jkap

CEO of posting

butch jewish dyke
part of @staff, cohost user #1
married to @kadybat

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staff
@staff

Happy tuesday, coposters! We’ve just had our End Of Month Meeting, which means our financials are fully up to date, which means it’s time for another financial update!

Since last month’s update included background and definitions, I’m going to forgo re-defining terms we’ve already used. I highly recommend going back and reading that if you’re confused about anything or want additional context. Let’s get started!

Activated vs. Active users

As you may know, a couple weeks ago we changed how we’re calculating a True User Count, moving from a number that reflects “users that are allowed to post” to one that reflects “users that actively use the website.” In our case, “using the website” means that in the last 30 days you have either (1) liked a post, (2) shared a post, (3) made a new post, (4) or commented on a post. The inclusion of liked posts and shares means that unactivated users can be counted as part of this number.

Another distinction to make is between “Users” and “Pages.” Within the codebase, “User” is little more than a shell for an email and password, a cohost Plus! subscription, and some display settings. Almost every single action you take on the website (including all the ones we count for metrics) are done as a “Page.” For example, I (jae) am a user. When my account was created, a Page (@jkap) was created alongside it.

There is not a 1:1 mapping between users and pages. Every user has at least one page, but as you know, creating new pages is easy. Since we are only able to track usage by pages, it doesn’t completely reflect how many individual users are active, but it’s close enough for our purposes.

As of right now, we have 19,056 total users, of whom 17,310 are activated. These users account for 19,105 activated pages, of which 4,314 are active. Our active page count has been growing since we actually started tracking it (and as a result started activating more users) and we’re expecting further growth there. We keep activating users at a rate of 999 per day. Once the current queue is cleared, we’ll share an update on how we plan to handle invites moving forward.

Conversion rate and subscriptions

We’ve moved to tracking conversion rate to be based off of Active Pages, rather than Activated Users. Active Pages give us a more realistic picture of how many people who cost money are using the website.

As of August 28, 2022, we have 476 cohost Plus! subscribers, accounting for $2,223.56 of MRR. This is up from 358 subscriptions and $1,692.36 MRR as of August 3, giving us an average of 4.72 new subscriptions per day. This is up from our previous rough average of 3 per day, and we’re happy with that growth.

Our current conversion rate for Active Pages is 11.39%. Since we’re well above our target levels for conversion rate, we’re okay with this going down if that’s a product of the site growing and becoming more active.

Overall profit/loss

MRR growth means we’re looking better for the end of the quarter and year, even with increased hosting expenses and the addition of a new contractor to assist with development work.

As of today, we have a total of $158,711 in the bank. We still intend to raise additional funding before the end of the year. So far, in Q3, we have lost only $43,417, which is incredible and puts us on pace for only losing around $70k this quarter. For reference, our Worst Case estimates put us at losing a bit over $79k.

For a slightly more detailed breakdown, so far this quarter we’ve spent $56,653 and earned $13,326. Of these expenses, around $44k is payroll, $5,200 on hosting, $5k taxes, and $1,300 for our lawyer and accountant. Our monthly hosting expenses are actually getting smaller right now, through various improvements to the site — recently, Colin’s improvements to performance, and fixing some issues with our internal logging and metrics — allowing us to consume fewer resources while still keeping the site running. That said, we won’t really start seeing the impact of this until next month.

Our contract with Jess is for $50 per hour (our standard rate, calculated based on our employee salaries to be roughly equal, plus a little extra to compensate for no benefits and contractors having to remit more payroll tax), maximum 24 hours per week, for 12 weeks. The maximum cost of this contract is $14,400. Jess starts on September 7, so her contract will be split across Q3 and Q4, with roughly 1/3 of it occurring this quarter. This is included in the estimated loss for Q3 listed above.

With MRR where it currently is and our worst case expenses, we expect to end Q3 with at least $128k in the bank, and end Q4 with at least $39k.

These end-of-year estimates keep growing, which is incredible news for us. That year-end estimate of $39k is up $15k since last month, and gives us an extra half-quarter of runway going into 2023, although as stated before, we will be raising additional money before the end of the year.

Looking forward

On the Revenue Product front, we are still planning to launch gift subscriptions for cohost Plus!, user tipping, and creator subscriptions. We do not have timelines that we’re ready to share for any of these features.

On the non-revenue front, we are also still looking to improve the experience when the same post is repeated multiple times on your feed, as well as improvements to notifications, adult content, and CW’d posts. We’re also still planning to ship posting features like inline images (without markdown or HTML), audio uploads, and additional post types like Asks. We don’t have timelines we’re ready to share for these features either, but they remain on the roadmap.

We are currently planning a move away from Cloudflare as a provider of various networking services. When we chose them a few years ago, we had ethical reservations given some of their other customers, but at the time they were the only provider with a few features we needed. This is no longer the case, and the ethical concerns have only grown since then. We will post updates about the migration once we know more details.

That’s all for now! Thanks for tolerating nearly 1200 words of Business Talk. This sort of transparency remains important to us and we intend to keep it up moving forward, even if it’s a bit dry to read. Thanks, as always, for using cohost! :host-love:

~jae


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in reply to @staff's post:

Thank you for moving off of cloudflare.

Is there (or will there) be anywhere to register interest in user tipping or creator subscriptions prior to the full launch? This is something I'm interested in soon, but would prefer to start with y'all directly, even in some sort of Beta form (when/if you start soliciting users for that).

you know it didn't occur to me at first, but I'm currently indirectly supporting Cloudflare with my Plus! sub, which is Not Great! I appreciate that you're moving to another provider for those services. I need to move back to Google DNS myself...

would you mind sharing what other companies you're paying significant amounts for cohost operations? It would be nice for peace of mind. (I don't expect like, down to the domain registrar lol, but anything that would scale significantly as the site grows at least)

If it helps, cloudflare is a very very very small fraction of our overall hosting expenses (less than 1% of our hosting/services spend).

The overwhelming majority of our spend goes to DigitalOcean (compute/storage/database) and Datadog (metrics/monitoring/code profiling). We're also using Stripe and Iframely, but those are more user-facing and obvious.

Thank you! and that does help a little. It already wasn't anywhere near enough for me to stop supporting cohost, honestly if colin's answer the other day was "nobody else can provide these services" I would understand, really it's on the major services that actually provide noticeable amounts of CF's revenue to reckon with it, in my book. The transparency and quick response to concerns are exactly why it feels so cozy here though!

readin about this business stuff about a brand new big website is so interesting
thank u for making these posts :)
i wish the best of luck to everyone working on the cohost 🙏
this site is a very nice place <3
one day when i am a functioning adult making money, i will give this place some

me, who has spent like 10 dollar on this beautiful website: hmm yes, as an investor I am happy with these numbers for Q3. I look forward to more Revenue Products in the future and will be supporting creator subscriptions directly. I hope that user tipping will be accessible from each post to minimize friction and create clear feedback for our content creators. great work team!