Today's opening keynote at the Add-on-Con conference in Mountain View CA highlighted the similarities between monetizing add-ons and monetizing Web sites. Although distribution channels and products differ, according to moderator Jeremy Liew of Lightspeed Venture Partners, in general add-ons generate revenue through: "search, advertising, affiliate type commerce and APIs."
Alexa's Geoff Mack explained that if you want your add-ons distributed, the key is in exciting webmasters. "Offer them a benefit, be it social or monetary, and you'll find they will be more likely to promote your service or product," he said.
James Joaquin from Foxmarks, the startup we wrote about two years ago, explained that AMO (Addons Mozilla Org) has been a phenomenal source of distribution for Foxmarks. But getting on the front page is a trick, and Joaquin attributes much of that success to Foxmarks having a founder that has had a rich history on the Web: "Not so much for pulling strings, but for being there early," he said. Mitch Kapor, Foxmarks co-founder has a long history on the Internet, being the co-founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation as well as the founding Board Chair of the Mozilla Foundation.
Alec Jeong from CoolIris explained that a vital element to consider when it comes to distribution is the touch points with your user; find out where your user will be, and then make sure you too have a presence there. CoolIris, the extension that transforms your browser into a 3D experience for enjoying online media, has also been working on building partnerships for distribution over the past six months.
Alex Iskold, founder of Adaptive Blue, the company that recently released Glue, confirmed the importance of getting onto central hubs like AMO, but also recommended using widgets as a way of distributing your product further. AMO, Iskold claims, accounts for 90% of downloads for his company. Glue, the new browser plugin that uses semantic technology to connect you to your friends and what they are enjoying was recently covered on ReadWriteWeb.
Search, advertising, shopping, recommendations and services are the main methods of monetizing add-ons according to the companies presenting today, but which business model has the greatest opportunity for success? Well it turns out that much depends on your personal philosophy, resources, and capital; there is no one right answer.
Alexa, purchased by Amazon in 1999 hasn't been 'under the gun to earn,' according to Mack, who concedes it is a luxury not afforded to all companies.
OneRiot, the social search engine, is on the flip side of that coin; continuing to build toolbars for other people in order to generate short term revenue. Kimbal Musk recommends search boxes as a form of monetization, claiming that the company only recently added search to their toolbar but has seen unexpected growth and traffic: "People use the toolbar to search," he said.
Adam Boyden from Conduit, the company that provides website syndication solutions for Web publishers, says that search is secondary and that the company's entire business model is letting publishers put their interesting content on a toolbar.
And then you have advertising. Adaptive Blue wants to make commercial transactions without showing you an advertisement; CoolIris on the other hand is mostly concerned with giving you beautiful ads.
We've discussed whether browser extensions can be a business before, and if today's conference is any indication they can and are.
Whether add-ons are on your site, or across the wider Web, the business of add-ons has now proven itself to be capable of driving user engagement and attracting investment, and judging by today's sold out conference, one area of the Web that holds great interest.
Disclosure: AdaptiveBlue's CEO, Alex Iskold, is a feature writer for RWW.
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We know that the Internet has become the enterprises to promote products, increase the visibility of the necessary means to their business information in BtoB's Web site to log into a lot of business after the Internet will do; At the same time, relatively well-known site in order to enrich their own Data resources, has been the find this kind of enterprise customer base continued to increase their visibility.
We know that the Internet has become the enterprises to promote products, increase the visibility of the necessary means to their business information in BtoB's Web site to log into a lot of business after the Internet will do; At the same time, relatively well-known site in order to enrich their own Data resources, has been the find this kind of enterprise customer base continued to increase their visibility.
The best statement of this keynote, based on this post, was "Offer them a benefit, be it social or monetary". This is an awesome statement because if you customer is someone "at the mic" then your marketing is done for you.
SocialDreamium's product (a social web dashboard) will be focused towards community managers of startups...these are the people already at the "mic" speaking to the rest of the web.
Great statement, and a great reminder of this solid marketing philosophy.
The subtitle should have been: "In search of business models." Hey, we all love our add-ons, but I hope they're made for altruistic reasons, not due to someone's fantasy of future ad revenues.
Hi,
I don't know if you were downstairs for Bijan(Xoopit)'s talk. There was a great conversations from different companies in the space that discussed the ideas out there for a business model and how to acquire users. I think you are going to see a lot more collaboration in the space which will then lead to advertisers/merchants coming too.
Glad you wrote about the Add-On Con and hope other people think about this space more.
Anu
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