Top Merge and Acquisition Deals of 2007

November 7, 2007

According to The Jordan Edmiston Group Inc.’s October 2007 Client Briefing report, the number of deals through the first three quarters of 2007 exceeded full year 2006 figures: 637 transactions with $95B in value thus far. Do the math and that is $150M per deal, quite rich.

As such, publishing our list in November 2007 is a bold and potentially premature thing to do. Regardless, why wait?

What started off as a Top 10 list turned into a Top 27 list: then it got out of hand because we were comparing apples with oranges. We’re at over 30 M&A deals in web-oriented sectors that stood out.

The deals are not listed by size or order of magnitude, just a combination of value, strategic fits and long term potential. Others made the list due to the storylines, frankly, or because they took a while and garnered the media’s attention.

At least one, you’ll see which one, has yet to be finalized, but we expect that it will.

Enjoy, feel free to add, criticize, re-order etc. Surely we’re missing some major ones… some time in December, using emails, comments, suggestions and votes I’ll probably publish a top 10 list of 2007 acquisitions…

ONLINE/OFFLINE PRODUCTIVITY SUITES & COLLABORATION TOOLS

- Yahoo! acquires Zimbra for $350M

Yahoo!’s email service remains the most popular in the world, but when it comes to online meets offline office suites, it was sorely lacking, in particular due to Google’s encroachment onto Microsoft’s terrain against the backdrop of Yahoo!’s dead silence on the front. But, in one move, Yahoo! staked its claim to the party.

- Google acquires Postini for $625M

Google is trying to dethrone Microsoft’s grip on productivity suites while Microsoft is trying to encroach on online advertising. Google has bought Writely, launched a spreadsheet program and while these initiatives and acquisitions have gotten the vocal minority excited, they have failed to win the hearts and minds of corporate IT decision makers.

While we doubt one decision alone will make a change, the acquisition of Postini - makers of corporate email security tools and anti-spam software - could technically make a difference over time. Let’s face it, Gmail is indeed pretty cool, but corporations won’t be caught dead using it. Maybe by meshing Postini with Gmail, offices worldwide will stand up and take notice.

- Facebook acquires Parakey

In 2007, Facebook grew synonymous with hype. Anything the company touched, or sought to touch, quickly turned to gold. Mind you, the company’s torrid growth rate was nothing short of breath taking. But when Facebook announced that it had acq-hired Parakey, a yet-to-launch web operating system developed by Firefox co-founders Blake Ross and Joe Hewitt for an undisclosed price, people noticed because this meant that Facebook had MSFT in its cross hairs. Over time, MSFT made a $240M investment in Facebook, creating an alliance between the two firms, and suggesting that Google, and not Microsoft, was Facebook’s true nemesis.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- Cisco buys Webex for $3.2B

Webex was the first stock I bought, and the reason was simple: companies spend so much money on travel and phone calls are not always easy. Webex was a simple way to bridge the gap between people who needed to at least be on the same page when it came to sales calls and phone meetings etc. Webex who for the large part of the 21st centuy traded slightly above $1B in market cap ended up fetching quite a premium from Webex, selling for a whopping $3.2B.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

PUBLISHING

- Answers.com acquires Lexico for $100M

Answers.com, whose parent GuruNet Corporation paid $57,000 for the URL moniker, turned around and paid $100M for the parent corporation of Dictionary.com and Thesarus.com, fitting for a company who bills its Answers.com site as the world’s largest Encyclodictionalmanacapedia.

Of course, Answers.com got far more than two sexy URLs, Lexico did decent revenue and earnings, too. But any way you dice it, the deal was rich, translating to:

- 35 times earnings
- 15 times revenues
- $9 per unique

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- Discovery Holdings acquires How Stuff Works for $250M

How Stuff Works has been around for what seems to be forever. It raised $50M for expansion this year and many expected the company to be the one signing the checks, but by year’s end, the company’s interest in all things video led to its sale to Discovery Holdings for a whopping $250M.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here and here.

- CBS acquires Wallstrip

On the one hand, as a fellow video producer at WatchMojo.com myself, I was happy to see Howard Lindzon’s Wallstrip exit successfully to CBS: it showed that one can create something of value in video content and, in all honesty, it created a floor price and a comparable… But, by the same token, I think Wallstrip sold too soon and for too little (nothing against CBS).

Ultimately, in the year when marketers spoke loudly against user generated content, it created a first example that professional made video could represent a valuable business if done right. If I dare say so, we’re now going to show just how much a video content creation and syndication business can scale and grow if you stick to your guns… but that’s for a separate post.

