How viable is it for small/medium websites to be supported by ads? I'm interested in any examples people have and even more interested by any HN'ers doing this.
Hacker News is famously run on 2 boxes. And that is without Cloudflare + CDNs to cache static requests: static websites are practically free. Domains are cheap as well, even a .com domain costs $20/yr and domains like .xyz cost <$5/yr. The cheapest linode cloud server costs $5/month. Idk how much ad revenue pays out but I imagine it can recover those costs.
However, you probably won't profit from ad revenue, and it definitely won't sustain a full income.
It's not really "viable". This may be because of the industry it's in, which doesn't really purchase online advertising, and therefore cuts into the overall earnings potential.
I run it for fun and for certain incidental benefits, not for the $$$
The viability of this business model has been somewhat dented recently by multiple Google algo updates. Many operators were buying expired domains, scraping People Also Ask questions in bulk from SERPs, and using GPT-3 to create prettily-worded but factually-questionable answers, on a massive scale. The algo changes aimed at these sites (and other types of SEO spam), which in some cases would have been generating six figures monthly, also seem to have taken out many legitimate sites.
Luckily the revenue wasn't enough for them to quit their job and do it full time, but it was still a financial blow.
I guess my point is: Ad supported is a nice idea, but it makes you very vulnerable to the big ad network(s). Even if you do everything right, if some automated system decides you did something wrong, click, you're gone. I've read stories about competitors hiring click-bots to click on ads until you get banned, and while I don't think that is what happened in the above case, it is another thing to be paranoid about.
Shepherd is a book discovery platform, still in baby stages and adding genres this winter!
I want to drop display ads eventually and replace it with in house book ads… but that is a big project, hopefully 2024.
On a personal note, I tried getting into ads for one of my personal projects (a map of recycling points for my hometown), but Google declined my application because it doesn't have much content on it — though it's kind of absurd because people use my web app, to find locations on the map, not read content. I ended up not doing ads for now, and keep receiving "buy me a coffee" donations.
At around 3-5k users a day things start to get interesting.
Ads pay for everything there even though something like 55% of people use an ad blocker. My partner has been really improving it and adding user reported issues and slowly going to get more data into the pages.
We sell and host our own advertising which are static images. No ad network for the last 7-8 years.
The goal is to match the ads to the content and have the content be curated so that only people who care about the content would be interested in the ads.
I'd like to hear specific cases if anyone wants to share