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Blizzard Watch

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The future of Blizzard Watch, Patreon, and our supporting community

Last week, Patreon announced they were changing the way their business works. Instead of creators paying finance charges on donations, it planned to make supporters pay instead. The proposed fees were particularly high for small supporters: anyone donating $1 would have seen a 40% upcharge with these changes. This punished people who could only contribute a couple dollars a month and that doesn’t allow a diverse community of backers at many different levels of support. 

While Patreon has rolled back this change, it's still posed a problem for Blizzard Watch. In response, we’ve lost over 100 supporters (understandably) because they can not afford extra charges.

Not only do we not agree with these changes, it puts Blizzard Watch’s future at risk and runs counter to the way we conduct business.  Moving forward, we’re expanding our system with new ways to keep Blizzard Watch running:

With that out of the way, let’s dive into this a bit more…

Consequences for Blizzard Watch

Patreon’s changes presented Blizzard Watch with a problem. Advertising makes about 15% of our monthly income, while the other 85% comes from our supporters.

Blizzard Watch operates on a very slim profit margin. I’d rather pay writers for more words than keep something sitting around in a bank. Patreon and PayPal are not exactly the same, but we can use both of them. We expect several thousand dollars of income within the first ten days of the month — Patreon gives us that, which means writers get paid on a semi-regular schedule. PayPal won’t provide that — it’ll be a constant stream of money, which while at the end of the month provides the same amount, it leaves us with real and significant short term deficits. But because we know this, we’ll be able to work with it.

Another consequence for Blizzard Watch is the simple fact that it costs more to gain a new supporter than retain one. With the significant loss of supporters this Patreon change has kicked off, we’re faced with a steep hill to climb to regain them. That being said, I think this something that we can do.

Status of these changes

You can set up recurring support to Blizzard Watch through PayPal now.

You can set up recurring support to Blizzard Watch through Patreon now.

On Monday, December 18th:

Some of you have already helped test this system a couple weeks ago in our Discord channel (unintentionally good timing that we were working on it for the last month). Right now it’s possible to log into Blizzard Watch via Patreon and disable ads, but that’s it so far. We just need to do a little bit more work to integrate PayPal and to allow for supporter only content to appear on the site without crashing the servers.

We’re also always looking for ways to make it easier to support us.

What we learned

Blizzard Watch has always been a learning experience for everyone involved. It’s forced us to take on roles we’re not used to, learn things we never thought about before, and change on a moment’s notice. This is another learning experience; we put all our eggs in the Patreon basket, and while it’s been a great few years, that basket broke. Just like when WoW Insider closed without a moment’s notice and we created Blizzard Watch overnight, we’ll now find our way going forward through this too.

That’s what this post is all about. Going forward. And in a very real way, that has always been at the core of Blizzard Watch; not lingering on the stupid stuff that was completely out of our control, but taking what we can do and making something wonderful with it. Whether it’s changes in a game we love or hate, changes by an employer closing its sites without a second thought, or changes by the platform we invested ourselves and our product in, at each stage Blizzard Watch rolled with the punches and came out stronger.

The constant is that we — the writers, the readers, the listeners, the community — are all still here. AOL, Patreon, or whatever crazy stuff gets thrown at us be damned; we’ll find a way.

As always, I, and all of us, invite you to join us in that journey.

Thank you for reading this and your continued support,

– Adam Holisky & The Blizzard Watch Crew

The future of Blizzard Watch, Patreon, and our supporting community

Comments

I didn't even realize that was a change that was proposed, but would have stayed subscribed either way. I know you're in a bit of a rough patch as a result of this, so I have two thoughts. First, I'm going to up my pledge for the month as a little Christmas gift that will hopefully help you through this rough patch. Second, I wonder if you guys should do a "pledge drive" type of thing. When you launched the site, the community was ready and willing to step forward and support you. That support has obviously dropped off. I wonder how many new readers you've picked up that might be willing to support you, but haven't thought enough about it or paid enough attention to know how the site is supported and how they can help. I don't think it would be inappropriate to have a short period where you are more openly asking for donations (more than just a sidebar link or something like that).

Zachary Dunn

You have been my first and only Patreon subscription. Before the change was proposed I was thinking about expanding my budget and contributing small amounts to other creators as well, but the (now halted) change stopped me in my tracks. I will keep my current sub as is, but waiting to see if other changes start from Patreon (as well as other services now that the boat has been rocked.)

Alan


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