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The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
exactly...
simple and uncluttered. fast loading.
keeping it simple.
part of why i like your blog scoble...
links and the content, nothing else.
black and white.
exactly why i think people switched from Yahoo to google.
un-cluttered, short url, and it's fast.
Other people I know have found exactly the same thing.
Even me. I have Microsoft's ugliest weblog.
I'm floored that this pile of shit gets $10,000 in ad revenue.
It's not slow here, by the way. I'm at the Apple store in Palo Alto and it pulls up faster than most blogs do.
I don't think it's so much that ugly designs are better, I think it's important to note that -usable- designs are better than pretty designs. If making a website pretty sacrifices usability then it probably isn't a good choice.
Now making a website fast loading, usable, and aethetically pleasing to the eye?
That's hard to do, which is why there are A-list web designers out there that get paid a lot of money to do such a thing.
I think there are way too many factors involved to begin to attribute success to one thing (or even several), especially for blogging notables like yourself. And, sorry, you are making the leap because you seem to believe what he says, are transferring his success to a generality, and have promoted it. ;-)
Craig
There's always a balance that can be struck. A site can be good-looking AND fast. A site can be good-looking AND useable. A site can be good-looking AND non-corporate. A site can be good-looking AND be well-optimised for search engines (which nowadays isn't very difficult at all—it's all about the content).
It's not rocket science, it's just not a sleepwalk.
Sure, but....
What's at the root of it all?
In my opinion its that the types of sites that you are talking about (inc. yours) are:
* non threatening
* speak with a human voice
You must agree.
I'm going to a geek dinner in Providence, RI soon and I sincerely hope nobody serves me a peetini. I prefer not to have distasteful things. If the rest of the world does and that's the key to these sites' success, then I'll say in a heartbeat the rest of the world is made up of tasteless morons. Is that how you think Microsoft should do their marketing? :P
Don't worry folks on the clean side, when this becomes the norm, clean/planned/interface will be the mavericks.
It just keeps fluctuating, be flexible.
And that site is successful, because the front page loads with more 'women looking for men' than 'men looking for women' (I tried refreshing 3 or 4 times to make sure :) )
The first impression I got when I entered that site was exactly "cluttered, hard to use", not the other way around. If he designed his site to be very usable and uncluttered, well... he might as well try again.
>> "What’s the secret to his success? Ugly design."
"Huh" I ask. So I put up an ugly website and instantly have revenue, while I'm dead if I have a pretty website? Have you even thought about this before posting it? Ugly sites _can_ be successful, but it has for sure nothing to do with them being ugly.
And yours, by the way, is actually one of the less ugly Microsoft blogs. Seriously.
-Jason L. Baptiste
In the beginning, it offered unprecedented customization for people unfamiliar with web design, and unwilling to go the route of managing a home page.
Metcalf's law has taken effect now - the value of MySpace today is proportional to the number of people on it. In order for someone to dethrone MySpace, they have to offer both the features and the population.
That's not an explanation. That's completely non sequitar.
"But, go deeper: we’re sick of committee-driven marketing."
This isn't true. Companies still succeed with polished, highly-developed marketing.
"That’s why my Channel 9 videos work."
Oh, I see: someone's trying to rationalize his own crappy work because of recent criticism.
"My design is ugly."
Your design is no different than a million other template driven blogs.
"It’s amazing how few corporate types get that the quality and engineering thought behind your HTML matters more than whether your site is pretty or not."
You seem to be confusing yourself: is marketing only skin deep or is it also thoughtful design. You crap together your videos and use a basic template so you aren't doing much marketing. Google very much is marketing and it's very sophisticated and polished. Craigslist was admittedly crude because he didn't know any better but it continues to get more sophisticated while retaining thecrude look because people are familiar with it.
However, the notion that crude or basic sites are anti-marketing is wrong, the notion that we are no immune to elaborate, superficial marketing is wrong, the notion that simple designs succeed because of it (without discussing the utility) or that sophisticated designs fail despite their content is wrong.
So: NO!!
----------
Oh ya, that's easy...you're Microsoft. And, that gives you the travel budget to go smooze "every" conference/country, "A/B/C/D" list blogger on the planet. Can you honestly get up in the morning, look in the mirror and say that you'd be as popular if you weren't at Microsoft and Winer and the rest hadn't adopted you?
