Ashe Speaks at Internet Conference
(Originally ran March 2000)
From Reuters:
AUSTIN, Texas, March 13 - Everyone who wants to start a Web site,
particularly a site that merges killer content with major e-commerce potential,
undoubtedly wants to learn the tricks of the trade from a successful CEO, and the folks
who Monday hung on Danni Ashe's every
word were certainly no exception.
Ashe, a featured speaker on two panels at this year's South by Southwest Interactive
Conference here, is the president of a successful Web company that had an estimated $6
million in revenue last year. Typical CEO stuff. The only difference is that on her Web
site you get to see her without her clothes on.
Still, despite the inevitable hem-and-haw that might follow the realization that Ashe's
company, Danni's Hard Drive, is an adult entertainment site, the fact of the matter is
that she is the shrewdest of businesswomen who maintains control of every aspect of her
company and runs it the way she sees fit.
``It looks just like any other business,'' Ashe said of her Marina Del Rey, Calif.-based
offices. ``If you walked in, until you walked way to the back to the back of the office
and you saw the design team you wouldn't even know you're in an adult company.''
To be sure, the online sex industry has more recently become a force to be reckoned with,
with more than 50,000 entrepreneurs generating as much as $1 billion in revenues annual,
according to Forrester Research.
When it was first started, the SXSW Interactive Festival was mostly a gathering of gamers,
animators and Web designers who in a series of panel discussions ruminated about the
future of the Internet and Web-related trends.
This year's collection of attendees, however, extends the impact of this conference far
beyond that which may have been anticipated all those years ago. What's also clear is that
those who participate are keenly tuned into the consumer-driven fervor the Web has ignited
over the last two years.
All of these things combined are what make Ashe's presence at this year's conference
``right on,'' so to speak, as she not only embodies the entrepreneurial spirit that has
taken the medium by storm, but also represents the alternative, taboo or underground
commodities that freely use the unbridled openness of the Web to promote themselves.
Danni's Hard Drive (http://www.danniharddrive.com)
boasts 3 million unique visitors every month, 27,000 of those who are paying members who
fork over $19.95 per month membership fee for the service. Still, Ashe said she's anxious
to figure out other ways to boost revenue without compromising or resorting to practices
that more hard-core adults sites tend to employ.
``We're taking advantage of the user base that we have as much as we can,'' Ashe said.
``But the truth is you have to throw a lot of traffic at a Web site to sell a $20
subscription.''
Ashe said she thinks one of the biggest challenges in the online sex industry is that all
transactions must be done via credit card, and in order to make the fees you pay to the
credit card company worth paying you have to charge a significant amount of money for
subscription fees or online sales.
``We think there's a lot of money that's being left on the table because you can't sell
people small pieces of things very quickly and easily,'' Ashe said. ``The day we have a
'cyberwallet' that everyone feels comfortable using is the day that we can sell one piece
of video or one image 50 cents or a dollar.''
``I think that will open up a lot more business, but right now we've really hit a wall,''
she said.
Aside from the money-making aspect of her business, Ashe, like any other Web-based
consumer site, said she spends a great deal of effort making sure her members and the
people who visit her site are not put aside by its content but rather see it as a ``warm
and inviting'' way to enjoy the Web.
``I don't want people to feel bad about themselves when they visit my Web site,'' Ashe
said. ``A lot of porn sites are very dark and sleazy and degrading in the way they address
visitors. I just want people to have fun.''
Having fun has kept Ashe's company profitable for five years, and though she admits to
looking for new ways to boost revenues she said she'll continue to resist the measures
practiced by other adult porn sites that she said have given her industry a bad name.

Danni Ashe
``There are a lot of negative stereotypes that
are out there and some of them are well deserved because of the actions of other people in
this industry,'' Ashe said, adding that she hopes to continue to inspire young women who
enter the adult entertainment industry to make a real business out of their work.
As far as acceptance by the financial world, Ashe said the idea of major financial backing
from outside sources and the thought of an initial public offering is ``frightening'' to
her, primarily because she doesn't want to lose control of the business she's worked so
hard to develop.
``I worry if it would take the edge off,'' Ashe, who started her company in 1995 by
spending $8,000 on two computers, said. ``If all of a sudden you have $15 million in the
bank you might not spend it wisely and you could get yourself into trouble.''
``I really love my business and don't want to lose it.''