Blurtit

Blurtit is a British Q&A website where people asked questions and a community of regular users provided answers based on their knowledge or opinions. Blurtit was founded in 2006, and was based in Norwich in Norfolk, UK.[1][2]

Blurtit
Type of site
Q&A website
Available inEnglish
OwnerBlurtit Limited
Revenue£2.4m
URLhttp://www.blurtit.com
Alexa rank59,363
Commercialno
Launched2006
Current statusInactive

Blurtit resembled a social media site as opposed to an information reference site.[3][4][5] Contributors were encouraged to enter multiuser discussions and to voice opinions about the questions placed. Questions were typically in the long tail of internet search in that they had a large number of keywords, produced limited results on a search engine, and as such required a live human to answer them. Blurtit covered a diverse range of subjects including social and spiritual matters.

History

Tim O’Shea and Chris Lee created and launched Blurtit[6] in 2006 as a new venture in their company, Mindcom Internet Limited. Originally it was intended as an experiment to gauge whether a social based Q & A model would be an effective internet traffic generator. Until then Mindcom's revenue was derived from arbitrage of pay per click advertising rates and affiliate marketing.

By 2008 Blurtit became the company's main source of income. The increase in online traffic mirrored that of peers JustAnswer, Answers.com, Answerbag and Yahoo! Answers. Blurtit's income source was generated solely by contextual advertising that corresponded to the topics being discussed on the site itself.[7][8]

In 2009 Blurtit started working on the development phase of Qhub, a tool for both experts and novice users with a passion for a particular subject to help them set up their own dedicated Q & A forum.[9] This development was part of the online movement where internet users are generating content. It is similar to other online services, such as Squidoo (articles), WordPress (blogs) and SocialGO (social networks). All of them help people set up their own websites without the necessity of having a high level of technical knowledge. Qhub was officially launched in January 2010, but subsequently ceased operations after a brief trial run in June 2011.

In September 2010, Blurtit averaged 12.5 million visitors a month and, as of May 2011, had in the region of 2 million questions. However, over the course of the next few months, the site merged, quality-controlled and retired some questions so that, as at July 2011, currently there are around 600,000 questions.[10][11] Also in September 2010, the company renamed itself Blurtit Limited and exited all non Q&A operations.

In November 2019, Blurtit Ltd. applied to Companies House for a voluntary strike off. [12]

Blurtit.com ceased to service http requests in early July 2020.

gollark: It's open-source and end-to-end encrypted.
gollark: My friendship group was mostly convinced to use Signal, *somehow*.
gollark: I am currently just not using Facebook, and if I'm forced into it for whatever reason I'll upload faked photographs or something.
gollark: It *probably* isn't actually against the law in... wherever they're testing it, America probably.
gollark: Technically, it's probably compliant with the law-as-written and probably law-as-intended.

References

  1. Blurtit profile, Crunchbase
  2. “Norfolk firm answers web profit puzzle”, Eastern Daily Press, 13 January 2010
  3. Public profile Archived 21 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Blurtit
  4. Website review, FeedMyApp, 7 August 2009
  5. Website review, Design Critique, 17 December 2009
  6. "Ask Questions, Get Free Answers - Blurtit". www.blurtit.com. Retrieved 14 February 2018.
  7. "Blurtit benefits from Google AdSense", New Media Knowledge 10 February 2010
  8. “AdTaily Signs Up Q&A Community Blurtit”, TechCrunch, 17 June 2010
  9. “How to fail and succeed”, Eastern Daily Press, 16 August 2010
  10. Traffic analysis, Quantcast
  11. Press Room Archived 30 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Blurtit
  12. "Companies House voluntary strike off".
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