Highly doubt it.
----------
"MySpace is popular BECAUSE it doesn’t look “professional."
Pure unadulterated "bullshit".
Why did Winer adopt me? Cause I hired him to speak at a conference and I recognized early on that he was doing something brilliant and told him so.
Ah, finally someone making sense! I don't think Robert understands that aesthetics and functionality aren't mutually exclusive.
1. Good design (as in attractive and easy to use/simple) will never hurt a cause, it can usually help.
2. Staid and committee-based content will always kill.
The Channel 9 videos work not because they look amateur, but because they look genuine and real. Real is always good, but if your videos were made with more professional equipment, they would still succeed. At least as long as the people in them weren't reading from a script.
Bill: how professional, though? I find that there's a line where people stop being candid and start acting. Also, the more professional the equipment, the more expert the user needs to be to run it. So, now, you need a camera crew and all of a sudden Channel 9's genuineness evaporates.
The thing about good design is that it's in the eye of the beholder. Good design to a designer usually looks much different than good design to my eye does.
Also, I don't live in the world the way I wish it to be, but how it actually is and Markus isn't the first guy to tell me his "ugly" site is doing better the uglier he makes it. (Better meaning, brings in more dollars in revenue and keeps users around longer).
Do you know what platform he uses for his forums on PlentyofFish? If not can you ask and post about it? Thanks!
What I think is interesting is how wide spread the non-corporate approach is becoming for consumer-driven sites. There seems to be an assumption that anyone using the net is anti-corporate, and I think these days that's a pretty big assumption.
Uh, congratulations?
The point I want to make is that design is not really marketing, just one part of it. My two cents... ;-)
FWIW, you can do a fast loading beautiful site and provide media specific CSS to rearrange it. CSS is cheap (properly done) and can improve both load times and readability.
FWIW, I did a little trolling on the fish site and found one woman who listed 11 conditions for compatibility. #11? Must not work at Microsoft. Ha!
Innocent Bystander, it is all about perceptions...
To say, that we've created 'bullsh*t filters' for good design ignores the huge design trend permeating society: Method products, the next Dodge Challenger, American Apparel, the rise of the prefab. There's so much love of good design these days - you may think you've cracked it with your website design, but to me the apparent absence of any care whatsoever, says that you have little love for what you do.
Since we have yet to invent an internet, software product, or inanimate(none active) object that actually smell’s (good, or bad) I just can’t for the life of me get my head around this thinking. Microsoft smells of it, it’s everywhere.
Poor design, on the contrary to what you have stated here, gives an impression of no thought, nor interest to the end user experience. Any successful product that would purposely do this, and then state that the bad design is by design, owes it’s successes to luck. Nothing more nothing less.
If poor design was the secret ingredient in the work that we do, then nothing as we know it, would be as it is.
Anti-marketing (er, anti-corporate) design works because there are many people in society who want to be different.
And, if you think that Apple, Target, or BMW's design isn't done by committees of brand experts, I have a bridge I'd like to sell you. They've done their work so well that you believe they do it all for love.
Have you ever met anyone who has worked inside those companies?
Some people do think style matters (see point 4).
It's for a site for social photo bookmarking: you can search similar images, tag, rate and get recommendations.
I think that the "ugly" matter is not central to it, except maybe for the fact that he doesn't have much fanciness to 'dilute' the keywords --- he even puts his site's title in an image with an ALT attribute that doesn't match it, giving, instead, more ad-friendly keywords. And speaking of ALT attributes, look at those of the users' pictures...
But here's where IMHO you get muddled:
Good design isn't necessarily pretty or decorative. In fact, many pretty sites are prime examples of bad design.
One of the most useful definitions of design is from Charles Eames: "A plan for arranging elements to accomplish a particular purpose." You cannot judge design without knowing the purpose. Google from day one had one of the most brilliant designs ever put on the Web.
Good design is not necessarily aided nor hindered by collaboration. One person can do crap. Ten people can do great design. It's all a matter of purpose.
Fast-loading is a useful purpose for anything on the Web. It is served by light-weight CSS, light-weight images. Your blog isn't ugly -- or bad design for serving a purpose.
