Those are the outliers, and winner-take-all ones to boot - they ate most other websites that "primarily deal in video and multimedia". Everything else deals primarily with text.
So what you’re saying is that the websites with the fancy videos and interactive content ate all the text-based websites, but that the customer is wrong and they’re going to the wrong websites?
Sounds like you’re the right person to convince everyone to buy cars with manual transmissions and crank windows. After all, they are more reliable and simple, and everyone is wrong for not buying them anymore.
I’d also like to know how you expect all of our serious business productivity apps to work as text-only or server-side rendered plain HTML web pages without being seriously compromised. Google Docs/Sheets/Slides? Jira? Google Meet? draw.io? Tableau? PowerBI? Gong? Notion? Slack? AWS Console? I honestly don’t even know how I would avoid getting fired if I only used text-only websites.
> So what you’re saying is that the websites with the fancy videos and interactive content ate all the text-based websites, but that the customer is wrong and they’re going to the wrong websites?
No. I'm saying that there are only few websites that "primarily deal in video and multimedia". They may take 9 spots in a top 20 list, but that 9 is like half of all such websites. The rest deal primarily with text (which includes formatted, rich text).