- Hearst acquires UGO for $100M

Men don’t read magazines. They’re watching less and less TV. Where are they? Apparently, online and playing video games. If that hypothesis and premise is true, then Hearst made a much needed investment to get into a video game publishing network targeting men, that of UGO. Incidentally, when Viacom and News Corp. vied for IGN Entertainment [disclaimer: my one-time employer after it bought the company where I was a partner], Hearst balked at the price tag, which hit $650M. But two years after that deal, the trend lines were clear: Hearst needed to get serious about reaching men online and the $100M acquisition of UGO was to serve as the spring board. UGO had raised $90M since its inception.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- CBS acquires Max Preps for $43M

High school athletics is a hot sector. High school sports are a key part of local content and local advertising has always been a huge market, and one that is up for grabs, particularly as newspapers see ad dollars flow to the Web. More importantly, high schoolers don’t spend as much time watching TV (not suggesting that all high school sports fans are actually high schoolers, of course). Combine these trends and you see why CBS’ acquisition of Max Preps was a smart one. After the deal, Max Preps was rolled into CBS’ College Sports Television (CSTV) and its network of websites. It’s always very important to hook consumers early on, and there ain’t a better time frankly than before the college years.

- Yahoo! acquires Rivals.com for $100M

$100M for a sports site geared towards college sports seems like a lot, for sure, especially when the previous year, News Corp. bought Scout for $60M and CBS bought Max Preps for $43M.

But when you consider that said company has raised $75M in venture funding and run by CEO Shannon Terry who made the list of SBJ’s Top 20 in Online Sports, you know the deal’s final price will get high.

Ultimately, by making the deal, Yahoo! leveraged its massive audience to become a main player in sports, rivaling FOXSports.com, SI.com and ESPN.com. Mainly, by holding out and seeing CBS and News Corp. buy Max Preps and Scout respectively, Yahoo! not only saw a floor being created for Rivals.com but also had to pay a premium to ensure that the company not fall in another media company’s hands.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- News Corp. acquires Dow Jones for $5B

I know what you’re thinking, did he fire six shots or only five, “Dow Jones is not online. I mean, it’s flagship product, the Wall Street Journal is not even free!”

My friends, Wall Street Journal has the single most successful subscription business and gets 10m unique users per month. For decades, lest centuries, media moguls and tycoons have pushed the mantra of synergies. Rupert Murdoch in one single transaction:

- acquires one of the two assets he’s always fancied (WSJ, other being the Financial Times),
- he gets the best springboard for his new Fox Business Channel,
- acquires 10M uniques on WSJ.com, or 17M in all if you include Marketwatch and Barron’s,
- has the right, but not the obligation, to open up WSJ.com and make it into the most valuable place advertisers can reach the world’s wealthiest and most influential readers.

If you consider all of the variables, that’s one helluva deal.

SOCIAL MEDIA

- American Greetings acquires Webshots for $45M

Forget the fact that Webshots remains a strong brand that just a few years ago was bought by CNET for $70M, but Webshots is actually very complementary with American Greetings’ business. Photosharing has become a huge market, and while in CNET’s hands Webshots needed to be a leader in its space, under a company like American Greetings, it need not be. Moreover, while in the hands of CNET Webshots needed to generate sizable ad revenues (given how many pageviews it generates), in American Greetings’ hands, it need not. In other words, American Greetings is buying a large online property that is very strategic to its core business at a discount. That’s a great deal.

- CBS acquires Last.fm for $340M

Extra! Extra! Read all about it: CBS’ (and traditional media in general) core businesses are shrinking. CBS is the world’s largest TV company in terms of ratings, the largest outdoor company and second largest radio company. But like TV (and print), traditional radio is shrinking, so CBS made the prescient move to buy Last.fm. Similar to Pandora, Last.fm allows users to find new music based on their tastes and the overall community’s listening patterns. Was Last.fm the absolute best and biggest site out there? Probably not, but when you are CBS, you cannot pull a Bertelsmann and invest in a Napster-esque company that has burned more bridges than [won’t go there but insert anything you wish here].

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- Cisco acquires Tribe

Cisco is no stranger to acquisitions, of course, but it usually acq-hires teams of engineers or technology. But by buying Tribe, one of the earlier social networking sites, did Cisco signal a shift away from Sun Microsystems’ mantra that “the network is the computer” to social networking is the Web? Perhaps, time will tell.

Ultimately, it’s a tacit admission that the web will become central to, well, everything.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- Nokia acquires Twango for $96.8M

Twango combines online storage with social networking, allowing users to organize and share photos, videos and other personal media.

Twango was founded in 2004 by former Microsoft employees and has around 10 employees. The deal is estimated to be just under $100 million, $96.8 to be precise. That’s right, it weighed in at $10M/employee. Twango is a small step in the seamless transferring of files from handsets to PCs. The fact that Nokia made the acquisition suggests that Finland’s most valuable company should not be seen as a telecommunications hardware company alone.

- News Corp.’s Fox Interactive Media/MySpace acquires Photobucket for $250M

Photobucket’s acquisition by MySpace makes the list mainly because the storyline behind it was pretty soap opera-ish. Photobucket builds business - according to MySpace and FIM executives - a la YouTube by leveraging MySpace’s audience and community, then adds insult to injury by trying to run ads in their slides.

Then Photobucket’s M&A advisors Lehman Bros. whisper their asking price: $300-400M. A lot of people scratch their heads. Of course, fearing a repeat of YouTube, where a company grew thanks to MySpace but sold to someone else, News Corp. blows a gasket and its MySpace site blocks Photobucket.