Fast-posting without a lot of foodle-doodling is another useful purpose.
Given the social purpose of plentyoffish.com, it does well by not upstaging the posts of the participants with irrelevant esthetical crap.
Brands in general don't need to be beautiful. The three you singled out, however, Apple, BMW, and Target, have adopted design as a marketable feature. Not that there's anything wrong with that. In fact, it's working well for them.
As for dismissing love as part of communications... If that's preposterous, then get to the Microsoft marketing committees quickly. They're spending a lot of ad dollars trying to "passion" onto the meaning of the Microsoft brand. But it's not preposterous for people to have passion in what they do. Or love.
Without getting into the typical form vs. function debate (yes, sites need to be useful and usable!), I’ll explain things the way I do whenever a client of mine makes this assertion. First of all, dismissing visual design as just a matter of “making things pretty” cuts off your ability to communicate with your customers at the knees. Design is a solution to communication not mere styling. Each product (via its interface design) needs to “tell” users what features it offers (its utility), how to use those features (its usability), and why they should care (its desirability).
Second, even if you deliberately don’t think about your site’s personality during the development process, you will end up with one anyway. The colors, content, and visual elements (or lack of all three) of your Web site all make an impression on your audience, intentional or not. Therefore, it is in your best interests to be aware of the personality you are creating for your site and make certain it is telling the story you want.
Yet many sites with a poor visual presentation remain popular on the merits of their content alone. But does their audience enjoy bumping through the site’s awkward graphics and hard to read labels? No, but the personality of the content (it could be high quality, funny, worthwhile, and more) makes the rest bearable. Would their audience be happier if the personality of the presentation matched the personality of the content? Of course. They like the content, don’t they? Such a site would be well served to improve their presentation. Not only would it enrich their current customers’ experience, but a presentation that reflects the site’s content would tell the site’s story to newcomers as well. Hey, we have quality content, come take a look.
"looking fo a real nigga
Yea, wus up this ya girl sexyfidethang and i wanna holla at the real niggas so let me take a second to tell yall bout me, bet!"
Take a look at my site for anti-design (siliconvalleywatcher.com,) my buddy Om at Gigaom.com has a beautifully pristine site and I think it looks way too corporate. I like mine, it's far from perfect, just like me :-)
"I don't want to make music that sounds nice," Silva told me. "I want to make music that opens the possibility of real spiritual communion between people. There's a flow coming from every individual, a continuous flow of energy coming from the subconscious level.
http://www.cosmoetica.com/OO4-RL1.htm
Difficult to see the world bottom-up, but that how hierarchies IS now.
I thought this was bad; get it straight? By positing the notion that anti-marketing as a marketing strategy you have created a marketing strategy that's more disingenious than any other by claiming it's anything other than another marketing strategy. Now, you say you need to be arrogant to be good? No, you have to be arrogant (and foolish) to create the bad impression "marketing" has as a word even though it's simply about maximizing your product's market.
Maybe there is another category for frugal marketing...
As for the tech/platform - I have deployed 100's of sites on Windows (ColdFusion mainly) and ASP. Like anything else - you have to dive in deep enough to "own" it, make it secure and work for you. It DOES work (well!).
Toodles.
The PoF website is not actually selling anything to its users. It does not, in fact, depend on them doing much more than just looking around. Its revenue comes from the Google ads. In short, it doesn\'t matter if the site is credible, appealing, or much else, so long as it gets huge numbers of hits (it\'s basically offering \"free sex\", of course it gets traffic) and some of those people click on another site\'s ad.
Its low-budget, amateurish appearance may be working here because it encourages visitors to go elsewhere. And what\'s the best route to \"elsewhere\" when you\'re on PoF and looking for a hot date? Click on of those Google ads conveniently placed on every page. They may actually have made \"lure the visitors here, then drive them away screaming\" into a viable business model.
History is the moment, and design is truth in saying. The essential fact is that people imitate success, amnd the world goes to hell.
Sure it's ugly, but it's one guy's site with no corporate BS. He just did it to provide the service.
I think it will work with a large dose of good luck...
Another factor to consider, the site mentioned has mass links (300k in yahoo alone, 10k in msn, 4k in google), all natural links of course 8-P. With that many links and traffic, to put up a graphically intense site would kill his bandwidth.
