The plain and simple truth is, if you're sales are down and you're loosing money. It's your own fault. Seriously.
It's so tiring to see the same old cliches spew out through threads day after day. Each the same old line, with the same old apocalyptic "the end is near" summary, or the same old backassward assault on an issue. I'm just going to finally make a thread and try to open some people's eyes. Although I have absolutely no expectation that my ideas will be heard. I fully expect the peanut gallery to chime in with their whole hearted attempts to disprove any points.
So, here we go;
1.
The flooding of the market, and the dot com bubble
Your not original, and this market is flooded with newbies and people building the same site you have to sling a product. Every minute hundreds of kids in their parents basements, and dozens of jackasses with a deep pocket book are going out there and building websites.
This industry is literally drowning itself. Web technology has become so advanced and prevalent. It would only take your 80 year old grandmother ten minutes to have a website up promoting bigdickbob.com on a wordpress blog SEO'd for google images. You're not competing with a hundred other websites anymore. You're competing with millions of other websites, with a thousand new ones opening every day. What's that? You just opened up a mutant donkey scat site that only contains mules with three legs, brown fur, who take purple shits on midgets. Yeah, well join the club. My sister opened up ten of them last week. It's even worse for affiliate sites, every kid old enough to walk probably has at least ten TGPs/MGPs/Tube promoting the latest teen hitchhiker paysites.
The time of being able to build and open a website and have it instantly make money is gone. It was too easy, and it drew in a horde of people wanting easy money. The game is now filled to brim with amateurs and the market is saturated. If you want to stay in this business, you have a lot of competition, and a lot of saturation you need to stand out from. You have a lot of fucking work a head of you if you want to be one above the crowd.
2.
Technology innovation has been flushed down the toilet
Remember when the adult industry was the one building the innovation? When porn was using the leading edge of technology and techniques. That has become a thing of the past. Porn has now become so far behind the curve it's not even funny. How long ago did youtube come out, and most of this industry probably doesn't have the slightest clue how streaming media delivery works.
""Email alert! We just updated SoSo's tour with a flash video!"" Wow, don't hurt yourself with that one there. But just so you know - My uncle does that every day, from his mobile phone. How could anyone expect their sales to not drop when their product still looks just like it did ten years ago. If you don't innovate your business, the only thing you should expect is for your sales to drop.
No longer can you sit around using technology from three years ago. If it's over a year old, you need to update your shit. Technology moves fast, real fast. Specially trends with the internet. If you want to be someone and sell something, do it with innovation. Use the best damn technology that is available and use techniques that are original and cutting edge.
3.
Update your product
There's quite a few ways of creating and delivering your product. Really, there are a TON of new and creative ways. Instead, this industry relies on selling digital images and digital movies as it's product. You purchase access to a hidden area, where the images and videos exist to view or download. It's the same product system that the industry used in the mid-nineties. You know what else dates back that far? The cordless telephone. Yup, this industry is still using a product system that dates as far back to when the cordless telephone made it's break into households across the country.
Really, with all the features and functionality of website technology out there right now. Everyone is still mostly promoting a product that is so archaic Jesus had better options.
4.
Pricing
For the record, I have three memberships to adult paysites. Paysites I could easily get a free membership to but simply decided to purchase one instead. Because these sites run off an intelligent cutting edge pricing plan. The most basic understanding of business model pricing would be when the economy tanks, your market is saturated, and the technology makes it easier for you to provide. Your price goes down. The complete opposite has happened through out the years though. Instead greed and idiocracy has taken over.
Porn is everywhere, the internet is just flooded with porn. Remember, we went over this earlier. Even a lot of micro-niches have more competition. This means your price should go down! The economy is also doing a lot worse. People still want and are willing to pay for porn though. However your price should go down, not up. Lastly, the technology for you to provide porn online has become better and more accessible which makes it cheaper. The cost of owning and running a website is getting cheaper and cheaper. Therefore it would only make sense for the prices of the product to reduce as well.
However in the industry, we've seen an increase in subscription price across the board. Instead of simple supply and demand, and competition taking over. Pure greed has taken over. We see one paysite selling their subscription for $25 and feel if they can charge that we can try for $30, someone see's that and tries $35, then $40, and so on. It's literally backwards. Specially when you consider most are still selling a product that runs on a system two decades old, and have no innovation to their website or business model.
5.
Screwing your customer
Somewhere along the way profiteering really took a bad turn. At one point, the greed became so overwhelming. This industry turned into a back alley operation running the lines of legality.
Instead of making a unique site, with innovative technology, and a great product. It turned to credit card fraud, cross sales and hidden join forms. Skirting the edge of legality and credit card fraud. Hitting the consumer with $100+ charges when they signed up for a $20 website.
The one true gem in this industry is the consumer, and it's our business to find the consumers out there who want to buy pornography. To find one of those consumers, and to simply burn them so bad as to possibly jade them from ever buying porn online again. It completely negates the purpose of selling porn, and it is the absolute most detrimental thing that could be done. Murdering people in the street might as well be a better business model if it gets you publicity. It might as well literally be better than burning your customer so bad with something like possible credit card fraud.
6.
Not stepping up and solving your problems. Just blaming everyone else but yourself
When it comes down to it, it's just easier to blame the other guy. It's just easier to blame someone or something else for your shortcomings. Instead of taking the time to figure out a solution and come out on top. The majority will just sit on their ass and whine about it.
When piracy became big. Did you take the time to educate yourself on copyright infringement? Working in an industry who's sole product is digital media which is copyrighted, one of the first business models should be preparing and modeling the way to protect your copyright and take action against copyright infringement.
When tubes came out. Did you switch over to the greatest innovation in content delivery since the <img> tag? Did you not see it coming even when the all mighty Google bought YouTube? Where you living under a rock, or are you really just that dense?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In conclusion. The real problem with this industry is that the majority of people will bitch about torrents instead of spending the time protecting their copyright, blaming tubes for the decline in their sales, while selling a product through a system two decades old, on an unimaginative website platform, in a market of millions of similar websites, with a price of $40, and hitting the customer's card five times for the sale.
Sales are down because you suck at the internet.