Suddenly, value of widget-driven businesses and Photobucket in particular plummets. Back channel diplomacy ensues, coup de theatre follows in the shape, form and fashion of a $250M buyout by News Corp.

In fact, the rumor of an impending deal broke out in early May, and the deal was formally announced on May 30th.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- Hi-Media acquires Fotolog for $90M

When European online marketing juggernaut Hi-Media announced its acquisition of Fotolog, eyebrows were raised. On the WTF? side of the argument were those who said: “using Fotolog’s forecasted 2007 revenue of$2.3M, a net-of-transaction fee sale of $90M implies a pretty rich 39 prices-to-earnings ratio. That’s rich. But, the counter-argument was that Hi-Media was acquiring a community of image-crazed users for 1/3 of what News Corp. paid for Photobucket; yes, call it the reverse fool theory. With $15M in financing, a $90M payout was part of the lure, turned out that the institutional shareholders of Fotolog decided to hold on to their stock holdings of Hi-Media. It should be noted, that just before the acquisition, Fotolog had signed a $75M advertising deal with Google, over 36 months, or roughly $2M per month.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- MSNBC.com buys NewsVine

What does this mean for Digg? We don’t know, but last year, the leader in social bookmarking and news, Digg, supposedly asked for $150M from News Corp. Rupert Murdoch balked, launched MySpace News. I’m not sure how well MySpace News is doing, I suspect Digg is doing quite well, but the fact remains, I doubt Digg will get $150M (then again, a sucker is born every second) because Stumble Upon’s $75M price tag and NewsVine’s price tag imply a lower value for Digg.

Of course, this is a post on NewsVine, not Digg. I can’t understand really the logic and prevailing wisdom to sell NewsVine, a company who had raised less than $2M in financing and who was riding high as America is about to enter an election season and NewsVine’s core focus seems to be political… but, I digress. On MSNBC.com’s part, this marked the NBC/MSFT joint venture’s first acquisition, ever.

E-COMMERCE

- Hearst acquires Kaboodle for $40M

Hearst bought a handful of companies this year: UGO for $100M, which was pricey but not very expensive for a company that raised $90M of funding since inception. But given Hearst’s traditional business focus in magazine, the deal for Kaboodle is intriguing because it allows fashion and retail advertisers - two of Hearst’s main clients - to tippy-toe online and connect branding with purchasing. If Hearst can pull this off, the combination can become powerful, and valuable. Will they? Big old media doesn’t have the best track record, admittedly, so time will tell.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- eBay acquires Stubhub for $310M

eBay = auctions, Stubhub = scalping. It didn’t take the MBAs very long to see fits. Speaking of graduate degrees, founders Jeff Fluhr and Eric Baker owned roughly 35% of the company and with $15M in funding over the years, they managed to build a controversial but successful company that did $100M in sales and $10M in EBITDA. The company’s backers included Allen & Co, Blue Water Capital, Pequot Ventures and Staenberg Venture Partners.

SEARCH, NAVIGATION & DIRECTORIES

- R.H. Donnelly acquires Business.com for $345M

When word got out that Business.com might be selling for over $300M, the natural reaction was to think “the bubble is back”. After all, just a few years ago, founders Sky Dayton and Jake Winebaum acquired the URL for $7.5M from Marc Ostrovsky. At the time, even I thought “will they ever generate $7.5M in revenues off the site, over the course of its lifetime”? Of course, when Dayton and Winebaum bought the URL, Google had yet to create the keyword ecosystem that today underwrites much of online advertising. While critics maintained that by 2007, Business.com was little more than a directory of resold Google text ads, R.H. Donnelly saw salvation for their shrinking print directories and agreed to acquire the firm for $345M.

See HipMojo.com’s posts on the deal before it happened here and afterwards here.

- eBay acquires Stumble Upon for $75M

Stumble Upon’s 2.3 million users and 5 million daily recommendations caught the attention of AOL, Google and eBay, and ultimately, after valuations ranged from $40-75M for a few months, eBay walked away the winner. When the rumor popped up and few understood the logic, though technically, like eBay’s Skype acquisition, the prevailing wisdom of the leading auction community to acquire a leader in “stumbling navigation” makes sense. Of course, that’s what was said about Skype too, and this year eBay wrote down a chunk of that acquisition, even though the fit was even stronger there. Stumble Upon raised less than $2M, which means that founders Garrett Camp, Geoff Smith, Justin LaFrance and Eric Boyd walked away with a nice payday each. Lesson for entrepreneurs: success did not come over night, the site was founded in 2000!

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here and here.

- Microsoft acquires Medstory

For all of the talk about vertical search engines being the next great thing, very few case studies proved to be profitable exits. Then came along Medstory and the battle for health information, which led Microsoft to acquire vertical search player Medstory as Google, Yahoo! and Microsoft all vied for search market share and to become the gateway to users’ health information online.