So of course most high traffic, successful sites are low graphics with simple designs. Load fast, get links, show off your ads. Very simple formula.
Top paying keywords
For Canadians, plentyoffish is pretty sticky. After all, who can help looking around to see if there is a better deal there. Granted, anyone else may not have that reaction. But that might change once it spreads to any particular readers geographic location.
It's the fact that if you have loads of crappy fonts all over the place the GOOGLE TEXT ADS look like they are internal links or editorial links and people are more likely to click on them.
People confuse the real content from the ads.
If you have a nice clean design, the ads always stand out as ads and people ignore them.
Chris
The page uses font tags with the face, size, color, etc for things like titles of posts and uses a lot of tables.
Most of the presentation seems to be handled in the html page rather than in a CSS file (which would only need to be loaded once and then it would be stored in the browser).
This would argue against the simple design being used for speed. You could *decrease* the weight of these pages with correct use of CSS and hence speed up loading.
He could further decrease the weight by getting rid of all the nested tables in the design and replacing them with divs.
Not that any of this really matters - the main reason why he's kept the design the way it is, is because more people will click on the ads which is the main aim of the site (as well as retaining visitors - who probably don't care if it's not the fasted loading site in the world).
A lot of well SEO'ed sites like this have not been 'designed'. I'm sure if a nicely designed site used the same SEO tactics it would do just as well in terms of visitors - although would probably get less clicks on the ads.
I think the most impressive thing is I have only 4 servers. NO other dating site this size has less then 200 servers and 200 staff and a 1 million in technical costs per month.
1. 1 DB server
2. 1 Web server running IIS 6, handles 1 million pageviews an hour at peak. No static pages at all, way to slow. All pages are Gzipped on the fly.
3. 1 Mail Server. Handles 1 million emails/day and also has a webserver that handles a Instant messager. That translates to 4-5 million polling pageviews/hour at peak.
4. 1 Image server, Like all major sites it serves images to a massive content distribution system/cache.
5. Outbound traffic is 70 to 100mb/sec If it was uncompressed it would probably run at 140mb/sec
My design my be bad, my html not so good etc. But this site was started as a little side project to teach myself asp.net and to provide something for free. I certainlly didn't expect to create a accidental dating empire. I'm just proud of the fact I was able to code every line of code in this site, design and write every page and just create something huge that is used by millions.
http://www.tnareview.com
http://www.site-reference.com/articles/Website-...
is gaining a lot of attention (slashdot, digg).
P-Brain
I have spoken with the owner of edate and he is not corporate and he just wants to offer a totally free dating service that takes on the big boys. It is currently pretty new so he is transferrring thousands of users over from another site.
I met my boyfriend on www.edate.com about a month ago. Does anybody understand how they stay in business without charging any money? I didn't have to pay a cent and it seems just as good as any other dating site that I paid for.
Just thought I'd let people know about edate.com because alll of the other dating sites rope you in to paying some fee and edate didn't.
However, I do agree that for certain kinds of sites simple "bad" design is okay. Craigslist is a complex site with a lot of content and the design should get out of the way of users who just want to get to what they want. But even that concept comes back to an old graphic design theory: form follows function.
Are you forgetting that your ugly design examples -- eBay, Google, and MySpace (owned by Fox) -- are all big companies?
Someone tells me you haven't a clue.
Compare the demand for 'Commercial Pretty Porn' and 'Amature Porn' the latter completely changed the porn idustry - why - because it was more authentic and there for more in line with what people could believe and i suppose fantasise about.
With plenty of fish (and even craigs list) the design (or lack there of) actually helps you associate with the person on the other end. Its about them and not about a brand that they are wrapped in.
When it comes to people and relationships do as the porn idustry had to do and remove the glam and let the people talk.
http://www.airbagindustries.com/archives/009000...
I hate when people with infulence perpetuate completely assinine ideas like this.
