TL; DR
With millions of Covid19 cases worldwide, stock market volatility, and billions of people under stay at home orders, this pandemic creates threats and opportunities for humanity. With great gratitude, Hacker Noon keeps humming along. Weâve always been an entirely remote team, and we like our position as a digital source of knowledge in time when people are spending as much time as ever reading online. This quarter was strong and steady at 3.4M+ words published (+5% 2019 average), 4.5M+ monthly readers (+12% 2019 average) and redacted in revenue (+42% above 2019 quarterly average). Weâll dig into how our business is making adaptations for the pandemic, but our overall strategy remains unchanged. Hacker Noon publishes insightful stories, makes useful software, and just is how hackers start their afternoons.Product Experience
Weâre focused on making a better place for technologists to read, write and publish.Our big release of the quarter was dubbed NextGreen: a redesign and re-architecture built with the NextJS framework on the story page, homepage, search page and tagged page. The story page is where the vast majority of our traffic lives, and while weâve been testing the new design work live for the last three weeks on production, average time on page is up 14% on the story page. Almost as importantly, this new architecture streamlines deployment across our CDN, cloud functions and application, so future iterations can deploy significantly faster.More Product Initiatives that were made live this quarter:
Ad by Tag- Needle: Revenue
- Example: #java
- Notes: Ad placement relevancy to content.
- Early returns: First couple Beta payings customers are live. Bugs worked out.
- Needle: Words Published
- Example: story
- Notes: Optimizing the rate of publishing.
- Early returns: Average stories published per day is 29. This helps keep the editors sane.
- Needle: Words Published
- Example: Scroll down to end of a story
- Notes: Integrated Disqus and added our own custom emojis
- Early returns: More learnings about what social proof matters.
- Needle: Time Reading
- Example: Search anything on site
- Notes: Rich media data for stories on all curation pages and filters on the search page
- Early returns: More value for curation decisions
Product Initiatives that are currently in alpha and beta:
Collections- Needle: Time Reading
- Example: HN top stories
- Notes: Curated reading lists from Hacker Noon & around the web
- Needle: Revenue
- Example: The Noonies
- Notes: Iterate on last yearâs custom voting app
- Needle: Words Published
- Example: site source code
- Notes: Real time streaming payments from readers to writers to charities
- Needle: Words Published
- Example: story
- Notes: Unlisted draft links & in talks to white label markup.io
- Needle - Time Reading
- Example - n/a
- Notes - Logic to subscribe to tags and authors
Editorial Experience
RedactedWe published 2,200 stories for the quarter. You can view the list of our best stories (3.37% of all stories) curated by editors here. We also have put gasoline on stories of the time, publishing 175 Coronavirus /Covid-19 stories (and rejecting about 350 more), besides our regular powerful topics, namely programming, python, and cryptocurrency stories.Google News started picking up Hacker Noon stories in late February, mostly our cryptocurrency news. Weâll be monitoring this source, but it is a solid win for amplifying the publish button, as Google News has â630M+ users. Some of top recent mentions around the web are Mercedes Benz commercial, Wired, Forbes, book citations, Investor Place, Media Post, Cornell, Yale, International Business Times, Yahoo Finance, Bitcoin Exchange Guide, ZDNet, BizCommunity, NewsMax, Crypto Slate, Crypto Daily, Security Boulevard, Hacker Earth, Decrypt, UPenn Law School, Seeking Alpha, Value Walk, Dice, IFL Science, ProductHunt, Cointelegraph, Coindesk, Bitcoinist, Thrive Global, Bitcoin.com, GeekWire, and other places around the web.RedactedWe have further steered into the âugly-highlighter-pixelated-terminal greenâ for our pixelated presence on incumbent social media platforms. We are creating and distributing more micro-content. In Q1 2020, not only did we continue to expand on current strong platforms such as on Facebook (where we gained a âverifiedâ checkmark), Twitter (where we have not gained a verified checkmark), Youtube (where we post podcast episodes and software updates) or LinkedIn (where they say we have 200+ âemployeesâ), Pinterest (with almost 400k monthly views exclusively from RSS repost), or Instagram (itâs very green); but also on younger platforms, such as Giphy (with 5.3M views across 80 GIFs), Minds (42k subscribers), and Unsplash (817k views and 2k downloads).Revenue
Ourredacted in revenue was 42% higher than the average quarter in 2019, but a 6% decline from 2019 Q4, which was the highest in company history. Advertising is highly seasonal and even in growing businesses, Q1 is often less than Q4 of the prior year. Top navigation continued to lead the way, brand as author overperformed, and we made a big move into ad placement by content relevancy with the beta launch of our ad by tag program.RedactedAt Hacker Noon, weâve also been building better tech for the sponsorship experience. For the prospective & current customers, weâve automated our internal brand as author publishing flow. For any lead that visits our sponsor page, we also introduced our own sales chatbot.We have also started to open our Ad by Tag beta program, with Sentry & NORDVPN as beta customers. As mentioned above, itâs our first ad placement by content relevancy (example of Sentry on the Javascript page).RedactedWhile the entire economy is subject to this global downturn, the effect of the bottom-line was not massive to ours: there was one delayed customer payment and a dozen or so leads dropping, citing budget constraints. However, we continue to benefit from increased marketing budgets from online education and knowledge based companies, such as our new customers Udacity and Udemy. Also, a lot of event marketing budgets have opened up, and how tech companies driving tech people to online events could grow. I think tech companies marketing budgets will not shrink like other industriesâ budgets, but who knows? What we control is how we make a better sales machine.Profit and Loss
RedactedRedacted
Redacted