COMMUNICATIONS, WIRELESS VOICE SERVICES

- Google acquires Grand Central for $45M

Let’s face it, financially, Google remains a on-trick pony with 99.9% of its revenues coming from paid search ads and the two related products: Ad Sense and Ad Words. But Google’s product assortment has grown very attractive, from GMail, to Maps, Google Earth, YouTube and soon Doubleclick, Google is certainly laying down the foundation to become a diversified new media and technology company. In that vein, the acquisition of Grand Central to arm users with one number on any platform is consistent with Google’s global and multi-platform ambitions. In fact, at $45M, the deal was cheap and provided good value to Mountain View.

- Microsoft acquires TellMe for $800M

TellMe is “a leading provider of voice services for everyday life, including nationwide directory assistance, enterprise customer service and voice-enabled mobile search.” If the price tag weren’t so darn high, it would surely be higher on this list. Regardless, this catapults MSFT into voice services and voice-enabled mobile search, which a few short years from now will actually help it quite a bit against the #1 and #2 in search, Google and Yahoo!, respectively. While $800M is a large price, if it can execute on that alone, the deal can be a enormous coup for Redmond.

MOBILE AD NETWORKS

- AOL acquires Third Screen Media

Indeed, to quote the Wall Street Journal’s Kara Swisher, new CEO Randy Falco has been busy torching AOL’s Dulles, Virginia’s HQ, but while he’s been doing that, he’s also been making some bets on the next growth area: wireless. In 2007, AOL bought Third Screen Media, a mobile advertising network and ad-serving management platform provider. Will this be a repeat of Advertising.com’s $435M which today drives most of AOL’s top line? Who knows. I doubt it, wireless is way too embryonic, today. But one day, when cars fly and everyone has a pony, wireless entertainment and mobile advertising shall inherit the earth. Time will tell if Randy Falco will be ruling the fiefdom when that happens.

- Nokia acquires Enpocket

In the emerging mobile content and advertising market, Nokia hopes to expand its footprint beyond hardware. To achieve its goal the handset manufacturer agreed to acquire Enpocket to build its advertising platform.

Though Nokia has a content and advertising presence in Europe, its wanted to expand there and elsewhere, including the U.S., through internal development and acquisition. The Enpocket acquisition follows Nokia’s buy of social media sharing service Twango, as well as internal moves toward content publishing.

Enpocket has customers in the US, Asia, and Europe, including Vodafone, Telefonica, British Telecom, and Sprint. It delivers advertising across a variety of mobile formats, including SMS, MMS, mobile Internet, and video. Its customers include both carriers and the companies with which they do business, most notably Pepsico.

In some ways, this deal was in the same vein as Microsoft’s acquisition of European mobile ad firm ScreenTonic with the intention of integrating its capabilities into adCenter: “We want to deliver a platform that helps advertisers buy across all digital mediums,” said Joe Doran, GM of Microsoft’s digital advertising solutions. “As we build out the breadth of our platform, we are continuing to invest against that vision.”

- Nokia acquires Navteq for $8.1 Billion

Nokia is the world’s largest manufacturer of cell phones. Nokia owns this market, basically, and any acquisition it makes is bound to have ripple effects. NAVTEQ is a leading provider of comprehensive digital map information for automotive navigation systems, mobile navigation devices, Internet-based mapping applications, and government and business solutions. NAVTEQ also owns Traffic.com, a web and interactive service that provides traffic information and content to consumers. The Chicago-based company was founded in 1985, generated 2006 revenues of $582 million and has approximately 3,000 employees located in 168 offices in 30 countries. Incidentally, “Internet and wireless” make up only 5% of Navteq’s revenues, compared with 25% from mobile devices and a whopping 62% from in-dash navigation systems.

Translation? Lots of upside in Web and mobile revenues and the creation of a very powerful wireless and local ad network, perhaps?

AD NETWORKS

- AOL acquires Tacoda for $275M

One of the bigger and hyped phenomenon (fairly or unfairly) of web advertising remains is behavioral targeting (BT). Rightfully, to better optimize inventory and users, and to make the promise of web advertising a reality, BT has a role to play. But AOL’s acquisition of BT also demonstrated BT’s inherent limitations: few sites want to partner with BT firms, they want to own the data and underlying IP. Will it be an Advertising.com type of payoff? Time will tell, but Tacoda within AOL is worth far more than outside, in that sense, this deal made sense…

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- Google acquires Feedburner for $100M

Google paid $100M for a company with $10M in revenue. Regardless of the financial merits of the deal, the fact is that had Google sought to emulate Feedburner (even had Feedburner not existed), the media companies that partner with Feedburner would not have allowed Google to access such private and valuable data. In other words, Google bought something that was worth many times more to Mountain View as in a year where it had become more and more enemy than friend.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here, Google Buys Feedburner and Encroaches on Organic Ad Results.

- Yahoo! acquires Blue Lithium for $300M

Blue Lithium’s focus on introducing large, sexy brands to the virtues of advertising networks is legendary. Before more and more larg, Fortune 500-type marketers embraced running online ads - let alone using ad networks - Blue Lithium stood out of the clutter with a product and service that appealed to both sides of the online advertising ecosystem. Once upon a time, Blue Lithium’s management even talked of its advantages and strengths over online ad champion Google, but then lo and behold, Yahoo! acquires Blue Lithium for $300M to maximize the monetization of its ad inventory and to bolster its online advertising network both outside Yahoo!’s burgeoning media properties.