You make a claim like this and then support it with completely ridiculous claims. "MySpace is successful because it's ugly." COME ON! You can't seriously believe some of this stuff.
a definition of design:
Design is a set of fields for problem-solving that uses user-centric approaches to understand user needs to create successful solutions that solve real problems.
you're talking of sites which are great because of their excelent functions and saying that they are good because of being ugly.
the correct knowledge of the design principles should make your webpage much faster, uncluttered, authentic and user friendlier than it is now. When you attain that, it's inerent beauty is visible.
this blog (not mine): http://simpleydone.com/
is much lighter, simpler and user friendlier than yours AND it's also better looking.
In my native language we don't have the word design, we use the english word. Maybe if you had to explain to your grandparents what design is, like I had, you would start understanding what it's really about - not ugly or beautiful, nike or coke, but about improving comunication. it seems that the ironic problem with design is that it's meaning is poorly comunicated.
Nobody but you and a *very* small minority gives a rat's arse how that site looks or whether it validates or not.
Everybody else goes there for the reasons 99.99% of humnaity would; for information. Hell, I'm thinking of signing up there myself :)
So your argument for not bothering with design is to repeat a tired truism: "It's all about content". Sexy-talking tramps = lots of hits from desperate losers. Craigslist and Google offer great, well-delivered content. Sure, you can a snotload of money from great content and ugly design. But can you do better if you have great content and a nifty design? Why not have both? That's the real question.
I don't like marketing geeks very much either, but just because marketing can be lame and over-the-top, doesn't mean you just throw it in the trash altogether. There needs to be a middle ground, dude.
Your site is so ugly, get your act together.
and performing very good on adsense. Not too much traffic but %20 - %30 click through rate.. Not too bad for an amateur :)
http://www.talktechno.com
Either a site looks awesome and is slow-loading and not as successful as the anti-aesthetic quick loading ugly site.
I don't think the above to be true however I do agree that elements of both should be kept in mind during creation.
I think for the last 10 years we've been arse backwards about how we tackled online communication in general.
I would guess 90%+ of the websites in existance were designed "before" they even knew what message they wanted to portray, "before" the content was written and the IA plan was in place to get this content across efficiently to the user.
On top of that there has obviously been very limited usability testing and no long-term consistency online 'period'.
I guess my point here is that while I agree sites should be lightweight and fast-loading, I also firmly believe that the problem is not solved by creating "ugly-anti-marketing" sites.
This problem is solved by well thought out IA which clearly communicates your well written message/content. This can be accomplished only in conjunction with extensive usability testing.
In the end I can see now reason you cannot have a well thought out, visually appealing yet easy to use website that offers a good 'and' effortless experience.
Wow that was a mouthful.
"Ugly by design" is branding. Low cost product branding almost necessitates a no frills packaging to hammer home the message. Go to any super market in the country and look in the cereal isle. Next to the Rice Krispies is a plain box with A&P Crisy Rice in it. The box looks like crap but who cares, it tastes the same and is half the price. Could A&P make a more attractive package?? Yes of course but that would make it less recognizable amoung all the other brands already competing with Kelloggs.
Some people only shop at Prada while others love the value of Walmart. Both get dressed every morning.
POF is the generic brand of Match.com
Craigslist is the generic brand of Monster.com
and Google is just a freak of nature.
Should anyone really be suprised that POF is making 10,000 a day? Not really. I would be much more interested in finding out how they marketed a free service to create the userbase that supports that revenue stream now.
Let's not over-generalize beyond that.
1. It's a FREE dating service, unlike most of all the others. Wonder how successful he'd be if he were SELLING something.
2. Online dating services are in great demand.
3. As another comment pointed out, "...the fact that if you have loads of crappy fonts all over the place the GOOGLE TEXT ADS look like they are internal links or editorial links and people are more likely to click on them.
People confuse the real content from the ads.
If you have a nice clean design, the ads always stand out as ads and people ignore them."
I've already read here of people saying they accidenatlly clicked on Adsense Ads, thinking they were part of the site's content. The site is successful with Adsense, not specifically because it's ugly. Let's not confuse causation and correlation; they're two entirely different things!
this is dumbest shit I've read in a while...
like one your readers so astutely pointed out, design is not just about making things pretty. I know this might be difficult for some of you to understand, but good design is visual problem solving. good design is not decoration. i think a lot of people assume that design = haphazard esthetic decisions. nope. good design has methodologies for solving problems just like good OOP does. good design doesn't place form over function in the way many software engineers seem to think it does.
another one of the above posts has pointed out that the anti-brand is indeed a brand. to assume that minimalist page design like craiglist has somehow escaped percieved visual trends to elevate its user experience above esthetics and escape the laws of branding is terribly uninformed, unrealistic, and arrogrant. people know shitty design when they see it. they might be willing to put up with it, but you're not fooling anyone.
