opinion

White Labels Turn Gray

White labels are evolving as marketers continue to refine their use is leading to some interesting new developments in the dating niche.

For the uninitiated, the dating site white label phenomena started for several reasons. The main two were a matter of brand continuity and facility. Previous marketing tools and materials like banner ads or click marketing required site owners who wanted to sell dating offerings to send their traffic to another brand name for monetization.

Factoring in DMCA safe harbor provisions and potential 2257 liabilities, it’s easy to see why so many use white labels to take reduce the heat. -Colin Rowntree

Having loyal bookmarkers leaving Site X to sign up at Dating Site Z under another brand name was not nearly as interesting to site owners as being able to quickly create white label landing pages as Dating Site X which share the exact same name brand, colors and theme as the existing host site.

By white labeling, site owners can attempt to sell dating without much risk of losing their own traffic to a dating site’s own marketing chain of offers if the potential buyer chose not to sign up.

Surely most site owners would have preferred to own their own sophisticated dating site network as well, but the amount of investment necessary to build out a fully functioning dating site platform is daunting. Add in potential liability from 2257 issues, moderating user-uploaded content, dealing with extensive customer support requirements and competing with deep-pocket competitors. That made white labeling an easy answer because it gave marketers the facility to provide potential customers with top-quality dating site features at virtually zero cost.

The failings of white label dating sites are not caused by any inability, but are actually due to their well-known ability to generate sales. What was once a small number of dating site networks and a handful of white labels has quickly turned into a mushroom cloud of even fewer exclusive dating site platforms and explosive growth in the number of white labels on the market. Thousands of cookie-cutter dating sites sharing very similar templates, duplicative image content, regurgitated text, and the exact same price points now litter the internet while crowding out innovation. Add to that the increasing awareness of savvy consumers who have now experienced online dating in one form or another somewhere else already — and it is easy to see why many webmasters and potential customers now believe that traditional dating white label sites have become quite stale.

In December the thin content epidemic reached such an unprecedented level that Google mouthpiece Matt Cutts stated in a YouTube Video that the Search provider now believes somewhere between 25 to 30 percent of all the content on the web is duplicative.

Google followed that up in January of 2014 with an official post on their blog. Stating plainly, “If your site syndicates content that’s available elsewhere, a good question to ask is: ‘Does this site provide significant added benefits that would make a user want to visit this site in search results instead of the original source of the content?’ If the answer is ‘No,’ the site may frustrate searchers and violate our quality guidelines. As with any violation of our quality guidelines, we may take action, including removal from our index, in order to maintain the quality of our users.”

Google’s own comments make it undeniably clear that a white label just like all the others is unlikely to gain any organic traction for traffic.

From the site owner side of the spectrum, the desire for an easy to implement white label system still definitely exists.

“Aside from the large concerns about fake profiles and recent FTC actions for false advertising practices, having produced content and run a network of content sites for 20 years, I have always shied away from running my own adult dating site or a community site that allows any kind of user generated images,” said Colin Rowntree of Wasteland.com. “Why? The sheer amount of moderation that needs to occur to keep spammers out results in individual review of all uploaded content, which then removes any umbrella protection as a simple regurgitator of user generated content submitted to the site. Factoring in DMCA safe harbor provisions and potential 2257 liabilities, it’s easy to see why so many use white labels to take reduce the heat.”

The result seems to be a two-headed approach. Some site owners continue to make use of templated white labels in members areas or with a clear understanding that they will need to generate non-organic traffic in other ways to see if the white label can convert it. Others have started to delve deeper to find ways of creating hybrid white labels that include just enough originality to be classed as exclusive websites.

“We have been approached by dating white label site owners seeking ways to overcome the obvious problems of thin content tours” said Colin Melanson, vice president of TranslationsXXX.com “Many dating site providers have already translated the very basic form mechanism which gets shared among all white labels of their sites, but going further to offer the entire tour in other languages can be useful for many reasons. The most obvious is marketing to people who speak that language, but perhaps as important, a site in several languages is thicker and distinctly different from competitors that are available only in English.”

