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WSJ on CraigsList and Zen of Classified Ads 278

prostoalex writes "Wall Street Journal profiles one of the Valley's most mysterious and secretive Web companies. A leader in online classifieds space and by some measures one of Web's top sites, CraigsList is ostensibly anti-ad and anti-self-promotion. From the article: "One industry analyst has estimated that Craigslist could generate 20 times that $25 million just by posting a couple of ads on each of its pages. If the estimate is to be believed, that's half a billion dollars a year being left on the table. What kind of company turns up its nose at $500 million?""
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WSJ on CraigsList and Zen of Classified Ads

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  • by American AC in Paris ( 230456 ) * on Monday June 19, 2006 @03:47PM (#15563812) Homepage
    What kind of company turns up its nose at $500 million?

    The kind of company that companies which wouldn't turn up their noses at $500 million doesn't want you to believe exists.

    Companies can exist, thrive and even excel without taking advantage of every opportunity to maximize profit. This sort of company tends to be discomfiting to the type of company which would gladly throw some ads at you for extra revenue.

    Companies like Craigslist and Costco--places that thrive on word of mouth, putting people ahead of profit, and genuine goodwill--tend to make "normal" companies uncomfortable. How do you compete when your competition has justly earned and kept the trust of the marketplace? How are you supposed to "optimize profits" with a consumer who knows what it feels like to be respected?

    • I am with you on most of your comment, but whats so altruistic about Costco?
      • Re:...Costco? (Score:5, Informative)

        by sadr ( 88903 ) <skg@sadr.com> on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:27PM (#15564148)
        CostCo pays their employees very well for retail and treats their suppliers with respect. In return, their suppliers try hard to keep them as a customer, and CostCo's "shrinkage" (i.e. mostly employee theft) is the lowest in the industry.

        Their profits are essentially the annual membership fee. Once you've paid that, you're buying everything pretty much at cost (including those higher salaries.)

        They do not advertise and dispense with most of the corporate BS. Which means the customer doesn't have to pay for all of that overhead either.

        • Re:...Costco? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by modecx ( 130548 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @05:38PM (#15564714)
          Totally... In addition to what you said, CostCo treats their employees so well that there are waiting lines to get a job in most areas, whereas there are usually no queues for jobs at Wal-Marts or Targets. I understand that they get good pay and decent benefits compared to most companies, and relative to other retail/wholesalers you wouldn't even think they were in the same business... Plus I've heard that they have a strict seniority system and with that comes vacation benefits and that sort of stuff.

          Also, from what I hear, they have what is probably the most liberal return/warranty policy of any company on the planet, though I haven't had a need to exercise that feature.

          I'm still cautious of huge "big box" retail chains, but on the whole, I'm pleased with CostCo. They seem to be non-evil and that's good enough for me. Plus, I can buy a5 gallon bucket of pickels without feeling guilty, and damnit, that's the way it should be.
          • Plus, I can buy a 5 gallon bucket of pickels without feeling guilty, and damnit, that's the way it should be.

            Pregnant much? ;-)

          • Yeah yeah, I know, rah rah Costco you-have-a-corporate-conscience-so-I-can-feel-goo d -giving-you-money and all that, but WalMart is not nearly as bad a place to work as people make it out to be. Granted, its probably not going to appeal that much to somebody who reads Slashdot, but people beat a path to their door when they open a new store:

            When one opened in a not-so-great neighborhood in Chicago, they got 25,000 applications (!) for 325 jobs. (http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-walma rt26.html)
      • Returns (Score:5, Informative)

        by phorm ( 591458 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:54PM (#15564354) Journal
        I've heard numerous complaints about most of the places around here in relation to returns (Future Shop, Radio Shack, London Drugs, etc). In particular, I've yet to see somebody manage to return a digital camera that has decided to die an untimely death...even with warranty

        However, with Costco, you bring in your item and you get a replacement. Sometimes even when the warranty has already passed. For that reason I highly recommend them for such things as digital cameras, etc, simply because when it comes to returns, they don't treat customers like potential cons.
      • Re:...Costco? (Score:5, Informative)

        by mrbooze ( 49713 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @06:09PM (#15564944)
        Costco is generally considered to be a "model company" in how it treats its employees and customers.

