Women's Sites Booming, Attracting Traffic And Ad Dollars

Women's Sites Booming, Attracting Traffic And Ad Dollars

Heather Armstrong's wickedly funny blog about motherhood, Dooce, is more than just an outlet for the creativity and frustrations of a modern mother. The site, chock full of advertising, is a moneymaking machine -- so much so that Ms. Armstrong and her husband have both quit their regular jobs.

J. C. Penney and Crate & Barrel sell their furniture and offer decorating tips next to posts on Ms. Armstrong's conversations with her 4-year-old daughter, Leta. Walgreens promotes its photo printing services next to pictures of the family dog. And the W Hotel chain of Starwood brags about its Internet-friendly rooms on the Dooce (pronounced deuce) home page.

These advertisers are eager to influence the 850,000 readers, mostly women, who avidly follow Ms. Armstrong's adventures. Although Ms. Armstrong will not disclose exact numbers, Dooce's revenue this year is on track to be seven times its size in 2006, according to Federated Media, which sells ads for the blog.

Sites aimed primarily at women, from "mommy blogs" to makeup and fashion sites, grew 35 percent last year -- faster than every other category on the Web except politics, according to comScore, an Internet traffic measurement company. Women's sites had 84 million visitors in July, 27 percent more than the same month last year, comScore said.

Advertisers are following the crowd, serving up 4.4 billion display ads on women's Web sites in May, comScore said. That is more than for sites aimed at children, teenagers or families. "Moms are the decision makers of the household as far as purchases are concerned," said Chris Actis, vice president and digital director at the ad agency MediaVest.

The rapid growth in advertising and traffic to women's sites has attracted the attention of major media companies and venture capitalists.

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