Carefully creating original page titles, adding copious amounts of quality text exclusively written for the site, adjusting templates and layouts, adding original logos and taking other steps can in fact have a very positive impact on placement. To that end, dating site providers have gradually added many new customizable elements to their white label offers — following in the footsteps of what HostedTube.com has done for white label tube site owners. The result is an ecosystem of three kinds of platforms. Full dating sites, traditional white labels and a new hybrid between the two, which is becoming more of a “gray label.”

Will a white label ever do quite as well as a completely original site that is properly constructed from scratch? No, and anyone paying attention should easily understand that. However, there are a growing number of tools available for diligent site owners to use that will allow white labels to outperform the “do nothing” variety without requiring even a tiny fraction of the investment necessary to build out a full fledged dating community for each of your own brands.

Related:  

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

opinion

Account-to-Account Payments: The New Banking Disruptor?

So much of our industry relies upon Visa and Mastercard to support consumer payments — and with that reliance comes increased scrutiny by both brands. From a compliance perspective, the bar keeps getting raised until it feels like we end up spending half our time making sure we are compliant rather than growing our business.

Cathy Beardsley ·
profile

WIA Profile: Samantha Beatrice

Beatrice credits the sex positivity of Montreal for ultimately inspiring her to pursue work in adult entertainment. She had many friends working in the industry, from sex workers to production teams, so it felt like a natural fit and offered an opportunity to apply her marketing and social media savvy to support people she truly believes in and wants to see succeed.

Women In Adult ·
opinion

Understanding the Latest Server Processors

Over the last decade, we mostly stopped talking about CPU performance. Recently, however, there has been a seismic and exciting change in the CPU landscape, due to innovation by a chip company called Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).

Brad Mitchell ·
opinion

User Choice, Privacy and the Importance of Education in AV

As we discussed last month, age verification in the adult sector is critical to ensuring legal compliance with ever-evolving regulations, safeguarding minors from inappropriate content and protecting the privacy of adults wishing to view adult content.

Gavin Worrall ·
opinion

Maintaining Payment Processing Compliance When the Goalpost Keeps Moving

VIRP is the new four-letter word everyone loves to hate. The Visa Integrity Risk Program went into effect last year, and affects several business types — including MCC 5967, which covers adult and anything else with nudity, and MCC 7273, dating services that don’t allow nudity.

Jonathan Corona ·
opinion

Making the Most of Your Sales Opportunities

The compliance road has been full of twists and turns this year. For many, it’s been a companywide effort just to make it across that finish line. Hopefully, most of us can now return our attention to some important things we’ve left on the back burner for months — like driving revenue.

Cathy Beardsley ·
profile

YourPaysitePartner Marks 25-Year Anniversary Amid Indie Content Renaissance

For 25 years, YourPaysitePartner has teamed up with stars and entrepreneurial brands to bring their one-stop-shop adult content dreams to life — and given the indie paysite renaissance of the past few years, the company’s efforts have paid off in spades.

Alejandro Freixes ·
opinion

WIA Profile: B. Wilde

B. Wilde considers herself a strategic, creative, analytical and entertaining person by nature — all useful traits for a “marketing girlie,” a label she happily embraces.

Women In Adult ·
opinion

Proportionality in Age Verification

Ever-evolving age verification (AV) regulations make it critical for companies in the adult sector to ensure legal compliance while protecting the privacy of adults wishing to view adult content. In the past, however, adult sites implementing AV solutions have seen up to a 60% drop in traffic as a result.

Gavin Worrall ·
opinion

Goodbye to Noncompete Agreements in the US?

A noncompetition agreement, also known as a noncompete clause or covenant not to compete, is a contract between an employer and an employee, or between two companies.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
Show More