        There's a couple of not-necessarily-unbiased articles about it (both seem to take a WALMART BAD! COSTCO GOOD! spin, which while I probably agree with it, is pretty definitely a spin):
        http://reclaimdemocracy.org/articles_2004/costco_e mployee_benefits_walmart.html [reclaimdemocracy.org]
        http://www.seattleweekly.com/news/0450/041215_news _costco.php [seattleweekly.com]

        Also, someone mentioned Costco sells items at their cost and only makes a profit on memberships. That does not appear to be accurate:

        "Costco caps its profit margin on most products at 14% and allows itself slightly higher margins only on its Kirkland Signature store brand (a name derived from its previous headquarters in Kirkland) with a strict 15% profit limit."

        (From the Costco page at Wikipedia, with a reference to a source article.)
    • by fm6 ( 162816 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:22PM (#15564107) Homepage Journal
      What kind of company turns up its nose at $500 million?

      The kind of company that companies which wouldn't turn up their noses at $500 million doesn't want you to believe exists.

      And in fact they pretty much don't exist. Craigslist was founded by one guy, Craig Newmark, entirely with his own money. He still owns most of the company, except for one small chunk that he gave away, and that later was sold to eBay.

      Craigslist is the exception that proves the rule. Consider the following facts:

      • Craigslist has no investors or debtors to satisfy.
      • Craigslist has lucked into a large and loyal customer base built entirely on word-of-mouth..
      • Craigslist costs very little to keep running.
      • Craigslist has goals set entirely by one individual who has no desire to make more money than he needs to live off of.
      If any of these factors didn't apply, Craigslist would be just another company that would be utterly incapable of turning its back on that half-gigabuck. And yet each of these factors is extremely rare.

      I actually find Craigslist's money policies a little short-sighted. Not that I'm entirely against them providing free ads. It's nice that you can post your resume, or sell your couch, or ask somebody to come and fix your computer, and you don't have to pay. A lot of the people who use these services couldn't afford to use them if they weren't free.

      But why should all the people dealing in real estate get a free ride? I don't mean people who just want to split their rent with a roommie. I'm talking wealthly landlords [craigslist.org] and folks selling million-dollar homes [craigslist.org]. Who benefit not just from the fact that Craigslist is free, but the fact that the housing search software is well-designed. They should pay. If Mister Newmark doesn't want the money, there are plenty of worthy causes.

      • by DragonWriter ( 970822 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:33PM (#15564188)
        And in fact they pretty much don't exist. Craigslist was founded by one guy, Craig Newmark, entirely with his own money. He still owns most of the company, except for one small chunk that he gave away, and that later was sold to eBay.


        Sole? Sole proprietorships and very narrowly, privately held corporations, partnerships, etc. make up a large percentage of businesses, and many of them operate in accord with interests of their owners beyond simply maximizing financial return or market value of the business.

        Widely, publicly held companies whose management's sole duty is to maximize the financial return to the owners may make up most really big businesses, but they certainly aren't most businesses.
        • Sole? Sole proprietorships and very narrowly, privately held corporations, partnerships, etc. make up a large percentage of businesses, and many of them operate in accord with interests of their owners beyond simply maximizing financial return or market value of the business.

          Sole Proprietorships make make up the majority of businesses, but, if you look at it in terms of revenue, I think you will find the largest businesses make most of the money, and have the greatest economic impact.

          • Don't have a cite, but I vaguely remember reading that while each individual large business has much more of an economic effect than any individual small business, the sum total of all economic effect generated by all small businesses is significantly more than the sum total of all economic effect generated by all "large" businesses (subject to your definitions of small & large, of course).

