Top Millionaire Companies |
Ever wondered where your blog can take you? Many bloggers aim to make money from their blogs. A few aspire to become probloggers, earning six or even seven figures. Fewer
still go on to build a full-blown business behind their blogs that make
them millions! A couple months ago, I argued that making big money from blogs
now is very difficult, nigh on impossible. But not if you do it the way
some of the guys in the list below have! Here are a few multi-million
dollar companies that were born as ordinary blogs!
1. CopyBlogger.com
Most of you might know about CopyBlogger.com. It is owned by CopyBlogger
Media, the parent company for a number of online services and
properties including StudioPress, Scribe, Synthesis, Premise, and more!
If you're a WordPress user, you should know about StudioPress, creators
of one of the most popular WordPress framework - Genesis, and various
WordPress themes.
The company was originally started by Brian Clark, who was once an
attorney. But he transitioned over, and decided that writing was more to
his liking than practicing law.
Before starting CopyBlogger.com in 2006, Brian Clark was an attorney.
“I hated practicing law and I was fascinated by the Internet. The transition was extreme I suppose, but I always had a thing for writing, so I started creating online content over a decade ago. Now it’s just part of me.”
For four years, Brian and crew pumped out post after post, several times
per week with a smattering of guest posts in between. With a network of
other projects and partnerships brewing, Brian brought them together in
2010 to create Copyblogger Media:
“Over the last 4 years, I’ve launched several companies from this simple blog of mine. The idea that building an audience with content and letting the revenue-generating ideas, products, and services reveal themselves based on what the audience actually wants has worked out amazingly well.”
One reason CopyBlogger.com does so well to attract an audience is that
everything on the site is totally free. Despite one million monthly page
views, CopyBlogger.com doesn’t make a dime. Instead, all of their
revenue-generating platforms exist on other domains and they use
CopyBlogger to make people aware of them.
2. SitePoint.com
SitePoint.com, a blog owned by Matt Mickiewicz, gave birth to the design
company 99designs. It started when designers in the SitePoint community
started challenging each other to create the best designs. Eventually,
others in the community joined up, and started offering cash rewards for
work on real projects. Hence, an idea for a design company was born.
Now, 99designs is a 64-person company, and is the world's largest online
marketplace for outsourcing graphic design. It has paid out over $38
million to its users.
One of the under-used benefits of having a blog is having direct access
to a specific group of people. If you ask them and observe their
interactions, you’ll find out what they want and what they’re willing to
pay for. Then, when you launch, you’ll already have an engaged
audience.
3. QuickSprouts.com
Many of us know Neil Patel and his wonderful in-depth articles on
QuickSprouts! He published his first blog post in April 2007. At that
time, he was working on his startup, Crazy Egg, and also working on an
internet marketing agency to cover up for the losses he was facing on
his startup. Combining his knowledge and experience from these and a few
other projects, Patel came up with a new analytics company,
KISSmetrics.
“With our new found knowledge, we decided to create another analytics company that would solve a much larger problem than what Crazy Egg solved. Crazy Egg was doing well, but it is never going to be that 100 million dollar company because the market size for that one product is very limited.
Neil made a small fortune through his marketing consultancy business,
but he didn't like the work. So he started working in the software
business instead, which he liked, and excelled at it. This goes on to
show what you can achieve if you're passionate about something.
Why did I relate blogging to large online companies? Well, as Neil
himself says, you can get the most return on investment via blogging -
no other business comes close. So if you're thinking about creating the
next big thing, consider starting off as a blog, and then build a solid
readership which will then feed traffic for your new startup, giving it a
jump start. This perhaps is the secret to how these companies became so
successful.
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