- EHow
Infobox Website
name = eHow.com
caption =
url = www.ehow.com
commercial = Yes
type =Collaboration
language = English
registration = Yes
owner =Demand Media , Inc.
author =
launch date = March 1999
current status = Active
revenue =eHow is an online knowledge resource with more than 140,000 articles and videos offering step-by-step instructions on "how to do just about everything". eHow content is created by both professional experts and amateur members and covers a wide variety of topics organized into a hierarchy of categories.
Through a proprietary social networking platform and
user-generated content tools, eHow maintains anonline community of users who publishhow-to s, images and video clips and receive a percentage of profits earned from traffic and advertising. eHow members can network and collaborate by building a personalized profile, creating friend lists, commenting on articles and interacting in an online forum.History
eHow.com was founded in March 1999. The company raised close to $30 million from
venture capitalist s, including Hummer Winblad,Media Technology Ventures ,General Electric andFingerhut . An editing team, led byBill Marken (formereditor in chief for Sunset Magazine) andSharon Beaulaurier , hired 200 professional writers, and the company employed a 25-person engineering team. By 2001, eHow had created thousands of articles. The professional writing, combined with a TV and radioadvertising campaign , briefly made eHow one of the Internet's top 10 news and information sites.Fact|date=October 2007 Despite the popularity, eHow was not profitable and was forced to declarebankruptcy when funding ran out.In 2001,
IdeaExchange.com bought eHow out of bankruptcy with the hope of charging eHow's readers to access how-to instructions. eHow remained unprofitable and in early 2004, IdeaExchange sold eHow to Herrick and Hannah.In January 2005, Two owners of eHow launched
wikiHow , a how-to guide in which anyone can edit.To keep costs low, Herrick and Hannah maintained eHow themselves with the assistance of one part-time software engineer. They restored content that had been lost during the bankruptcy and added improvements that made the site easier to use. In 2005, they started a wiki-based companion site,
wikiHow , which allowed both anonymous and registered users to create articles. Between March 2004 and April 2006, eHow traffic increased from 250,000 visitors per month to more than 4 million visitors per month.Fact|date=October 2007In May 2006, eHow was acquired by
Demand Media [http://www.demandmedia.com/default.asp Demand Media, Inc.] while Herrick and Hannah retained control of wikiHow.In September 2006, eHow launched
weHow.com , which allowed registered users to create new how-to articles (eHow articles continued to be written exclusively by professionals). In March 2007, in concert with the introduction of social networking features such as messaging, friend lists and forums, weHow merged with eHow.As of December 2007, eHow.com hosts more than 140,000 how-to articles and videos and has received more than 11 million unique visitors per month. By May 2008, the number of articles had increased to more than 337,000.Fact|date=October 2007
References
External links
* [http://www.ehow.com/about_us/about_us.aspx eHow website]
* [http://www.demandmedia.com/default.asp Demand Media, Inc.]
* [http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB114644530844940115-lMyQjAxMDE2NDA2MTQwNDE1Wj.html "For these sites their best asset is a good name"] ,Wall Street Journal , May 1, 2006
* [http://siliconvalley.internet.com/news/article.php/583951 "eHow to file for Bankruptcy?"] ,Internet.com , February 8, 2001
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