Vox Revenue

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Vox Nutrition Revenue

Vox Media checks all the boxes of a high-flying venture-backed publisher. Two years ago, it got a $200 million investment from NBC Universal, enabling it to double its revenue to $100 million and almost double its headcount, to more than 800. Its traffic grew 37.5 percent to 72 million uniques in the past two years while the bigger Huffington Post and BuzzFeed have been on the decline.

Vox Media Revenue

Vox is a general interest news site for the 21st century. Its mission is simple: Explain the news. Politics, public policy, world affairs, pop culture, science, business, food, sports,. The company, which owns websites including Vox, The Verge and SB Nation, had been targeting revenue of about $200 million in 2018, which would have translated into about 25% growth over last year’s haul of roughly $160 million, the people said.

At a time when advertisers are more aware than ever about their ads popping up on offensive videos on YouTube, falling victim to ad fraud or going unseen, Vox Media is seen as a safe haven. “They have solid, viewable, human traffic, across good audience segments and responsive sales teams,” said a digital buyer who couldn’t speak on the record about individual companies.

Yet Vox Media still has liabilities. It isn’t exactly a scale play. Its combined traffic — which is still important for publishers’ ability to fully monetize it — for its eight verticals (Vox, The Verge, Polygon, SB Nation, Eater, Racked, Curb and Recode) trailed other venture-backed publishers The Huffington Post and BuzzFeed, according to comScore. Individually, most of its verticals fall squarely in the niche category, which will exclude them from many ad buys. Including off platform distribution, Vox claims over 800 million monthly content views, including video, but those often aren’t monetizable because they’re on other platforms.

Vox media revenue 2020

The Verge, which rolls up The Verge, Polygon and Recode, ranks 4th in comScore’s tech category. SBNation, which rolls up several small blogs, ranks 6th in the sports category. But Vox.com, the biggest of Vox Media’s sites, at 25 million uniques, still ranks only 39th in the news/information category. Eater, Curbed and Racked ranked below the top 10 in their respective comScore categories. Racked, for one, recently ranked 30th in comScore’s Beauty/Fashion/Style lifestyles category.

“I don’t think clients are necessarily going for scale, but the quality of the audience,” said Alex Stone, vp of digital investment at Horizon Media.

Moreover, three verticals, SB Nation, Eater and Racked, lost traffic in the past year. Vox.com grew 45 percent in the past year, but its flavor of news is decidedly on the left at a time when many big brands are fleeing political news.

In March, Vox Media announced a deal that would enable advertisers to buy Condé Nast’s digital audience along with Vox Media and NBCU’s through Concert, the ad-buying platform that Vox Media and NBCU launched in 2016. Vox Media sees the deal as a way for brands to get brand-safe inventory at scale and better compete with Facebook and Google, while Condé Nast gets access to Vox Media’s young, digital audience. Buyers said they’re intrigued by the offering, but said it’s too early to tell how effectively Vox Media and Condé Nast will sell it.

The company firmly believes in its distinct verticals approach, and Lindsay Nelson, chief marketing officer at Vox Media, said it’s taken time for the company to build an operation that supports their growth. But she said she sees the company well positioned, now that advertisers are emphasizing engagement and quality as much as scale. She said Vox Media was beating the market “pretty significantly” and that she expected Concert and Vox Creative, the company’s branded-content arm, to each show triple-digit growth this year.

Vox Revenue

“It’s taken us a bit of time to operationalize around what it means to be a company that plays in eight different categories,” she said. “But the maturity in that has taken us to a place where we can really turn on the faucet.”

Vox Media, the company that owns far-left Vox and The Verge, will likely fall far short of its 2018 revenue target.

The Wall Street Journalreports:

The company, which owns websites including Vox, The Verge and SB Nation, had been targeting revenue of about $200 million in 2018, which would have translated into about 25% growth over last year’s haul of roughly $160 million, the people said. Instead, the company will be struggling to achieve double-digit percentage revenue growth, the people said.

Vox’s failure to meet its goals is no surprise. Early this year, the company announced layoffs of around 50 employees, mainly those who worked on video.

During the last few years, a number of left-wing news sources have seen substantially stalled growth.

In February, news broke that CNN would lay off a number of employees, mainly from its digital news side, after it failed to meet revenue targets.

Vox Mobile Revenue

Last November, left-wing BuzzFeed fired about 100 employees after the company fell 20 percent short of its revenue target.

“As our strategy evolves, we need to evolve our organization, too — particularly our Business team, which was built to support direct sold advertising but will need to bring in different, more diverse expertise to support these new lines of business,” BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti said in an email to employees.

“Unfortunately, this means we have to say goodbye to some talented colleagues whose work has helped us tremendously.”

Vox Media’s The Verge was the former home of Sarah Jeong, who was recently hired by the New York Times:

.@SarahJeong joins NYT’s editorial board. She's the newest in a fab group of recent additions to @nytopinion: Michelle Alexander @susanthequark @JenSeniorNY@karaswisher@MCottle@JInterlandi@MaraGay@JyotiThottam@talmonsmith@lauren_kelley@ByAlexMarchhttps://t.co/B7OPWHRbsW

— NYTimes Communications (@NYTimesPR) August 1, 2018

Jeong has a long history of racist tweets denigrating white people. She has complained about “dumbass fucking white people” and tweeted “CancelWhitePeople”:

Dumbass fucking white people marking up the internet with their opinions like dogs pissing on fire hydrants

Vox Media Revenue

— sarah jeong (@sarahjeong) November 29, 2014

Vox Media Revenue 2020

oh man it's kind of sick how much joy I get out of being cruel to old white men

— sarah jeong (@sarahjeong) July 24, 2014

Vox Revenue Model

Despite these racist tweets coming to light, the Times did not fire Jeong.





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