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Apart from sites like wikipedia which can get donations, how do they make money?

I'm talking about free websites where you don't have to pay anything to interact with them.

A common income is publicity revenues, but behind that what?

I'm asking this here because I think that how to sell your product is a basic non-functional requirement, despite it has nothing to be with coding.

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Your last sentence is why the question was closed, and why I will vote to re-close if it's re-opened. – David Thornley May 7 at 17:13

closed as not programming related by Chad Birch, Adam Davis, John Sheehan, McWafflestix, bdukes May 7 at 16:53

5 Answers

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Advertisements.

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publicity, as I have said... Behind that what? – eKek0 May 7 at 16:47
Nothing. You either charge the user, charge for impressions or you're a cost center. See the Twitter business model for reference. – JP May 7 at 16:52
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They give slick presentations to venture capitalists to talk them into investing, then they gather subscribers until they get bought out by someone like Apple, Microsoft, or Google. If they do well enough at gathering subscribers, they do an IPO, and end up with a stratospheric P/E ratio.

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Just imagine the amount of information about their users and their behaviors and preferences that can be used for targeted advertising campains.

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As they have said, first they get money from investors and venture capitalists. Then they try to monetize with advertisements (Facebook, MySpace). What they should do is find another income, like in Linkedin (you pay a year fee).

I think vertical oriented social networks are easier to monetize than the general ones. Better for specific advertisments, and more possibilities of selling products/services/suscriptions.

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They ask you for your email login for your contacts when you sign up, then empty your pen pal account.

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