Skip to main content

Medium cuts one-third of its staff as it looks beyond ads at new business model

medium job cuts
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Following on from a successful 2016, publishing site Medium just dropped the bomb on its staff. The platform created by Twitter co-founder Evan Williams is axing 50 jobs (around one-third of its entire workforce) and shutting its offices in New York and Washington D.C.

The cuts will affect those in sales, support, and other business functions, claims Williams, with Medium retaining the “vast majority” of its product development and engineering teams.

“This is certainly one of the hardest things I’ve done in my years as a founder and CEO,” writes Williams.

The announcement comes as a bit of surprise seeing as just weeks ago Medium was touting the impressive year it had just witnessed. Publishing and visitor numbers were up across the board in 2016 — users shared 7.5 million posts (up from 1.9 million in 2015) and Medium saw its monthly visitors spike by 140 percent year-on-year to reach 60 million.

Evan Williams
Medium creator and CEO Evan Williams Image used with permission by copyright holder

So, what went wrong? According to Williams, the layoffs are part of the company’s efforts to create a new business model. What that model will look like remains unclear. For now, Williams maintains that the current ad-driven media system is “broken.” Nonetheless, it was a path that Medium was content to go down despite its creator’s comments upon its launch in 2012 condemning the digital media landscape as “unsustainable and unsatisfying for producers and consumers alike.”

However, in its bid to court major commercial publishers, Medium realized it had to create ad products, which were introduced last year. As a result, it managed to attract some big names and buzzy publications including The Awl, The Ringer (Bill Simmons’ post-ESPN media venture), and an offshoot of Time Inc. property Fortune. Its main ad initiative was “promoted stories” — Medium’s ad unit (launched in beta last year) that dealt with sponsored posts. A person familiar with the matter told Digital Trends that its ad unit is one of the affected offerings impacted by Medium’s shifting model.

Instead, the person says Medium will concentrate on Memberships — a subscription system that allows publishers to charge for some or all of their content — and micro-payments as a “potential area for investment.”

In his announcement, Williams touts a vague new model that will “reward” writers and creators “based on the value they’re creating for people.” The company was unwilling to clarify exactly how it plans to do this. Perhaps, as Williams indicates, it is itself unsure of what the strategy will look like.

Venture capitalist and Medium investor M.G. Siegler posted his own response to Williams’ announcement. Referring to the solid numbers the platform witnessed last year, Siegler said that metrics can “deceive” and that simply slapping ads on the site was not a “sustainable” solution. “The goal is not actually to build the site with the most pageviews on the internet, but instead to fundamentally change the nature of publishing and reading,” said Siegler in his post.

Saqib Shah
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Saqib Shah is a Twitter addict and film fan with an obsessive interest in pop culture trends. In his spare time he can be…
How to increase your internet speed in 7 easy steps
Man working at a desk at home.

Nothing is more frustrating than having to contend with a slow internet connection. Fortunately, though, there are some things you can do to improve matters. Before you reach for your phone to upgrade your internet plan, give these 7 tips a try:

Reset your router
Manage your Wi-Fi channels
Remove signal-hogging devices from your network
Use an Ethernet connection
'Flush' your DNS
Switch to a faster browser
Add an extension to manage your cache

Read more
The 18 best VPN services for 2024, reviewed by experts
best VPN services

These days more and more of our daily lives and everyday tasks are conducted online. Which means that it only becomes increasingly imperative that you prioritize ensuring that your financial and personal information is protected from cybercriminals. Protecting yourself from identity theft or even hackers can seem daunting, but it doesn't have to be. Take it one step at a time.

And your first step can be something as simple as using a virtual private network (VPN). The good news is that a reliable VPN is one of the easiest, cheapest, and most effective ways to safeguard your online activities from unwanted network intruders.

Read more
What are mouse jigglers, and can they keep statuses active?
Undetectable Mouse Mover at a computer.

It makes sense that mouse jigglers have gained prominence alongside the recent rise in jobs becoming remote positions. If more workers are working from home and away from employers' direct supervision, employers are going to try to find new ways to supervise their remote employees. And those employees are going to push back against being monitored by their employers. Which is how you end up with products like mouse jigglers becoming popular.

This odd little tech solution is being used to thwart some types of micromanagement and help employees manage time on their own terms, among other solutions. But do mouse jigglers work? Are jigglers allowed in the workplace? Here’s everything you should know.
What are mouse jigglers?

Read more