"oh wait! our shitty looking site has stands as a beacon of integrity in sea of trendy, slick looking over-designed site! yeah! thats the ticket! when people see our no frills layout that looks like 1996 doodoo, they'll KNOW WE'RE KEEPIN IT REAL!"
right. next time i need to craft a brand, I'm going to call some software engineers! preferbly ones from the company that has the most shallow, confused, and awful brand of the modern age.
furthermore, if form over function is your mantra, you should scratch myspace off your list of shining examples. have you actually looked at that markup? take a look and get back to me. the ONLY remarkable thing about myspace is the sheer number of people who are using it.
kind of like MS products....
anti-brand >is brand
actually, there's only design. ugly/graceful/etc have a form follows function relationship.
anti-brand >is brand
i mention target because bridgesolution has an alliance with their branding team.
i agree most web designers miss the point. becuase in reality there is only design. bmw doesn;t make dump trucks, and print isn't the web; and newspapers aren't magazines.
we use the concept of having designers interact with implementers. the dialogs can be amusing.
What a cruel world.
Guaging how much visual appeal draws an audience is the first step in a successful (ugly OR pretty) design.
For example: the charm of your favorite hole-in-the-wall diner would be ruined by yards of velvet and mood lighting. BUT would most people pay extra for the ABSENCE of velvet and great service?
Plentyoffish doesnt' make big $$$ because its got ugly design, its a big, FREE dating service for crying out loud! (and, I'll be the clients with the most traffic are the best looking!)
I bet you can't design. Google is used so much cos it works best, not because it has no design. Design isn't just colors its a way to communicate.
"We trust things more when they look like they were done for the love of it rather than the sheer commercial value of it."
Yet the rest of the time all he's talking about is CA$H CA$H CA$H. Your design goals permeate through your corporation, Robert. You are an excellent choice for M$.
And I don't know how many times I've said myspace would be so much better (more enjoyable to use) if it implemented a means of creating pages/profiles that weren't absolutely horrendous to look at. Half the time, I can barely read people's pages and I am always baffled that they can't see that for themselves.
"Maybe MySpace is kicking blogging’s behind because most blogs are simply too pretty!"
There's no way that's true. First off, most blogs aren't that pretty. Most of the time, they're just based off templates (that are easier to implement than myspace templates). It's the networking nature of myspace that makes it insanely popular. It's popular in spite of it's appearance, not because of it. No one ever said, "Have you seen myspace? It looks like $h!t. You should check it out!" (The same goes for google and craigslist, which by the way I found craigslist unusable on my first visit. Where do I look first? This looks like crap for such a popular site. Am I on the right page? ) I've found that most users don't even use the blogging feature on myspace. It seems to be predominantly used for simply making comments (despite the email feature) that consist of obnoxiously large images, animated gifs, or WMV clips. Setting up a blog doesn't allow you to search for and find old friends or acquaintances...or have an entirely superficial friendship with your favorite band. Myspace does. Blogging requires creative thought on a regular basis. Myspace doesn't.
This is too long. I simply disagree.
its possible?
Simple works and is effective.
But i think it has more to do with being simple and easily-navigated than 'being ugly'. Google is clean and proffesional, but I wouldn't exactly call it amateurish. Many other clean, proffesional sites have had outstanding success.
The arguement is too simplistic to be valid, depends on the sites purpose and functionality. End of story really.
?
Yes, but you're taliking 1 small, incy wincy, tiny bit of code to call a font that wouldn't even be noticed (not like you have to DL the font itself). If you are purely after readability and functionality, then a sans serif font would probably be better re both causes.
BTW, just as a side note we share the same surname. Does yours originate from the Cornwall lot?
for money making go for the lowest common denominator. mass appeal. appeal to the dumb. if you want to "say" something more important opt for a more personal approach. picasso pulls a good price these days and due to his innovative ideas could probably command a lot of dosh for an appearance/consult if he was still alive.
pop is boring. people eventually grow up.
