Digital media in the 2010s was an absolute mess, yet it was (weirdly) defined by optimism — that print’s demise would free up future-facing investments, that social media would be a favorable partner.
That the next great sustainable business model would take shape and save the newsrooms living on the razor’s edge.
… and so we are here, at a rolling funeral:
Any publications you know and love not listed above? Assume they’ve suffered, too.
It’s quite the downfall — just six years ago, Vice lived atop the media world, swaggering to a peak valuation of $5.7B.
Journalist Simon Owens pinpoints a stealthy reason why everything came apart: many once-proud digital media giants devalued their own ad inventory.
To deliver those ads, media orgs bet on social media companies being cool with sending the masses away from their own platforms.
As it turns out — nope, they weren’t cool with that.