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90 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
# Why ads?
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<small>2022-09-04 | [@andrea](/@andrea)</small>
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I don't like ads, I don't think anyone does… So it really wasn't an easy decision to have made…
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But recently we've decided to start an experiment in which we start funding the project using ads instead of donations.
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In the spirit of transparency that I've always tried to keep in here, I'd like to let you know more about that decision.
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As I described in my financial transparency posts ([2020-2021](/blog/financial-transparency-2020-2021), [2022](/blog/financial-transparency-2022)),
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funding the project with donations and arc.io widget seems sustainable.
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But on the other hand, donations are very unpredictable (example numbers: May: €26,45, June: €60,44, July: €13,50, August: €43,13)
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and although they still seem to be growing with the growth of the project, I have experience of another website
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where at one point donations started dropping significantly after a while, even though new users kept coming.
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Having a source of income potentially orders of magnitude bigger would make it way safer to manage in the long term
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and allow us bigger investments in infrastructure and other projects rather than trying to find the cheapest possible option
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capable of handling the load.
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But servers, cloud services, domains, licenses etc. aren't the only type of cost related to this project –
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we also put in huuuge amounts of our labour into Pronouns.page.
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Myself, I spend on the project a few hours almost every evening and sometimes whole days on weekends –
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not just coding new features, fixing bugs, maintaining the server, responding to emails from users, writing blog posts
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or coordinating translations, but also a lot of work that's invisible for most users,
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either because it's internal administration and management of the team,
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or because it's related to the Polish version of the project where we run more initiatives
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(eg. [a zine „Poczytałosie”](https://zaimki.pl/zin)),
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[cooperate with book publishers](https://zaimki.pl/linki),
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and often are [present in national media](https://zaimki.pl/media).
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Estimating ~20h/week and starting in early 2020 (before our official “birthday” in July),
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it seems that I could have made around €100.000 if I had spent that time working commercially 🤯
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TBH, I probably wouldn't, because this project is something that I'm _really_ passionate about,
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and spending so much time on top of a full-time job would quickly lead me to burnout, if I weren't, but still.
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And that's just me! There's tens of other people who contribute their time, effort and skills into making this project better.
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They're moderating entries and cards, creating new language versions, preparing posts, graphics, designing our logo, etc. etc.
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Yes, we all volunteer to do all that because we believe in our mission and want to create the best resources and tools we can,
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but that doesn't mean our labour is not valuable and shouldn't be rewarded, if an opportunity comes.
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And the opportunity seems to have come indeed, because [according to our traffic analytics](https://stats.pronouns.page/en.pronouns.page?period=30d)
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we serve almost 5 million pageviews a month on the English version alone – and apparently that can translate to thousands of euros in ad revenue.
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We don't know yet how much would it be exactly, what percentage of that would go towards taxes,
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and how to divide it between costs, investments and contributors,
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but depending on such factors, it's the kind of money that could allow us to:
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- not worry about project maintenance costs anymore,
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- improve our infrastructure,
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- invest in some new queer-related initiatives,
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- spend more time working on the project with less existential dread during the cost of living crisis,
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- or even have myself and possibly someone else start working on the project full time,
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- donate to transition funds,
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- and more, probably…
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I really wanted to introduce ads that are not obtrusive and privacy-friendly,
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but providing those doesn't seem to be a popular business model 😢 We found an almost perfect candidate,
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called [EthicalAds](https://www.ethicalads.io/), but they only target websites for developers,
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so their ads wouldn't be relevant for most of our users. We contacted them, asking if they're maybe planning to pivot
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(they aren't) or if they know similarly privacy-friendly but more generic providers
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(they couldn't find them, that's why they started their own company).
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Ultimately, we went with [Ezoic](https://www.ezoic.com/) who claim to balance user experience and revenue in a smart way.
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(Update: for many reasons we're now experimenting with AdSense instead)
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It's not ideal, but I'm still trying to make it as fair to the users as possible,
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for example (as much as the providers allow such customisations):
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- GDPR requires that services ask for users' consent before storing tracking cookies for personalised ads;
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and apparently it's a standard practice to only show those consent banners to users covered by GDPR 🙄
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we want to respect everyone's privacy, whether they live in EU or not, whether a law requires us to or not;
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- those cookie consent banners often involve long paragraphs of legalese text and make accepting cookies way easier than rejecting them;
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our banner is short and simple (with links to [Privacy Policy](/privacy) for more details)
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and gives a simple choice with both “Accept” and “Reject” buttons styled identically
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(as opposed to hiding the rejection option under a less prominent button labeled “more options” or “show purposes”) –
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we appreciate you supporting the project by allowing them, but we totally respect your choice to keep more privacy;
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- we don't try to detect ad blockers or shame you for using them;
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- our profile of activity is quite different on the English version compared to the others;
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while English isn't very gendered, aside from pronouns and a few nouns,
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and there's already quite some awareness about _singular they_ or even neopronouns,
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speakers of other languages usually need more education about what's even possible to achieve in their languages
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when it comes to inclusion of nonbinary people;
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that's why our English version is usually used mostly as a tool to host and share cards
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while others focus more on getting the word out there in the first place –
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we'd like them to be able to focus more on the message and the activism without advertising noise,
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therefore we only enable ads on the English page;
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- it should go without saying, but for completeness I'll mention that
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we wouldn't dare to keep asking you for donations or using arc.io widget anymore.
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Ads, as annoying as they are, might prove to be a gate that will open our project to new possibilities
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and let us do even better what we've been doing already or possibly even start doing new cool things.
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We're both excited and anxious about this experiment.
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We hope it gets received well and helps us grow, rewards our labour and lets us focus on creating great resources and tools.
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There's money basically laying on the street and waiting for us to pick it up –
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it would be a waste not to do it, right? 😉
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