Given that the next wave of growth in online advertising will be display / banner ads (after video) and that will come from Fortune 500 marketers, this is a move that can pay off considerable dividends to Yahoo!

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here and here.

- Google acquires Doubleclick for $3.1B

Technically, this deal has yet to go through. But we added it onto this list because it shows that Google is completing its arsenal of web tools. Starting off with search, then video (YouTube), then email/newsletter (Feedburner) and now display/banners (Doubleclick), Google has the potential to circle the loop of online advertising.

We’ve covered this deal ad nauseum, so we’ll simply link back and leave you with this quote from one of our posts:

“When a lot of people said Google just hit a home run in online advertising by buying DCLK, they were wrong because saying DCLK is an online advertising play is akin to saying MSFT is strong with ad agencies because ad agencies use powerpoint in their client pitches. DCLK sold all of its media assets to L90/MaxOnline when ad rates were low and no one really paid CPM rates, and got into software only”

But, that notwithstanding, Google buying Doubleclick is a key deal because it bolsters Google’s online advertising software suite, which in itself helps it attack MSFT on many more fronts.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here:

- Google Buys Doubleclick for $3.1 Billion; Blocks MSFT Acquisition
- Questions in Wake of DCLK/GOOG Deal; MSFT/YHOO Repercussions?
- Two Variables in DCLK/GOOG Deal: Dart for Publishers/Advertisers; All Cash Deal
- Why GOOG’s DCLK Makes Little Sense (To Me)
- DCLK Winners: Hellman & Friedman; Losers? DCLK’s Shareholders?
- aQuantive Under Spotlight

- Yahoo! acquires Right Media for $750M

Technically, Yahoo! paid $45M for 20% of Right Media first, then less than a year later, it paid $680M for the 80% it did not own. Right Media was unique in that it worked with other ad networks to allow publishers to create an auction process for a publisher’s long tail inventory. On a property like Yahoo! alone, with billions upon billions of remnant, unsold ad inventory, such a platform can be worth billions each year.

And, as Yahoo! develops its network online (away from Yahoo!-owned sites), Yahoo! liked what it saw enough to justify pushing up the price of the asset four times in less than a year.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- WPP acquires 24/7 Realmedia for $649M

WPP is one of the largest agencies in the world, a marketing behemoth with huge ambitions in digital advertising. It got one step closer to that when it bought 24/7 Realmedia, getting an advertising network, an email newsletter business, search marketing tools and much more. With its extensive advertiser relationships, WPP is sure to get enough bang out of its $649M bucks.

See HipMojo.com’s post on the deal here.

- Microsoft acquires aQuantive for $6 Billion

Microsoft generates very little from advertising. In the future, all advertising will be planned, bought and managed on digital platforms. And digital advertising will be larger than all offline advertising. Furthermore, targeted/tracked (web) advertising will command a considerable premium to non-targeted and untracked advertising. As such, for MSFT to win aQuantive - the crown jewel in the sector - it had to pay a commanding premium.

Like it or not, the market determines how much an asset is worth, which in turn is a function of demand and supply. aQuantive had a range of suitors, and the company that wanted it most ended up paying for it. MSFT’s acquisition of aQuantive can be a game-changer for MSFT if it does not botch it up.

Talk, Google, Talk!

Another day of autumn, another bloated new version of Yahoo Messenger. Very few people remember that Google launched back in 2005 an instant messenger that promised to enhance people's lives. The Windows application with a non-standard interface and the strange installer that didn't give you any option.

Google Talk
's silence gave birth to a Flashy gadget that can be embedded into any web page, even if the only effect is that the page loads slower. The gadget took over Google Talk's homepage and even added some features that weren't available in the stagnant desktop client.

10 months have passed since the last Google Talk release and people expect to see all the features from the bloated Yahoo Messenger in the same simple interface. The promised integration with AIM, Skype and the "traditional phone systems" should also be added.

For the moment, the original Google Talk got back the homepage and has yet to add an entry in the "What's new" page. Despite its acute lack of features, Google Talk is almost perfect because it didn't make too many mistakes.


Probably the biggest mistake was to promise things that couldn't be accomplished in a timely manner.

"Your #1 feature request was file transfer, which we're happy to have launched. Look for updates to the form, and make sure to vote again! Now, we're off to the next version. I can't tell you what your #2 and 3 suggestions were, but I do know that they're on the way." (Google Talk Blog - August 21, 2006)

"Just as exciting are our plans to explore interoperability between Google Talk and Skype, making it easier for our users to chat with one another. This is just another step in our commitment to interoperability via open, industry standards." (Google Talk Blog - August 28, 2006)

The second mistake was the lack of communication and that's hard to understand, especially if you consider that Google Talk is a communication app. It's actually "a Google approach to instant communications".

Add Windows Live Messenger to Your Blog

The Windows Live Messenger Team posted on their blog about an easy new way to create an IM button to put on your website, blog, or in your email signature. To get started, click here and begin to customize your button. You can pick different shapes, colors, taglines, and then you enter in your Live ID and snag the code for your button. The button code works on Spaces, Blogger, Facebook, MySpace, Outlook 2003/2007, MSN Hotmail/Windows Live Hotmail/Windows Live Mail beta or it can be added to your website. When your friends and family click on the button, you are automatically added to their contact list. Cool.