Love, Me
but if the story is true and he really did that he deserves anybodys respect until the end of time.
You're very out of touch with what design is. You're also a little out of touch if you think a person will only disagree because they're a working designer.
Well, thats an fact! If a site have everithing goods to offer for the user, there is no reason to click on adds from google. The key is sucking traffic from google, make the user curiously to earn clicks...
"Appeal to the classes, and you'll dine with the masses.
Appeal to the masses, and you'll dine with the classes."
...
People with bad taste feel ostracized by good design. They know that it's above them, on all levels - intellectually, aesthetically, emotionally, financially. They flock to bad things - American cars, television, fast food, sweat pants, pop music, MySpace - because THEY ARE TOO STUPID TO UNDERSTAND GOOD DESIGN. There, I've said it - the ultimate value judgment.
If you disagree, I want you to walk out on the street and look into the eyes of the first person you meet. There's a 99% chance that this person's entire soul will be on display. It will be clear to you that they're an idiot, with bad taste, with money to burn. They don't know the difference between a serif, a sans-serif, and a slab-serif - but they are affected by it.
It's a fact: successful business owners exploit distasteful idiots. Apple Computer makes the best computer hardware and software in the world, but they will never sell more computers than bargain-basement Dell. You have to work harder to please customers who can discern good design, but lucky for Dell, those people are a very small minority of the population.
1) people with bad taste > people with good taste
2) more customers = more money
Scoble, you can close the comments now.
The reason for their ugly design is the fact that they all started as a homework project. Now that they gone big, why would they change their look?
It does not mean that you can build an ugly site and be successfull. No you won't.
And who said that simple, uncluttered, fast loading design can't be pretty?
Get real people!
Adult Dating Online Community
http://www.adultxdating.com/
www.aretheyopen.com is using it, and they are doing pretty well.
Also think your marketing story would, on the other hand, make for a more intriguing article.
Cheers.
http://allasianpass.spaces.msn.com/
days only, you can see a little TIPS from this site
http://www.netdesignmedia.com/acne/index.php
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Ten Days Make 1000 Dollar
IMNSHO myspace works so well because it extremely lowers the entry barrier for anybody without visual skills, i.e. the largest share of people. it does not make users ashamed of their lack of skill.
google OTOH is absolutely clever designed. people still believe that it was simple. if you just take a look at the search engine this may still hold true, but the large and _complex_ majority of google's services is hidden behind this facade of simplicity. perfect marketing, i would say.
and OTTH the dating site works well, because… well, it is a free dating site. it serves a need that has and propably will always be profitable to serve. heck, it might even work better and be even more succesful with a better interface, but neither can i prove this nor you can prove the contrary.
BTW, agencies and marketing departments of certain companies have been using non-corporate looking design very purposefully for quite some time now, especially where popular youth culture is concerned. and that's also one point why, to me, anybody using the word “authentic” in public without turning beet red deserves a severe flogging for either being ill-spirited or for excessive naivity and extreme lack of insight. marketing already knows quite well, where it should not dress up like standard industry marketing to be perceived well.
maybe you should think again. there *are* some points in the original post, but in the end the conclusions drawn from them turn out as nothing but hot air.
I recommend signing up on all dating sites and social networking sites if you are serious about meeting the right person. You might find a great date online, at a singles bar, or just walking down the street. However, the more that you, and or, your pictures are exposed to other singles the better chance you will have to find love, friendship, intimacy, a one night stand or whatever you are looking for.
Also, just think, if you find someone you like on a paid site is $20.00 to much money. Yes, it's great to have the internet free but most free dating sites are full of ads, spam, players. Again, I would suggest using the free services too but just be prepared to figure out who is and is not trying to spam you.
900K CAD is about 800K USD. 400K per month (exclude tax fee). But do not forget that Markus should pay for HUGE outgoing traffic. 100K cash isn’t too much but very good for one person
He made nobody elso couldn’t dream about.
This is an example how an ordinary dating website can make so much money
So we have a chance too?
Then my site is doomed for success, eh?
It is just disheartening to be abused to develop and market a beautiful website, which loads in 20 seconds, is barely crawlable and with no navigation.
Our own projects we (SEOs) go for.