            A society could do a lot worse than have economic policies which favored small businesses, and to ignore the desire
          • Sole Proprietorships make make up the majority of businesses, but, if you look at it in terms of revenue, I think you will find the largest businesses make most of the money, and have the greatest economic impact.
            Last I heard, the vast majority of all jobs were in small businesses, not big business.
      • by funfail ( 970288 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:35PM (#15564204) Homepage
        Did you read TFA? They charge for real estate in NY. Granted, they made that decision because of spam, but not all ads are free.
        • You're picking stupid nits. Most of their real-estate ads are still free. If you'd followed the links I'd provided, you see free ads for million-dollar house, and rentals that go for $10,000 a month.
      • "He still owns most of the company, except for one small chunk that he gave away, and that later was sold to eBay."

        Actually, ebay owns 25% of Craigslist [cnn.com].
      • You're mostly correct. Craigslist is a corporation but it's not been listed on public exchanges. Essentially it's privately held via shares. Because it is structured as a corporation then those shares are freely transferrable which is why one of the former employees sold 25% of the company to Ebay. That was nearly two years ago and Craigslist hasn't suffered for it.

        This kind of company can only exist when it's not publically owned. The pressures of revenue growth on public companies would never allow

      • I really liked your post, and think I can suggest an answer to the business of why ads are free. It's the "barrier to entry" thing. It's already happened to me. I wanted to test my very first web site product ad - so I put it in CraigsList for free. There's no way I would have given anyone on the web my credit card number for this tiny test (more worried about personal security on this one than the ten or fifteen bucks, I suppose). I got 20 hits on my web site, confirming that it's worthwhile to advert
    • by Anonymous Coward
      This is false. They _are_ maximizing profits, just over the long term. These sorts of companies make strategic decisions which pan out over years or decades, not over one or two financial quarters. You do them a disservice, and make these managers lives more difficult, by accusing them of not seeking profits. The CEO of Costco has been beating back financial analysts and stockholders for years because people like you keep the myth going.

      The lesson is that you can make profits, and increase profits, and buil
      • There are two problems with thinking about the long term (especially CL, less so Costco). First, in the long run you are all dead. Second, it's highly likely that your corporate entity will be dead far sooner than imagined. If there had been an ethical bullwhip company and an evil profit maximizing one the first left a lot more on the table than the second for pretty limited long term benefits. This does make a huge assumption that the ethical companie is more likely to attract talent who would allow th
    • Everyone sells out at some point.

      Craigslist will be no different once the smell of money corrupts them enough. Its the way of the world.
    • What kind of company turns up its nose at $500 million?


      the kind of company that knows it has more of a future by restraining its greed rather than by indulging it.
  • by loteck ( 533317 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @03:49PM (#15563833) Homepage
    What kind of company turns up its nose at $500 million?

    Perhaps, one that has decided that it doesn't need $500 million?

    I know, it hurts my brain too.

  • Timescope (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward
    It's like looking back in time, back to the middle ages when only the aristocracy had ad blockers on their computers.
  • Business Ethics (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Detritus ( 11846 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @03:53PM (#15563869) Homepage
    That "industry analyst" should tell his wife that "she is leaving thousands of dollars on the table" by not becoming a part-time prostitute.
  • by cavtroop ( 859432 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @03:53PM (#15563870)
    What kind of company turns up its nose at $500 million

    The kind that likes to keep its readership? How much would viewship go down if they had to be subject to ads? Or how many people will just get adblocking software? I know I already do.

    • How much would viewship go down if they had to be subject to ads?


      Probably not at all. Slashdot/OSDN has some of the most anti-ad customers. I consider some of their ads to be one step more elegant than "Punch the monkey", which isn't saying much. You didn't see them back out with their tail between their leg, did you?

    • Quoting from the end of TFA's intro:

      "What kind of company turns up its nose at $500 million? That's what I'm here to find out."

