawker, and Weblogs, Inc.
Soon after I talked with Kerrie, the blogosphere was abuzz with the closing of Know More Media, an online network of business information and news blogs. Co-founder Tim Stay left comments on several blogs that KMM is actually on hiatus (meaning their bloggers are not getting paid) while they fix search engine issues and regroup. Many KMM bloggers are staying put, and continue to post.
At the same time, AOL-owned Weblogs, Inc. drastically cut back on their bloggers’ compensation. AOL said that it overspent in previous months, and they would start paying their bloggers later this summer. Some Weblogs, Inc. bloggers continue to post, which garnered criticism about giving away work for free and lowering blogger pay rates.
Should you consider joining a blog network?
So are blog networks worth considering if you want to make money blogging? Probably not since many network bloggers are paid based on revenue share, a portion of advertising revenue. The average pay on the bottom end is around $2/CPM ($2 per thousand views of a blog). If you have a low traffic blog, let’s say 200 views a day – which is not bad for a beginner – that’s $12 per month. You could do better collecting aluminum cans.
If you break the numbers down, that’s $12 for 12 posts per month. Let's say that’s three posts per week. (You’re usually required to write more). If each post is 250 words, that’s .004 cents per word. If you’re lucky enough to have good to great traffic – in the 1,000 to 10,000 per day range – you may earn enough to make it worth your while. However, traffic like that takes months to years to get, and depends on the niche you’re blogging in and your blog marketing efforts.
Some of the better networks give their bloggers a monthly stipend, which is what I got when I blogged at ClubMom. However, if you leave, get fired, or the network closes you probably don’t have rights to your content. (The blog network has at least first rights to your content, but may prevent you in some other way from taking and posting your writing somewhere else. Check your contract.) If they do allow you to take your work, you may have to buy the blog from the network for several thousand dollars. I was lucky. When ClubMom canceled their blogging program, I was allowed to transfer my blog to another host for free.
Read your contract CAREFULLY
If you’re considering joining a blog network, read your contract carefully. Then do an Internet search to find out if the network has a good reputation, or a high turnover rate and disgruntled ex-bloggers. Finally, know what your time is worth and how long you’re willing to blog for (nearly) free.
Still, writing for a network like b5media, 9rules or SparkPlugging is very prestigious. As now-out-of-work KMM editor Easton Ellsworths of Business Blog Wire says, joining a network to build exposure or boost your resume is one of the best reasons to do it.
However, there is a way to gain exposure for your writing without giving away too much of your content for free. It’s called guest blogging and I’ll write about soon.
This originally appeared in the August issue of the Northern Colorado Writers newsletter.