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I am wondering if anyone knows (or can guess) approximately how much advertising revenue 1 million page views would generate on StackExchange in a month's time using the format on these sites.

How about 10 million? I’m obviously trying to figure out if all this will be worth it.

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wait, are you asking how much you should charge for 1M views/month on your web site? or how much you would make with 1M views/month on someone else's web site? Because neither of these questions has a non-subjective answer. – Steven A. Lowe Aug 6 at 19:46
how much to make. – Nick Aug 7 at 4:48

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On the most recent podcast Jeff talked about how horrible AdWords was for StackOverflow and how it barely covered the cost of a part time programmer.

It seems custom targetted advertising does about 50x better, but I think the days of getting super rich off of internet advertising are starting to go by the wayside and are left to the scammers.

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Advertising revenue is by no means constant, and is entirely dependent on the demographic of your users and your advertising providers. If you're trying to figure out if you'll profit from StackExchange, you won't.

Expanding on this, I've run a few sites with over 1 million page views per month (not 1 million uniques, 1 million views). The revenue generated from Adsense was abysmal, about $20 a month.

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So your saying that generating a profit will not be a motivation for someone signing up for this Stackexchange thing. If I'm not a company looking to increase production or intelligence within then why would I do it? a hobby? expensive hobby. – Nick Aug 6 at 13:02
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I'm pretty sure that when they decided to make a business venture out of selling the stackexchange framework, they weren't looking at website hobbyists as their target demographic. – TheTXI Aug 6 at 13:03
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StackExchange is a service. Do you try to generate a profit using your cell phone? Browsing the internet? Unless you have a large enough target audience that you can justify buying the $999+ plan that doesn't restrict page views, you simply won't be able to turn a profit. – Ian Elliott Aug 6 at 13:07
This is a big reason why I have been a major advocate for releasing a very basic and stripped down version of StackExchange as an open source project. Not only would it allow the community to branch out and make their own "flavors" of the framework (say...one ideally suited for a social networking style site), but it would also give the official StackExchange a good community base to lift good features from and include in future versions. That and you would have a -lot- of satisfied users who would love to play with it but not want to shell out $1000 or more. – TheTXI Aug 6 at 13:10
That's one of my biggest questions about it besides the cost. Will we be able to add and subtract features as our user base requests? SO has definitely evolved and changed over the past year with User Voice. I'm waiting to find out what the level of control is going to be. Also, Barrack you are a bit discouraging! You seem to speaking from experience though. There must be an effective way to make it work. – Nick Aug 6 at 13:22
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What about going the old fashioned way? Say it’s about gardening. (podcast) You call up garden stores, tool companies, maybe landscapers and say that you have a million page views on this site about gardening. Will you pay me this much money to have your banner on this site. Must be worth more than $129/ month right? – Nick Aug 6 at 13:38
@Ian Huh? The cell phone company is the service, not me using the cell phone. And the cell phone company sure as hell tries to make a profit. – user130657 Aug 30 at 11:17
@TheTXI You keep saying this. What is it about HaackOverflow that you don't like? – user130657 Aug 30 at 11:18
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To use an analogy... that's like asking "what will 1 million lines of code do?"

For traffic, it depends on what the traffic is worth and your ability to sell ads on the space. Consider, for example, HR.com - they charge upwards of $80/CPM. MySpace, I've heard, is in the $0.001/CPM range.

So, going off those numbers, selling 1M monthly impressions could generate you $1 a month or $80,000.

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