      IOW, that was a teaser, transformed into an ideal troll for an endlessly gullible, non-TFA-reading Slashdot audience. And just to complete the loop, the end result of this is to drive up ad revenue on Slashdot. Gotta love those virtuous circles!
  • by DaveInAustin ( 549058 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @03:54PM (#15563877) Homepage
    Is it possible that if craigslist didn't offer most ads for free, they wouldn't be where they are today, and they couldn't have cashed in? Was linus turning away millions by not charging $50 a copy for linux? Charging money for all ads on craigslist would be killing the proverbial gold-egg laying goose because it's not producing fast enough.
  • by mr_stinky_britches ( 926212 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @03:54PM (#15563881) Homepage Journal
    that isn't driven to make all the money possible as soon as possible. Part of the reason CraigsList is so popular and people appreciate/use it so much is because they aren't a bunch of sell outs who will spam you with ads at every possible opportunity.

    Also, sometimes when running a business, the best place to be is not necessarily the "biggest" and/or "most visible" place to be. Not every company dreams of or wishes to aspire to growing into some kind of huge behemoth like Wal-Mart.
    ---
    http://wi-fizzle.com [wi-fizzle.com]
    • magic word (Score:5, Insightful)

      by conJunk ( 779958 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:23PM (#15564116)
      that isn't driven to make all the money possible as soon as possible. Part of the reason CraigsList is so popular and people appreciate/use it so much is because they aren't a bunch of sell outs who will spam you with ads at every possible opportunity.

      100% right on. you used the word "spam", and while i know you meant visual spam, it reminded me of something.

      One of my favorite things about craigs list is that you *never* need an account to use it, so you know they aren't spamming you. no crap in the mail box, no crap in the box, so lots of people use it and it works.

      their whole point has been conmunity-focused interaction. it's impossible to have a community if the participants are all on the receiving end of the host's spam. if they had ads, or required accounts, it wouldn't be a community, and it wouldn't be used the way it is

  • A company... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by esconsult1 ( 203878 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @03:55PM (#15563893) Homepage Journal
    * that doesn't want the crap politics that happens every day in corp america

    * who genuinely thinks customers come first

    * that wants nothing to do with the power plays in the industry (their power play is right there with their loyal customers!)

    * dont want venture caps knocking on their door

    * who hates the idea that facebook wants 2 Billion for less traffic and prestige than their site

    * who feels that their size is good and right for them, not for wall street.

    * whose leaders and owners can sleep without worries at night

    Have you ever listened to Craig in an interview? Do so, and you'll find 10 more reasons than I cited, easy.
    • Re:A company... (Score:3, Insightful)

      the kind of company that would probably generate that much
      traffic in the first place.
    • * who genuinely thinks customers come first

      I am curious. Who are the customers? What does Craig do to pay for the sites? I thought he doesn't charge for listings, he doesn't charge for browsing, doesn't take ads. I don't really use the service, so I don't know.

      I do think it is hypocritical of people to demand a high quality site with no ads and no fee to use. It takes work and not a lot of people don't want to do that work without a tangible return. I know I wouldn't spend hundreds of hours in the ser
      • Certain types of ads do cost money. THe rest are free. The small percentage that do cost pay for the rest. As for tangible return- Craig is a multimillionaire now. Sounds like a good deal to me. I suppose he could have made a few more tens of millions, but why bother? How much money do you really need in a lifetime?
      • Re:A company... (Score:3, Informative)

        by kcb93x ( 562075 )
        As listed here: http://www.craigslist.org/about/help/post-fees.htm l [craigslist.org]

        "All posts are free, except for:
        -job listings in New York City, Los Angeles, and the S.F Bay Area
        -brokered housing posts in New York City"
      • I do think it is hypocritical of people to demand a high quality site with no ads and no fee to use.

        Funny that. We're well used to being told that company exploiting its users to the nth degree is justifided. Invariably cited are "market forces", "supply and demand" or the holy of holies "capitalism". How odd that when consumers apply the same yardstick, suddenly it's "hypocrisy".

