DPReview doomed? Exactly why? Doesn't the website garner more visits than most of its contenders?
Multiple Internet sources allow one to measure the volumes of activity that various websites generate. I find it difficult to explain why the DPReview site, whose daily visits exceed 250,000, and employs fewer than 20 people, can't make money, while similar websites, with fewer visitors, and sometimes a lot more overhead, manage to survive?
Or do most of them simply "run on fumes," requiring a continuous subsidy from outside? Most of the sites' visitors buy little, infrequently, or not at all.
My guess is that the DPR traffic count is disproportionately skewed by forum posters who seldom use sponsored links to vendor websites to buy anything. Or what they buy at Amazon is not camera-related and not credited to DPR.
Apples-to-apples comparisons can be elusive: a camera review site, a photography site, a camera store, and a store that sells cameras and other stuff too have a blurred affinity that confounds any strict ranking. However, monthly visit counts should translate to revenues, at least vaguely.
According to SimilarWeb , the monthly visits received by sample photography / camera websites compare as follows:
Site Affinity Visits / Mo. Peer Rank
DPReview 100% 7,100K #23
Fstoppers 100% 2,300K #58
digitalcameraworld 76% 4,800K #50
KenRockwell 100% 980K #204
The-Digital-Picture 90% 633K #276
Photographylife 72% 1,100K #219
Cameralabs 91% 385K #509
Photographyblog 95% 624.6K #314
photo.net 92% 566.5K #345
TheCameraStore 100% 432K #522
SLRlounge 77% 439K #526
Imaging-Resource 91% 737.9K #282
FredMiranda 91% 804.3K #203
TheDigitalPicture 90% 632.6K #276
Petapixel 88% 4,800K #51
Flickr 85% 49,500K #1
Northrup.Photo 74% 38K #1,152
Froknowsphoto 100% 60.4K #2,891
MattGranger 100% 26K #2,298
DXOmark 83% 2,500K #60
NikonUSA 81% 1,100K #194
B&H Photo 70% 16,500K N/A
Adorama 75% 3,200K N/A
Canon USA 80% 3,600K N/A
Multiple Internet sources allow one to measure the volumes of activity that various websites generate. I find it difficult to explain why the DPReview site, whose daily visits exceed 250,000, and employs fewer than 20 people, can't make money, while similar websites, with fewer visitors, and sometimes a lot more overhead, manage to survive?
Or do most of them simply "run on fumes," requiring a continuous subsidy from outside? Most of the sites' visitors buy little, infrequently, or not at all.
My guess is that the DPR traffic count is disproportionately skewed by forum posters who seldom use sponsored links to vendor websites to buy anything. Or what they buy at Amazon is not camera-related and not credited to DPR.
Apples-to-apples comparisons can be elusive: a camera review site, a photography site, a camera store, and a store that sells cameras and other stuff too have a blurred affinity that confounds any strict ranking. However, monthly visit counts should translate to revenues, at least vaguely.
According to SimilarWeb , the monthly visits received by sample photography / camera websites compare as follows:
Site Affinity Visits / Mo. Peer Rank
DPReview 100% 7,100K #23
Fstoppers 100% 2,300K #58
digitalcameraworld 76% 4,800K #50
KenRockwell 100% 980K #204
The-Digital-Picture 90% 633K #276
Photographylife 72% 1,100K #219
Cameralabs 91% 385K #509
Photographyblog 95% 624.6K #314
photo.net 92% 566.5K #345
TheCameraStore 100% 432K #522
SLRlounge 77% 439K #526
Imaging-Resource 91% 737.9K #282
FredMiranda 91% 804.3K #203
TheDigitalPicture 90% 632.6K #276
Petapixel 88% 4,800K #51
Flickr 85% 49,500K #1
Northrup.Photo 74% 38K #1,152
Froknowsphoto 100% 60.4K #2,891
MattGranger 100% 26K #2,298
DXOmark 83% 2,500K #60
NikonUSA 81% 1,100K #194
B&H Photo 70% 16,500K N/A
Adorama 75% 3,200K N/A
Canon USA 80% 3,600K N/A