HubPages

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
HubPages
OwnerThe Arena Group
Websitehubpages.com

HubPages is an American user-generated

San Francisco
.

Though the content is user-generated and owned, the editorial staff and engineers are responsible for managing, editing, moderating, and publishing articles across the two dozen network sites.[2][non-primary source needed] The network sites focus on niche content that ranges from topics like automobiles and travel to beauty and pets.[citation needed]

History

The site launched on August 5, 2006, funded by a

MongoMusic.[4]

It raised $8 million between 2007–2008 and has not been able to raise any since and struggled for the next ten years.[5]

In 2011, traffic to revenue-sharing sites, including HubPages, was slashed following changes to Google's algorithm ("Panda").[6] Over the ensuing years, HubPages made strenuous efforts to recover from the setback, while most of its competitors gave up and closed their doors. In 2014 HubPages acquired its largest competitor, Squidoo, in a friendly takeover.

In 2016, HubPages announced it was moving from a single-site to a multi-site structure with the introduction of separate "vertical sites". Each site contains articles covering a group of broadly related subjects.

In 2018, it was acquired by Maven which gave investors a mild payout.[5]

Memberships

Unlike its competitor Medium, HubPages is not a subscription-based platform and creating a user account can be done for free.[citation needed] Members post informational articles and earn a share of the income from those articles through the HubPages Earnings Program.[citation needed] At one time, having an AdSense account was a prerequisite for being a member but this is no longer the case.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Maven Rebrands as the Arena Group, Expanding Business Strategy Around Consumer Media Verticals Anchored by Flagship Brands" (Press release). 20 September 2021.
  2. ^ "About Us".
  3. ^ Arrington, Michael (2006-08-05). "HubPages Launches, Gets $2 m from Hummer Winblad". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
  4. ^ Arrington, Michael (7 February 2006). "HubPages, a better Squidoo?". TechCrunch. AOL Inc. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  5. ^ a b Levy, Ari (2018-01-06). "After 12 years and endless fights with Google, start-up HubPages finds a buyer". CNBC. Retrieved 2020-10-15.
  6. ^ McGee, Matt (2013-02-25). "Google Panda Two Years Later: The Real Impact Beyond Rankings & SEO Visibility". Searchengineland.com. Retrieved 2017-10-28.

External links