        I expect it's Jolly inconsiderate of Cragslist. Encouraging that sort of thinking in the marketplace.

    • But the guy is a total hypocrite! He talks about giving users what they want, and as a user, I want ads on Craigslist! I like them, and I'd like to know that they're earning money from my traffic, rather than being drained by it. So where is the little, unobtrusive button at the bottom of the page that says, "support Craigslist by enabling ads?" I'm looking for it, and I don't see it.

      If they wanted to do this, and give most of the money to charity, that would be even cooler.

      Hmmm... so, here's an anti-bu
      • I am a craigslist user, and I dont want ads, so
        where is the hypocracy?

        You could do like Craig did, but with your model
        as above and see how it works.
  • "What kind of company turns up its nose at $500 million?" how about a successful one? one with integrity, and one in touch with its user base, and one that wants to stay around?

    people also scoffed at google's little one-line blurb text ads when they came out. are they scoffing now?

    i'm certain there are plenty of guys who would love to put interstitials and flash animation on craigslist. and such people would drive craigslist into the ground. you don't make money on the long term by destroying your user base's allegiance by pissing them off

    so your choice is: make $500 million this year, and much less year and year after that, as your user base abandons you, by putting annoying ads on craiglist. or: make $25 million this year, and keep growing, and stay the place to go to for online classifieds for all time, since you have won and deserve and keep the respect and allegiance of your userbase

    "the customer is always right" ever hear that one? some people just don't get it: they are very shortsighted. they are willing to destroy craigslist's user base for a fast buck, thereby making less money over the long haul. that's a nice sound business sense
    • people also scoffed at google's little one-line blurb text ads when they came out. are they scoffing now?


      Google make nearly all of their income from advertising, that's not a very good example. Ads haven't driven people away from Google, so who's to say they'll do the same for craig's list?
  • by BlackCobra43 ( 596714 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @03:56PM (#15563901)
    An analyst claiming that an advertising site could make more money...by advertising. There's some sort of feedback loop here I just can't wrap my mind around.
  • by RyanFenton ( 230700 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @03:58PM (#15563920)
    Our economic lives could virtually always be exploited in countless ways if we were willing to do so. Not everyone wants to live their lives in a way to allow them to exploit every "opportunity" that can be imagined. Not everyone really wants to truly maximize the economic value of their lives either. If someone wants to just have a business of their choice without pinching all "opportunities" to fill eyeballs with the paid messages of others, I hardly consider that a tragedy, no matter what kinds of dividends it could pay to the "greater economy". Nor do I consider it a failing of the economic system that competition doesn't force him to do so. I personally would consider that more of a rare victory for the the role of humanity in our economic system - a trend I hope continues at a stronger pace than has been the case for the past few decades in the US.

    Sometimes, just creating a simple system of mutual benefit, and leaving it simple, is of much greater value than the usual constant gamesmanship of economically preditary behavior. Even in the middle of a ruthlessly free market.

    Ryan Fenton
  • by biendamon ( 723952 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @03:59PM (#15563928)
    They rely on their reputation, and part of that reputation is the lack of annoyances. People buy, sell, and trade there because they don't have to put up with the crap that smothers most commercial websites. If they started selling ad space, their profits would probably experience a temporary spike, followed by a long, slow death as people jumped ship.

    There are other classifieds sites. We don't *have* to go to Craigslist. We go because we want to. If we stop wanting to, then Craigslist dies. Since ads would drive us away, allowing them would be short-term profitable and long-term suicide.
    • by Infonaut ( 96956 ) <infonaut@gmail.com> on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:23PM (#15564117) Homepage Journal

      They rely on their reputation, and part of that reputation is the lack of annoyances.

      What amazes me is that this is not more obvious to so many people in the business world. The Web really just a series of interconnected user experiences. The author of this WSJ piece seems to think Craigslist is wacky - just plumb daft! - for forgoing potential revenue in favor of taking care of customers. After all, if Craigslist is taking care of its employees and making money, why wouldn't it want to have 10x the employees and 20x the profits! Why wouldn't it want to control the world?!

