As of this writing, online publisher Demand Media is worth more on the stock market than is The New York Times Company. Of course, this says more about the enthusiasm of IPO investors than it does about the relative merits of the two organizations, but given the overall level of terribleness of Demand&'s product a4‚¬a4œmainly hastily written how-to articles aimed not at readers, but at search engines a4‚¬a4œ it&'s still a bit disheartening.

In afternoon trading, Demand shares were up by 35 percent, to about $23, after reaching a high of $25. They priced this morning at $17, above their range of $14 to $16. After expenses, Demand raised about $67 million in the offering.

Apparently, a number of investors believe that Demand will somehow thrive despite the company&'s raw exposure to the whims of Google, which recently said it means to crack down on spammy content like Demand&'s (though it didn&'t mention Demand by name). A change in Google&'s search algorithm could send Demand&'s content way down in search results, which would cut deeply into Demand&'s traffic. That could happen at any time, in a heartbeat.

While the IPO is clearly a success, the Wall Street Journal&'s Deal Journal blog offers some perspective: the 20th largest tech IPO since Google&'s 2004 market debut &8212' that of Solera Holdings in 2007 &8212' raised three times as much money as Demand did today.

Next Story: Crowd Factory raises $6.5M to track social media marketing to the dollar Previous Story: DEMO deadline in less than a week: Apply now to launch!

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Tags: content farms, content mills, IPO, search algorithms, spam

Companies: Demand Media, Google

Tags: content farms, content mills, IPO, search algorithms, spam

Companies: Demand Media, Google

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