Skip to main content

Leaked ‘AOL Way’ documents expose AOL’s cash-driven content strategies

the aol wayAOL’s been in a bit of a slump recently – nothing of Yahoo-like proportions, but a slump nonetheless. The company’s earnings call yesterday revealed that while numbers are down, all things considered, it could be worse. The company posted fourth quarter numbers that beat expectations, with a reported revenue of $596 million. This is down 26 percent from what it posted last year, but ahead of the Street consensus of $587.4 million, according to Forbes.

The reason for the 26 percent drop is advertising. It’s no secret that AOL has struggled to sell online advertising, and its advertising revenue accordingly fell 29 percent since last year. Subscription rates aren’t doing well either, dropping 23 percent, and access customers also fell 23 percent.

“I am very proud of what we accomplished in 2010 as we began the year with a significant restructuring of AOL and ended the year with a significantly improved balance sheet, a number of exciting new products and a new culture focused on winning,” CEO Tim Armstrong said. “We have set aggressive goals for ourselves in 2011 in pursuit of capturing the growing opportunity ahead of us.” Despite any hope Armstrong might have, AOL is in need of a cash generator and a way to drive advertising sales – and there’s a 58 page document out there to prove it.

The site appears to be extremely focused on content creation, and some information has surfaced showing AOL is dead set on getting as many eyeballs to its site as possible. Yesterday, Business Insider got its hands on The AOL Way: Content, Product, Media Engineering, and Revenue Management that makes it clear AOL wants to pump out articles with nothing but SEO and profit in mind.

According to the manuscript, Armstrong wants AOL editorial to write an extra 20,000 stories a month, increase pageviews per story from 1,500 to 7,000, and for 95 percent of written content to be driven by SEO. Obviously, this is bound to cause some strain on the writing staff. One AOL journalist told Business Insider, “AOL is the most f—— up, bull—t company on earth. The worst career move I’ve ever made.” One page of the document breaks down step by step how a writer should select daily stories: “Use editorial judgment & insight to determine production. Ex: ‘Macaulay Culkin’ & ‘Mila Kunis’ are trending because they broke up…write story about Macaulay Culkin and Mila Kunis.” Good stuff.

So why is AOL turning itself into a content farm? To reverse its sagging advertising dollars. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that the more pageviews, the more advertising space you can sell, and AOL’s strategy to get there is to dramatically increase content creation and tailor stories to trending topics. Hardly an earth-shattering idea – it’s more the degree AOL’s taking things to that has industry experts shocked. Taking SEO into consideration is all well and good, but there’s a line and instructing writers to consider the “profitability” of their stories is over it.

the aol way - profitAnd of course, now that The AOL Way is available to the public, you’d think readers might starting taking the site’s content with a grain (or two…or five) of salt.

Topics
Molly McHugh
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
Best deal ever? Get 80% off PureVPN and an Uber Eats voucher
A close-up of a computer monitor displaying a generic VPN.

Everyone should sign up to a virtual private network, so if you're looking for VPN deals, here's one that you wouldn't want to miss -- two years plus three extra months of PureVPN's Max Plan at 80% off for just $4 per month, for a total of $108 for 27 months. That's $16 in savings per month for dependable online protection, and to top it off, you'll be getting an Uber Eats voucher worth up to $30. We're not sure how much time is remaining on this offer though, so if you're interested, you're going to have to sign up for the subscription immediately.

Why you should sign up for PureVPN Max Plan
A VPN is a necessity in this digital age because it will protect your data from being accessed by cybercriminals. It will also help you get around any geoblocking restrictions as you can have your device appear as if it's located in another part of the world. PureVPN is one of the best VPNs for these purposes, as it uses a global network of more than 6,500 servers that are located across dozens of countries.

Read more
Razer’s most boring product is also one of its best
The Razer Iskur V2 gaming chair in an office.

Razer isn't exactly known for subtlety. This is the company that released a Bane-like RGB face mask, a headset with haptic feedback, and most recently, a mouse pad that has RGB lighting from corner to corner. The Iskur V2 chair is an exercise in subtlety, however, and a change of pace that pays off for Razer in a big way.

There's nothing special about the Iskur V2 at first glance. It's a gaming chair fit with the usual racer-style back and some green trim to let you know it's a Razer product. But there are no motors promising immersive haptic feedback, and no RGB leaving you tethered to a wall outlet (yes, Razer has done both in a chair before). The Iskur V2 is just a well-designed, comfortable chair, and that's exactly why it's so impressive.
Out of the box

Read more
Best OLED monitor deals: Get an OLED screen from just $450
Marvel's Spider-Man running on the Samsung Odyssey OLED G8.

Up to a couple of years ago, OLED technology only really existed in OLED TVs and very-high-end monitors that cost thousands and thousands of dollars. Luckily, the prices have come down quite substantially, even on the best OLED monitors, especially as the market gets more saturated with options. That means that if you tend to use a monitor for the majority of your content consumption, such as gaming, then you can grab an OLED monitor for a great price and experience amazing visual fidelity and reproduction.

To that end, we've gone out and scoured all the major retailers and brands to find our favorite OLED monitor deals out there and compiled them below. That said, if you haven't quite found what you're looking for, or feel you aren't ready for an OLED monitor, be sure to check out some of these other great monitor deals.
LG UltraGear 27-inch gaming monitor -- $660, was $1,000

Read more