      This snarky little tidbit reveals how little Mr. Carney understands Craigslist, the Web, and customer satisfaction. At the end of the day, all he can think of is all of that (vaporous, as biendamon pointed out) potential profit that *someone* is missing out on:

      Having taken advantage of their hospitality for the better part of an afternoon, I stand to take my leave, but my hosts insist on driving me back to my hotel. Once there, we say our good-byes and, belatedly, a thought occurs to me -- an afterthought, perhaps. If Craigslist does what its users ask of it, and Craigslist doesn't need or seem to want all the ad revenue it declines to collect, maybe we, as end-users, should ask them to post some banner ads and give us the money instead. There's something wrong, I suppose, in that reasoning. But I like the idea.

      Argh! Someone put some banner ads on Craigslist, and do it quick, before Carney gets an aneurysm!

      • Does anyone remember the schemes where you'd install adware on your machine and "GET PAID TO SURF THE WEB!!!"?
        My poor friend fell for this and after 3 months her PC became unusable. She did get a check for $2.33, but it wasn't worth it.

        We should just infect Carney's machine in order to leverage his whatever. He'll stop complaining about not enough ads on the intarweb.
    • If they started selling ad space, their profits would probably experience a temporary spike, followed by a long, slow death as people jumped ship.
      Isn't that what you're supposed to do? Sell-out for short term profit. Go public and make tons of money. Sell off all your stock before the crash comes.

      The idea of keeping long-term economic viability in play is so last decade.
  • Points from TFA (Score:5, Informative)

    by Odonian ( 730378 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:02PM (#15563951)
    So to paraphrase Jim Buckmaster (Craigslist CEO): The company has 21 employees and has been profitable since 1999. They have no venture capitalists or stock holders so they are beholden to no one. Their policy is to only implement things users want. Users don't want banner ads. They aren't above charging commerical interests who use the site for profit, such as real estate brokers.

    And that's pretty much it. The guy is happy and making enough money as-is, apparently.

  • Fascinating. (Score:4, Interesting)

    I'm all starry eyed about this guy all of a sudden. I mean, a true public servant nerd. His very existence totally undermines some of the basic tenets of capitalism. Of course, he could just cash in so fast it's amazing. But he doesn't, for some reason. And they send this guy from the 'money news source' and he manages to impress him. Not to be stared at like some kind of crazy, but to impress him and then take him back to his hotel. I mean, it's not like Craig's List is that impressive- you could rebuild it in a month (week? Three day codefest?) with the right developers. So customer service is key.... And that's what he provides. I'm bowled over.

    I love the 'give us the money instead' comment, though. I've always wondered if there would ever be a way for an Internet company to farm big corporations for real people.... At first, I thought that that was what Google ad revenue was doing.
    • Don't worry, he'll die in an "accident" and the insider they place inside will rise to the top and take the company public, with ads.

    • Re:Fascinating. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by E++99 ( 880734 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:49PM (#15564314) Homepage
      His very existence totally undermines some of the basic tenets of capitalism.
      ...or else his existence is the epitome of the greatness of capitalism.

      On the other hand, fidelslist and jungilslist are both pretty good, except that A) they do have banner ads, and B) Fidel and Jung Il are the only ones allowed to post to them.
  • Who is to say.... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by dubmun ( 891874 )
    CraigsList's popularity is due in no small part to the LACK of spamming users with all kinds of crap we don't want to see. Here's hoping they don't turn off much of their clientele by adding advertisments.

    And now for a cliche-prediction-bomb: mark my words... all good things come to an end... Eventually every business capitulates to the almighty buck and CraigsList will not "buck" the trend.
  • by HardCase ( 14757 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:07PM (#15563988)
    turns up its nose at half a billion dollars? No company. What kind of analyst says that a company like Craigslist can generate half a billion dollars in revenue? An analyst hyping himself, I'd say. Remember analysts who said that the Dow would hit 20,000?

