Top Money Making Websites

. Google.com

Founders: Larry Page, Sergey Brin
Annual Revenue: $50.2 billion
The best example of a website becoming “ubiquitous” is perhaps the strange case of Google.
The word “google,” which simply means to look something up on Google, was added to the Oxford English Dictionary.
For years, Google has been the standard of search engines. Using any other search engine was a telling sign that you belong to a previous generation of obsolescence.

2. Facebook.com

Founders: Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin, Andrew McCollum, Dustin Moskovitz, Chris Hughes
Annual Revenue: $5.1 billion
The tale of Facebook is, on the other hand, completely different. It too has had a seemingly bizarre effect on our language: “to friend,” “to like,” or “wall” have all assumed a place in our colloquial talk. But its story is a little different.
It was once cool to use Facebook. Then it became uncool, once everyone had it. You began to hear of people disabling their account for Lent or some other misguided ascetic reasons.
Years later, it has simply become an extension of your identity, for better or worse. It’s assumed that when you meet someone, you friend them and look through their profiles and pictures.
It’s changed entirely the distinction between our private and public lives.

3. Youtube.com

Founder: Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, Jawed Karim
Annual Revenue: $1.7 billion
Before YouTube, we had no control over what we could watch.
Youtube is truly the tube that belongs to the people, enabling us to find the weirdest, funniest, the most horrifying, or the most humane videos that give us a real snapshot into the breadth of human culture.

4. Yahoo.com

Founder: Jerry Yang, David Filo
Annual Revenue: $4.98 billion
Yahoo was one of the first web “portals,” a name for websites that bring together information from a diverse set of sources. The point of the portal, perhaps, was to create a miniature internet, so that you would never have to stray away from it to acquire what information you needed. Perhaps it was too ambitious in this respect and was therefore superseded by the calm simplicity of Google.

5. Baidu.com

Founder: Robin Li, Eric Xu
Annual Revenue: $2.36 billion
Baidu boasts the most poetic origin of all the top earning websites. The name comes from a classical Chinese poem named “Green Jade Table in the Lantern Festival,” which speaks of, after searching thousands of times, finding someone in a crowd. To founder Robin Li, this persistent search for the ideal ought to be the philosophy of a search engine, and this perhaps accounts for the great success of the great Chinese language search engine.

6. Wikipedia.com

Founders: Jimmy Wales, Larry Sanger
Annual Revenue: $2.735 million
You probably did not expect a non-profit website on this list, and you probably uttered, “Oh yeah!” upon seeing Wikipedia. This site defied what we thought would be impossible, or at least worthless: to build a reliably informative knowledge-base using anonymous volunteers on the internet.

7. QQ.com

Founder: Ma Huateng and Zhang Zhidong
Annual Revenue: $4.6 billion
The Western world might not have heard of QQ, but it’s made a huge impact in China. It’s the most popular instant messaging service there, perhaps because it features the cutest penguin mascot ever.

8. Twitter.com

Founder: Jack Dorsey, Noah Glass, Evan Williams, Biz Stone
Annual Revenue: $140 million
When I first heard of Twitter, my first thought was, “So it’s like Facebook updates, except without the Facebook. Yeah, great.” I should have curbed my skepticism. Twitter has changed the way we construct narratives around our lives by condensing what we say, feel, or think into a series of 140-character musings.

9. Amazon.com

Founders: Jeff Bezos
Annual Revenue: $61.09 billion
You’ll never need to worry about whether you’re getting the best deal. You’ll also never need to go to a retail store again. Heck, you can even get groceries on there. Who knew? Amazon, the world’s largest online retailer, can fetch it all for you. It’s like having a vending machine in your house that sells everything ever.

10. LinkedIn.com

Founders: Reid Hoffman
Annual Revenue: $972 million
Founder Reid Hoffman is a veteran of the social network concept, creating SocialNet.com in 1997, years before anyone had ever heard of Myspace or Facebook. After working at PayPal, he founded the first important business-oriented online social network.
Ok so we have reached the top 10 earning sites mark, I bet you expected most of them to be there…

11. Bing.com

Founders: Microsoft
Annual Revenue: $73.72 billion
Bing has been making a comeback in recent years, after MSN was out-competed by Google and Yahoo. Perhaps this has to do with the collaborative efforts between Yahoo and Microsoft to make Bing into a serious contender with Google. By 2011, Bing had become the fastest growing market share in core searches.

12. Yandex.ru

Founders: Arkady Volozh
Annual Revenue: $641 million
Like Baidu, you might not have heard of it. Yet it’s the 4th largest search engine worldwide. It’s also the most popular website in Russia.

13. WordPress.com

Founders: Matt Mullenweg, Mike Little
Annual Revenue: $45 million
Man is a blogging animal. Yet there was Xanga, then OpenDiary, then LiveJournal, then MySpace, then Blogger, etc. But WordPress has been the definitive blogging platform—nay, not merely a blogging platform but essentially a flexible content management system that is user-friendly to both novice and experts.

14. Ebay.com

Founders: Pierre Omidyar
Annual Revenue: $14.07 billion
The world’s largest thrift store, pawn shop, vintage dealer, antique market, used record store, etc., etc.

15. Weibo.com

Founders:Wang Xing
Annual Revenue: $482 million
Sina Weibo is China’s response (or copy?) of Twitter. Users post with a 140-character limit, add hashtags, follow other users, with many celebrity accounts.

16. Microsoft.com

Founders: Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer
Annual Revenue: $73.72 billion
We all know the story of Microsoft, titan of the computer world, crushing every competitor with its little toe. Yet for everything there is an ebb and flow, and Microsoft soon lost its hold on every soul to Apple. Of course, I kid, but Microsoft does seem a little out of place here. Maybe they’re including Windows Update in the results.

17. Tumblr.com 

18. Mail.ru

19. Pinterest.com

20. PayPal.com

21. Ask.com


22. IMDB.com


23. Apple.com


24. Craigslist.org


25. AOL.com

26. CNN.com

27. Adf.ly

28. Alibaba.com

29. Huffington Post

30. About.com

31. Imgur.com

32. DailyMotion 

33. ESPN.com

34. NYTimes.com

35. GoDaddy.com

36. eHow.com

37. Vimeo.com

38. DeviantArt.com

 39. Dropbox.cox

40. Reddit.com


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