Major Newspapers Consider Ad Alliance

November 6, 2007

According to a New York Times story this morning, circulation across the US newspaper industry fell about 3 percent over the spring and summer compared with figures from the same period last year. The drop in paper sales is indicative of a change in the way people consume news content, shifting especially toward the Internet, where traffic to newspaper web sites has risen. Even paid online content is doing well, with the Wall Street Journal reporting over 1 million paid online subscribers, now accounting for about half of its paid circulation.

Newspapers are not taking this shift in news consumption behavior lying down. The Chicago Tribune reports that five major US newspaper publishers are considering forming a joint online ad network. Gannett Co., Tribune Co., Hearst Corp., Media News Group and Cox Newspapers are in talks to form an ad sales consortium that would, according to a Tribune source, capture seven of the top ten US newspaper markets.

The alliance would compete with the newspaper ad network that Yahoo! has been building since last November. Yahoo!'s network includes both Hearst and Cox, and has a reach of over 400 newspapers. Though Yahoo! initially formed partnerships with newspapers to push their HotJobs career classifieds service out to a broader audience, they have plans to expand to search advertising by the end of this year, and display ads sometime in 2008. Tribune and Gannett co-own chief HotJobs rival, CareerBuilder.

Cox and Hearst say that talking to the Yahoo! rivals does not signal a rift with Yahoo!. An unnamed executive at one of the Yahoo! alliance papers seemed to indicate that while papers may be pleased with the Yahoo! partnership, they're not opposed change. "Fundamentally, there is a need to make it easier to buy ad space on our Internet sites," said the executive. "Yahoo still has the best technology platform. But why shouldn't the newspaper industry have its own [ad sales] firm? Don't you want to get out and tell your own story?"

YouTube In Legal Trouble in India

As a kid growing up in India, I would often come across audio tapes made by a company called T-Series. They were pretty bad quality and featured music pirated from other record labels. Still, they were cheap and became popular with the crowds that didn’t care much about the quality and legitimacy of the music. No surprise, the company grew and grew and become a mega-million-dollar operation. Somewhere along the way it acquired respectability and legitimacy and became a record label.

Why this story from my childhood? Because that very same company with piracy roots, Super Cassettes Industries, a.k.a. T-Series, has obtained a retraining order against YouTube and Google (GOOG), which according to ContentSutra, prevents them “from disseminating or displaying on their websites, or infringing in any manner, the copyright of any audio visual work in which the T-Series owns exclusive copyright. T-Series has filed a suit against Google and YouTube for a permanent injunction.”

The injunction essentially means that Google and YouTube will now have to actively police the content that is uploaded to YouTube. YouTube is also rumored to be launching an India-only site as well. The injunction is also going to impact other Indian video sites such as iShare, Dekhona and thebig.tv.

IAC to Split into Five Companies, One of Which is Pretty Hot

InterActiveCorp (IAC), parent company of Ask.com, Bloglines, Evite, and dozens of other popular Web sites, has decided to split itself into five separate, publicly traded companies. The hotter of IAC’s properties (it’s so-called “media & advertising” and “emerging businesses” groups) will remain under the IAC brand, while slower growth units HSN, Ticketmaster, Interval International, and LendingTree will become separate companies.

As we noted in IAC’s recent earnings report, some of the company’s properties are performing quite well, growing at 40 percent over last year; these are the ones that will remain under the IAC brand. However, Home Shopping Network, its biggest unit by revenue, has basically flat-lined, which hurt the company’s overall results.

This is clearly a “sum of the parts worth more than the whole” move by IAC that is being welcomed by investors this morning, with shares of the company trading up more than 8 percent on the NASDAQ.

IAC also announced that it has come to terms on a deal with Google for advertising, worth an estimated $3.5 billion over five years. There had previously been speculation that the deal might not happen.


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Here’s the specifics of how IAC will be splitting up, from the company’s press release:

IAC will include: Ask.com, Bloglines, Citysearch, CursorMania, IAC Advertising Solutions, Evite, Excite, InsiderPages, iWon, My Fun Cards, My Way, Popular Screensavers, Smiley Central, Webfetti, Zwinky, Match.com, ServiceMagic, Shoebuy.com, Entertainment Publications, ReserveAmerica, Black Web Enterprises, BustedTees, CollegeHumor, GarageGames, Gifts.com, Green.com, InstantAction, Primal Ventures, Pronto, Very Short List, Vimeo and 23/6, Active.com, Brightcove, FiLife, Medem, MerchantCircle, OpenTable, Points.com and SHOP Channel.

HSN: The Home Shopping Network, which includes HSN TV, hsn.com, and the Cornerstone Brands, Inc. portfolio of catalogs, web sites and retail locations.