    Maybe it's worthwhile to heap accolades on Craigslist for being a "good" company. Or, just maybe, they're happy with reasonable year over year growth, rather than uncontrollably exploding, not unlike a supernova.

    Besides, it strikes me that if the name of the game is for Craigslist to draw its members to view classifieds on its various sites, then it would be a disservice to those members who advertise on Craigslist to send the viewing members away from the site - even if classifieds are free. I kind of think that the idea of the sort of commercial ads mentioned in the WSJ article probably strays from the Craigslist business model.

    -h-
  • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:08PM (#15563996) Homepage
    That's Craigslist, making it impossible to compete because of their low, low prices. And it's working. The newspaper industry is furious at being underpriced. Tough.
  • by Serveert ( 102805 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:09PM (#15564007)
    Maybe Sergey Brin can take some notes.

    It's a tough concept to grasp but sometimes money isn't everything. At least Sergey is now realistic about the old "Do no evil" mantra but it's pretty sad to hear effectively, "Yes, we are filtering content for the Chinese government but... " I and I think many others stop when we hear rationalizations. Yeah it's a lot of money but consumers are waking up and paying attention. Google is helping an authoritarian government control its citizens, I don't want to hear rationalizations. Corporations need to start weighing in "ethical capitalism" costs. Sure the profits might be huge now but when you weigh in the ethical costs, those profits aren't so large.

    The key to this consumer awarness is information. We can easily learn about sweatshops thanks to the internet. We can learn about content filtering thanks to the internet. We can learn about AT&T splicing fiber for the NSA thanks to the internet.

    You can no longer rationalize and use advertising and PR as effectively as before, consumers are less ignorant. /end rant
  • One that isn't just in it for the money. They are in it to preform a service and have a belief about how that service should be provided. IE, not bugging the @#$%@#$^% out of your costomers to the point where they go to some other site and spend their money. Or they stop coming to your site because it's hard to navigate. Or......

    The list can go on and on. I for one applaud craigslist, and the fact that they DON'T advertise on their site is the reason I use it more than just about any other site.
    • Actualy I'd say Craigslist is in it for the money. They're just in it for the money year after year after year for the rest of the owner's life if possible. As Buckmaster noted, they may not be making huge bucks but, unlike a lot of Internet ventures raking in larger revenues, Craigslist has been profitable for 6-7 years now and shows no signs of losing money or going away anytime soon. They aren't making as much every year as they could be, but they'll be making it for a lot more years than they would if t

  • by poopie ( 35416 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:13PM (#15564039) Journal
    We all loved it with no ads, and then something happened and we debated about whether or not to add ads to slashdot, and it basically came down to, "we have to if we want to survive". Faced with that, most slashdotters preferred slashdot with ads to no slashdot.

    If craigslist can survive without pimping ads to users, more power to them, and their userbase will only grow.
  • by furchin ( 240685 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:14PM (#15564046)
    Why is it that authors of these articles can never understand the simple fact that the reason I go to Craig's List is precisely because I'm not being bombarded with ads and junk and a horrible cluttered layout? Doesn't anyone remember how refreshing Google was when it first started (and still is to a certain extent, except the other companies have de-cluttered their pages)? Yahoo was a horrible experiment gone wrong in seeing how much crap could be jammed into a portal!

    Sure, if craig's list had ads, they'd make some more money, but a lot of people, myself included, wouldn't visit as often or at all, and therefore the article's total sum of potential earnings is an over-estimate.
  • by Yardboy ( 742224 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:15PM (#15564054)
    If they can make $25 mil with just 21 employees, think how much they could make if they hired 500 employees?
  • if analysts were running the show, they'd run them into the ground. industry analyst is analogous to movie critic. full of opinions, but unfortunately, none of them right
  • by kozumik ( 946298 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:21PM (#15564098)
    Wow, that makes me think how much more money Toyota could make this year if they stopped making such high quality reliable vehicles, and just bolted a crappy SUV body to a cheap truck chassis, and sold it for a giant profit, like GM did. It would probably take at least 5 years before consumers really caught on, and in the meanwhile execs and shareholders could make many billions. Of course then they'd implode and Hyundai (or whoever up and coming) would have incentive to beat them in quality and steal all their customers, the way GM has lost all their customers to Toyota. Yep, real geniuses we have in business in America these days.

