Wed

Feb 6
2008

Jimmy Guterman

Jimmy Guterman

The Industry Standard is back. Why?

The Industry Standard ably chronicled -- and, eventually, mirrored -- the Internet boom that began a decade ago and died a few years later. (Disclosure: Despite its occasional excesses, I am honored to have been associated with the magazine.) After years of noticing that thestandard.com was still receiving ample traffic and -- with one brief exception a few years back -- not doing much about it, IDG, which was the Standard's lead investor and picked up the carcass in bankruptcy court, has relaunched the site this week.

The new site is, to these eyes, an unintentional parody of Web 2.0 features. Rather than mere advertising, it has a more high-end sponsorship model (i.e., one pay-for-it-all advertiser), it seeks to create a community (you have to sign in to enjoy the more interesting features), it combines aggregation and a sliver of original material with a "wisdom of crowds" prediction market, and it appears to have a bare-bone staff. And, of course, to keep costs really low, this time the brand is online-only.

I'm not sure what's being accomplished here, aside from the modest monetization of a dormant but still semipopular URL. It's an attempt to revive a once-very-popular name, synonymous with original content, with as little original content as IDG can get away with. Maybe that will change.

Recently someone I hadn’t been in touch with for more than 20 years found me on Facebook and suggested we "reconnect." But if we really wanted to "reconnect," whatever that means, we might have done so at least once during the previous two decades. That’s how I feel about The Standard coming back: it’s too late, its time has passed. The new site should rise or fall on the basis of its own achievement, not on those of an entirely different team a boom and a bust ago.


 
Previous  |  Next

0 TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://blogs.oreilly.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-t.cgi/6273

Comments: 2

  Justin Watt [02.06.08 09:12 PM]

Reminds me of what Calacanis did/tried to do with Netscape. And what's happening to AT&T. And Britney Spears.

"Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled brands yearning to breathe free..."

  Michael R. Bernstein [02.06.08 09:24 PM]

Hmm. I'm inclined to give them a pass. They wisely decided to preserve the URLs of archived stories, so I think they deserve some credit for not breaking the web.

So they get a little name recognition (little though that matters given the different model they're using) and some traffic. Big deal.

Would you really prefer to see the domain snapped up by a speculator, domain squatter, link farmer, search arbitrageur, or splog publisher?

I say let them go ahead, as long as they keep stories like this one online:
http://www.thestandard.com/article/0,1902,26784,00.html

Post A Comment:

 (please be patient, comments may take awhile to post)






Type the characters you see in the picture above.