Ticketmaster will include: Admission.com, Biletix, Billetnet, BillettService, Cottonblend, Echomusic, Kartenhaus.de, Lippupalvelu, LiveDaily, TicketService, Tick Tack Ticket, TicketWeb and Ticnet.se, as well as Ticketmaster’s current investments in Frontline and iLike.

Interval International will include: CondoDirect, Resort Quest Hawaii and VacationSource.com;

LendingTree will include: RealEstate.com, Domania, GetSmart, Home Loan Center and iNest.

Radiohead Could Really Piss Off the Music Industry Machine

Radiohead blew us away with the “donated” sales revenue from its last album “In Rainbows.” The band offered the music for free, and let fans choose how much they’d pay, almost as a tip for the album. What comScore found was that 62% of global users chose not to pay for the album at all.

What’s equally as interesting is the fact that international fans were less likely to pay than US fans. You’d have to do a fairly extensive study to figure out why this may be the case, considering variables such as the native country of the band, the amount of disposable income per capita in various countries around the world, the musical preferences of countries’ citizens, the prevalence of P2P networks as legal options in other countries, etc. So there’s really not much to say in regards to these stats for Radiohead’s album at this particular point.

But what is another topic of conversation is something we’ve touched on in previous coverage of Radiohead’s flip of the script: is this an anomaly and how can regular musicians replicate such success? I’ve said my two cents on the matter–it’s currently rather difficult to make a killing on album sales in the same manner that Radiohead has done, if you don’t already have the fan base. The music industry knows this and may use it to its full advantage.

Radiohead used to be part of the music industry’s machine. Having now cut out the middle man, the band offers content direct to the fans. So with the music industry now looking for ways in which to continually make the same amount of money it raked in during its peak years, I wouldn’t be surprised if Radiohead gets sued.

It was that industry machine that enabled Radiohead to garner such a large fan base, right? So now that the band has kicked the middle man to the curb, the middle man may still want a cut of current sales. While the music industry is still boo-hooing about the decline of sales and the slower adoption of current legal trends, it still has a machine to run. In order to close that gap between previous power and current influence, it will have to find better, more cost-efficient ways in which to advertise artists, and market them across the web.

We’ve seen some pretty under-handed effects arise from this kind of pressure (that means you, Marie Digby), but the evolution will go on, and balance out at some point. As we all know, advertising isn’t going anywhere. The music industry will just need to continue to shift its approach. So will we still have artists able to gain major traction without the music industry’s machine? We won’t have to. The machine will just be better operated.

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Pandora’s A Social Climber: Major Upgrades Look Like Last.fm, Napster

Pandora’s got a pretty big upgrade, and it’s called “Pandora Extras.” This looks to be a general entry into the realm of social networking and music recommendations, in the league of Last.fm and Finetune, for streaming content.

Pandora Extras ushers in a wealth of new provisions of peripheral information surrounding the song you’re currently listening to. This could include bios on the artist, and a string of recommendations accordingly.

This doesn’t appear to be much different than the information Pandora already offered up, but now it’s being made readily available directly from your player, as dynamically changing content. It could be likened to Napster’s player, which leads you on a journey of continually updated information on artists and similar songs.

Pandora’s also bringing in some social tools, which let you see what others are listening to, so you can learn from your friends’ own music preferences. This takes the Amazon approach of making public what Pandora already keeps track of–a social view of its music recommendations. Pandora has also indicated that this major upgrade is only the beginning of what it plans to achieve with its budding vision.

What else could this vision entail? Perhaps the rumored inclusion of videos to its service? Or maybe a social network in the true sense of the term, where you could make friends, follow other users, and share ideas, media and preferences in a more direct manner.

Additionally, some sort of continued integration with existing social networks, in a more involved and integrated fashion with its own site, could achieve some of the same goals without having to recreate much in the way of an actual social network.

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Joost Chooses Meebo for Chat Rooms

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For an IPTV service whose chat options had been questioned by some, you may be glad to know that Joost has chosen Meebo as the provider of its chat tool, which will come complete with most of its bells and whistles. Is anyone wondering why Skype seems to be the odd man out, or is that a moot point?

The partnership essentially combines Joost’s full-length delivery with Meebo’s group chat rooms. This ties into meebo’s most recent release of its developers platform, which looks to integrate with more third-party applications for live interaction with others. Chatting while watching TV is a good place to start. The platform on which these two operate could open a lot of doors, for both Meebo and Joost, depending on what types of integration they’ll look towards in the future.

Whether advertising from Joost’s partners could be implemented across Meebo chat rooms, or if Joost content could become readily available for launch directly from a meebo chat room, the potential for a lucrative advertising revenue-sharing model is definitely evident.

Google’s plan: not one Gphone but thousands

Also see: The Gphone is coming; how Google could rewrite the rules

open handset allianceIt’s clear that Google, which announced its entry into the wireless world today, is out to break the stronghold of the carriers in the U.S. to advance their own initiatives — selling mobile ads and getting their applications on as many cellphones as possible.

androidAs expected, Google did not announce it was delivering an actual branded phone, dubbed the Gphone. Instead Google is leading a broad industry partnership known as the Open Handset Alliance and is developing an open software mobile platform known as Android. Together, Google hopes, these will deliver a new breed of handsets and greatly improve the mobile Internet experience for consumers worldwide.