    From the Wall Street to the WSJ to the board room, the culture of short term thinking to screw the customer is pervasive. It's all about rape and pillage for the shareholders, kill the company (after offloading the stock to E-Trade suckers) and then invest somewhere else. Where will investors go once US business is depleted? China & India of course.
  • From TFA:

    "Having taken advantage of their hospitality for the better part of an afternoon, I stand to take my leave, but my hosts insist on driving me back to my hotel. Once there, we say our good-byes and, belatedly, a thought occurs to me -- an afterthought, perhaps. If Craigslist does what its users ask of it, and Craigslist doesn't need or seem to want all the ad revenue it declines to collect, maybe we, as end-users, should ask them to post some banner ads and give us the money instead.

    There's somethin
  • by DragonWriter ( 970822 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:24PM (#15564123)
    Indeed, Craigslist is plenty of ads. Analysts who say that Craigslist should seek more profit by making people view ads they aren't interested in in order to see the ads they are actively seeking by viewing Craigslist in the first place are, well, perhaps missing the source of Craigslist's dominant position.
  • More than money (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Spinlock_1977 ( 777598 ) <Spinlock_1977@yahoPARISo.com minus city> on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:24PM (#15564128) Journal
    "What kind of company turns up its nose at $500 million?"

    One led by a person believing there is more to their enterprise than money. I think I'd like to work there.
    • If you can excuse the small amount of self promotion, I think that this is essentially an ethical decision.

      With my company (http://www.beskerming.com [beskerming.com]), we run no ads on our site, and our free mailing list [skiifwrald.com] is just that, free. There are no subscription fees, no advertising, no vendor pitches (besides our own occasional announcement), no spam, and no vendor sponsorship. It keeps our readers happy, and we have seen our influence stretch to over 400 million people via those responsible for their information and
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:27PM (#15564153)
    The targeted ads would devalue the free ads.
    If the free ads are worth less then there will be less customers.
    Less customers, less content, less visitors, less paid advertising revenue.

    Not to mention the incalculable value of goodwill and trust - I mean you just can buy that!

    Better go back to analyst school there buddy.
  • 25mil is good (Score:3, Insightful)

    by bobs666 ( 146801 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @04:35PM (#15564208)
    lets see 21 people 25 million a year.
    I can live on that.

    Why Be greedy?

  • CraigsList is the kind of company that offers free lastminute "hookup" ads [craigslist.org] for/from real people. And instead of slapping ads in the middle of that delicate, if casual, transaction, instead offers a safer sex forum [craigslist.org]. The kind of company that steadily grows and has no real competition in its niche, because buyers and sellers have enough trust that they operate like a community.

    What's so "zen" about running a company you'd prefer to use yourself, even if you're rich? The Wall Street Journal doesn't seem to unde
  • by Culture ( 575650 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @06:48PM (#15565172)
    The business cost essentially nothing to run, and is making reasonable profits to allow for the founder to live a lifestyle in excess of 99.99% of americans. Every year the market share grows, because who can compete with free? When he is ready to to sell out, the marketing "geniuses" on wallstreet will look at the number of page impressions, assume they can plaster the site with flash add and make BILLIONS. He will sell out for billions, and wallstreet will run the site into the ground. What's not to like?
  • What kind indeed (Score:3, Insightful)

    by swordgeek ( 112599 ) on Monday June 19, 2006 @07:22PM (#15565391) Journal
    "What kind of company turns up its nose at $500 million?"

    The kind that believes industry analysts and experts who say outrageous things are likely talking out of their asses.

    Half a billion? I really really doubt it.

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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