To the previous comment.
I'd say Markus deserves what he gets. He has put hours, weeks, months and years into what he has created. So, why not?
If someone is jealous about Markus, I'd rather not imagine how they feel about Bill Gates.
Thanks,
Don
Mr. Frind,
It appears that you have blocked my access to your website. While you certainly have that right, I would like to ask you why. You are not obligated to discuss this with me but I would like to say that if you check your records you will find that I have used your site for quite some time and have never had a problem. There have been some disagreements with some of the other members from time to time, but as far as I know I have never done anything to warrant this.
I do suspect however that a female I blocked because she continued to solicit me to solve electrical problems for her is the cause of this. I have no idea what she may have said, but if you checked your records and found that I was in violation of your agreement, I would appreciate you letting me know what it was. I have tried to contact you after you have blocked my access when I try to re-establish a profile but you do not respond.
The only other incident was one female who was not expecting one of my photos to be shirtless, however I do not view that as a violation since I see women in skimpy clothing all the time and I saw nothing in your agreement that stated that a man without a shirt on was in violation. Furthermore, in this last instance, this particular lady continued to talk with me via instant messaging and had no issue with the photo after we talked. However, I doubt it was her but who knows? People do strange things.
So, I have no idea why you are blocking me. Would you care to explain or at least let me know what is going on?
Don
I forgot to tell you that you can contact me anytime at x2751@hotmail.com
Don
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What I personally feel is lacking in a lot of the design you see on these big sites is input from traditionally educated Graphic Designers. All too often design decisions are made by 'Photoshop Monkeys' calling themselves Graphic Designers.
People enjoy sites that (a) offer content that they, personally, can use, learn something deeply desired from (and me a writer), grow, etc. In other words: expansive content. Design that serves that end, adds; design that merely embellishes, detracts.
Content-heavy "ugly" sites that work: Jerry Pournelle's Chaoes Manor, Joe Henderson's Running Commentary, Digg, Fark, Arts & Letters Daily, Bloglines, Cool Tools, Desktoplinux.com, etc.
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Almost a decade ago when we had the first 'Dot Com' boom, designers that knew Photoshop and maybe Flash were in massive demand. I think a lot of people fell into these jobs because they knew how to use these programs, not because they were design experts. So many developers ended up having to work with these 'designers' who only knew how to embellish and not how to add real value to a project. This seems to have sadly become the norm for a lot of these 'ugly' sites, many of whom, I imagine, are constantly doing their utmost to be rid of these 'photoshop/flash monkeys'.
This is complete crap. It is the content and usefulness that pulls the users in. Having a great design is not going to deter users.
I'm concidering anti-marketing version as a secondary version for my site
my question is if there is a benefit of creating a simple version of the site along side of the regular design would be equally effective
Realy strange. You are right, but what could be the problem. I mean I really prefer beautiful design, but at the same time functional. Because really there are some designs with bad functionality and there are others with good functionality and bad design.
May be people really prefer information than fancy stuff.
Cheers!
http://www.goaddsite.com/
Scobleizer, I've read this post today and it has been bothering me that you're hyping this 'anti-marketing, ugly design' concept. I think your being too 1-sided in this. It's just not so ...
I've worked in many corporate projects where design has really been a key player in the success of a project. Also, I've worked with MANY people (designers AND marketing experts) who wanted to develop something beautiful because they were passionate about the projects that they were involved in...
The reason for the success of plentyofffish doesn't have to do with 'how ugly the design is'... the design is functional, but if it were to be just as functional and great looking, would it be succeeding less ? I don't think so ... it's kind of 1-sided to attribute this everything good about plenty off fish to 'an ugly web design' ....
Mind you ... I am not trying to attack your opinion here but I need to speak out on behalf of all people (including myself) that have dedicated years of study and have worked very hard to bring everyone beautiful looking designs.... Just imagine that everything would be ugly looking ;) wouldn't you then just want to have the best 'ugly looking design ?' ... Sorry ... I really and I mean REALLY have to disagree with you here...
- Lex G
he was just lucky what else could be said...
This is complete crap. It is the content and usefulness that pulls the users in. Having a great design is not going to deter users.
Its just popular same with craigslist
google works better the any search.
get real people