“We are not building a Gphone, we are enabling 1,000 people to build a Gphone,” Andy Rubin, Google’s director of mobile platforms, told The New York Times. (See also Rubin’s blog announcement.)

Eric Schmidt, Google’s chief executive officer and chairman, said in a statement, “Our vision is that the powerful platform we’re unveiling will power thousands of different phone models,” he said.

open handset alliance smallThe Open Handset Alliance is where Google’s initiative begins. It is comprised of more than 30 mobile operators, handset manufacturers, and software, semiconductor, and commercialization companies.

Among the participating carriers are Sprint and T-Mobile in the U.S., the world’s largest telecom operator (China Telecom), the leading carriers in Japan (NTT DoCoMo and KDDI), as well as T-Mobile in Germany, Telecom Italia in Italy, and Telefonica in Spain. Noticeably absent are AT&T and Verizon, the two largest carriers in the U.S. with more than 50 percent marketshare.

Handset manufacturers who signed on are HTC, LG Electronics, Motorola, and Samsung. Obviously those who participate in the smartphone market — Apple, Microsoft, Nokia, Palm, and Research in Motion — are not involved as the so-called Gphones will compete with their own offerings.

The Gphones, however, are not expected to reach the market until the second half of 2008.

Among the chip makers are Broadcom, Intel, NVIDIA, and Texas Instruments. And software is represented by a bunch of companies most people have never heard of, except for eBay (owner of Internet telephony company Skype) and Google.

rubin nytThe idea here is that the Open Handset Alliance works together to produce components and hardware that works flawlessly with Android, which Rubin originally co-founded before being bought out by Google in 2005. Android is a fully integrated “software stack” that consists of an operating system, middlewear, a user-friendly interface, and mobile applications. (Intro video.) The SDK will be released Nov. 12.

In contrast to existing competitors, Google’s software will be freely available under “open source” licensing terms, meaning that cellphone manufacturers can use it at no cost and create their own features and apps to differentiate their products and services from others. In return, Google’s mobile strategy is not unlike it’s success on the Internet — give away software and services to gain revenue through targeted advertising.

Obviously, these new Gphones will feature applications and services from Google — Gmail, Gtalk, Google Docs, Google Maps, Google Earth, Search, AdSense, among many others. Additionally, programmers familiar with the Linux operating system and Sun Microsystem’s Java language will use Android to create all kinds of apps and features, allowing consumers to load up their phones with whatever software they want to use independent of what’s already on the phone.

gphoneCurrently in the United States, consumers are generally restricted by the mobile operators from putting any software on their phones that’s not offered or blessed by the carrier. This lack of flexibility and the resulting consumer frustration has been a driving factor behind Google’s mobile initiatives from the start.

“We want to create a whole new mobile experience for users,” Schmidt said. “Mobile users want the same applications on the phone as they use on the Internet.”

Peter Chou, chief executive of HTC, one of the largest handset makers in the world, told The Times, “Today the Internet experience on handheld devices is not optimized. The whole idea is to optimize the Internet experience.”

But the “Internet experience” is relatively new to a majority of cellphone users. Internet-enabled phones have been around for years, but these have many factors working against them, namely the small size of the phone, poor browsing experiences, user interface constraints, complexity, and the overall expense of buying a smartphone and using a carrier’s data plan.

This is changing, however, as Apple introduced the iPhone this summer. The iPhone has a large, high resolution, bright touch screen, full email and calendaring capability, and a pleasant Internet browsing experience with Safari. While it’s tied to one primary carrier (a huge sore spot in itself), AT&T at least offers an unlimited data plan great for checking email, browsing the Web, and using Web apps.

Apple and Google are tapping into the fact that consumers depended on the information that’s important to them, no matter if it’s email, instant messaging, chatting, blogging, carrying around PDFs, or logging into social networking sites such as MySpace or Facebook.

The more people are mobile, the more they carry their information with them, the more they participate in social media and social networks, the more they need mobile devices that meet their needs. The iPhone is a start, and the Gphones a continuation.

But this is where the two separate.

Apple is taking the route of a semi-closed environment, controlling the components, hardware, design, and software of the iPhone. Apple initially opened up the iPhone only to Web apps, but that is expected to change in February as third-party developers will finally gain access to an SDK so they can produce new applications and games for the phone.

gphone 2Google is taking the open route, which many industry observers and consumers applaud loudly. Without the Open Handset Alliance, it would be a bumpy road — not unlike what Microsoft faces with Windows Mobile on hundreds of devices worldwide. With the alliance, the going for Google and Android is expected to be smoother, but not without potholes.

Can different manufacturers, programmers, and third-party developers deliver Google-influenced phones that meet the needs of today’s mobile, info hungry consumer? Or will Google phones be a mish-mash of user interfaces, half-baked applications, spotty networking, and other problems, which seem to plague Windows Mobile?

The world is waiting.

“Just like the iPhone energized the industry,” Sanjay Jha, chief operating officer at Qualcomm, told the NYT, “this is a different way to energize the industry.”

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