The number of advertisers on the alt-right site Breitbart.com has dropped 90 per cent in recent months, from 242 in March to 26 in May, according to data from MediaRadar, a New York firm that tracks online advertising. Among the businesses that continue to advertise on the site include a
Breitbart lost 90pc of advertisers in 2 months
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Steve Bannon, President Trump's White House Chief Strategist, was Breitbart's chairman. Photo / Getty
More than 2,200 companies, including Audi, Harris Teeter, Ethan Allen and Lyft, have asked third-party vendors to pull advertising from the controversial site in recent months, according to Sleeping Giants, an anonymous activist group that is tracking online data.
Representatives from Breitbart did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
"This is a good example of how advertisers have been suddenly shoved into the polarized political landscape," said David Carroll, a professor of media design at the New School in New York. "It's a post-election reality the industry was not prepared for."
MediaRadar estimates that the mix of brands willing to advertise on Breitbart has dwindled in recent months. During the first three months of the year, the site hosted 20 categories - including media and entertainment (accounting for 22 per cent of total advertisers), retail (21 per cent) and professional services (14 per cent). By April, however, advertising had become "almost entirely conservative," the firm said, offering examples such as TheRightToBear.com and American Patriot Daily.
"Breitbart's advertising has collapsed," said Todd Krizelman, co-founder and chief executive of MediaRadar. "Most political sites are making less money today than they did a year ago because of the election cycle. But they're not down 90 percent, I can guarantee that."
The number of visitors to Breitbart.com has also taken a hit, tumbling 53 per cent since November, to about 10.8 million unique visitors in May, according to ComScore.
There are also signs that ads on Breitbart might not be as effective as they are on other sites. The "click-through rate" for ads on the site was about 15 per cent in November, compared to 32 per cent on the New York Times' website and 35 per cent on FoxNews.com, according to WordStream, a Boston-based online marketing firm.
"Ads on Breitbart.com have surprisingly low click-through rates, poor conversion rates, and cost far too much per click, compared to its peers on the Google Display Network," Mark Irvine, a senior data scientist at the company, wrote in a blog post. "Ads on Breitbart.com may cost as much as they do on FoxNews.com or NYTimes.com, but the reach of Breitbart.com is a fraction of that of its peers."
Breitbart staffers told Fox Business in February that the pullback in advertising has taken a toll on the site.
"People at the news outlet say that an effort is underway to make Breitbart more mainstream, by hiring reporters to cover news and devote less space to political commentary that has been its forte," Fox Business reported. "People inside Breitbart say while the website may in fact be profitable, it is also suffering from a business standpoint with advertising dollars shrinking significantly."
But it may be immaterial, said Jeff Jarvis, a journalism professor at the City University of New York.
"If Breitbart lost every single penny of advertising tomorrow, it probably wouldn't matter," Jarvis said, adding that the site is backed by billionaire Roger Mercer. "Quite the contrary: It would probably be a badge of honor."