aol

Jennewein joins AOL-funded Patch.com

New-media pioneer Chris Jennewein, former exec with the San Diego Union-Tribune and Las Vegas Sun, is now working with AOL-funded Patch.com as senior regional editor for San Diego and Orange County.

Jennewein joined Patch after his most recent venture, the online-only San Diego News Network, ran out of funding. We first reported on the local-news venture in Aug 5., 2009.

As senior regional editor, Jennewein will eventually have 24 editors reporting to him, each focused on a specific Southern California community. “We’ll cover community news and club information, city councils, school boards — the kind of content that newspapers used to do in the days of aggressive zoning but don’t do now,” he told us.

AOL is reportedly investing $50 million to make Patch.com a U.S.-wide quiltwork of local news sites, staffed primarily by professional journalists.

Jennewein said that while editors encourage public postings of community announcements and events, “We think that having a professional journalist focus on a community is vital to community coverage.”

Couldn’t agree more.

  • Share/Bookmark

AoL Q110 ad revenue way down, selling properties

AoL recently reported year over year total revenue decrease of 23 percent, with ad revenue taking a 28 percent dip, and subscriptions down 11 percent. What drove the drop in ad revenue were declines in search, contextual and display revenue across the various properties, as well as lower revenue from its Third Party Network.

The company’s earning release explained the advertising drop this way:

” AOL Properties revenue reflects the continued declines in search queries, due primarily to a 26 percent year-over-year decrease in domestic AOL subscribers (who tend to search more frequently than non-paying visitors) and the removal of various contextual links during the quarter….Domestic display revenue declines largely reflect a disruption in sales associated with a reorganization of the salesforce during the quarter…[and] efforts to improve the user experience by reducing the number of ad units displayed on a page.”

The News Tribune reported on AoL’s plans to sell assets in order to focus on U.S. ad sales.

 

  • Share/Bookmark

New York Times, AoL, invest in social, new tech companies

As pointed out by PaidContent.org, the incubator projects backed by Betaworks of New York City read like the “who’s who” of online startups.

Now The New York Times Company, AOL Ventures, Intel Capital, RRE Ventures and others have contributed $20 million as a second round of funds. Its first round brought in $8 million.

This money will help grow current projects that include Bit.ly, Twitterfeed, TweetDeck, Stocktwits, Chartbeat, DailyBooth, Hot Potato, Tumblr, UserVoice and Outside.in. It will also help new start-ups with incubation, investment or acquisition.  Betaworks is majority owner of Twitterfeed.

  • Share/Bookmark

 Axel Springer and PubliGroupe acquire AOL´s British affiliate network Buy.at

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Ugly new AoL. face; what’s up with Time Warner?

Perhaps there’s some important piece I’m missing but the new home page of AoL. is just plain ugly. The choice of “themes” at the top make no sense at all, especially since choosing one over the other makes little change to the page at all. Hopefully, this isn’t an example of the changes the newly-independent company has in store for us.

Both AoL. and Time Warner executives spoke at the recent 37th annual UBS Global Media and Communications Conference  [PDF] in New York. While both Aol.’s chair and CEO Tim Armstrong and TW’s chair and CEO Jeff Bewkes were somewhat skimpy on details they provided the media audience with a little taste of the firms’ futures and a short look back.

Jeff Bewkes, approaching his two-year anniversary as CEO, spent much of his helm time recreating and in some ways dismantling the company. “What we’ve been really doing is significantly focusing in programming and on the brand, putting more resources in and getter earnings power and band strength from those products,” he said. “We feel very strong about our position in the media sectors we’ve focused on. We had a very good year this year and are looking for the same next year.”

Film seems to be the Time Warner revenue hero, with earnings over $1 billion for the last eight years. “If our new Sherlock Holmes and Invictus do what we expect them to do at the box office we’ll have eight films over $100 million each this year,” he said. “We’re also the largest producer of TV series’ to the U.S. network industry, for all four networks. No network can produce everything for itself. We’re the second favorite place for them to get their series’.”

Bewkes is excited about Time Warner’s new TV On Demand initiative, saying it will make it very easy for people to continue watching their favorite shows. “As long as we move in that direction and do it fast we can make this successful,” he said. “People are watching more, advertising price per time is up, time watching is up. If you look at some of the more popular Internet versions, it’s clear people will pay for it. It has to be a fair deal, though.”

Bewkes assured shareholders that the AoL. spinoff wouldn’t negatively impact profits. “We have said that we will maintain our dividend after we spun off AOL and will increase it. We have very strong earnins that we will return this year. We have also been buying stock on a steady basis,” he said.

While not confirming an MGM purchase, Bewkes did admit Time Warner would consider that. “I think MGM is going to look for alternate capitalization, and many companies, us included, will look at that,” he said.

AoL.’s Armstrong enthused about the company he joined just this March. “I’ve nothing but respect for Google, and loved working there,” he said. “What got me to leave is that Aol. has a global brand, which is incredibly difficult to build. It has a unique set of attributes. A tough decision, when I look back I think it was the right one.”

Armstrong began his AoL. life with a 100-stop listening tour of all AoL. locations and that of its partners. He then held a July 24 global meeting for the entire management team. He asked for employee feedback and management feedback of all that the company needed to change. He had his own personal list from his travels. “We had three whiteboards, with only five points on each allowed. All turned out to be exactly the same, with one exception on my list. That was very strong recognition that there are real things that can be done. AoL. has been working on a one-page document since then – that is our strategy.”

One of the primary obstacles for AoL. was its 24 advertising systems and 17 management systems, none of which integrated with each other. Among other things, this complicated ad sales, reducing them to a total when Armstrong arrived of fewer than 1000 advertisers. He spent months overseeing the building of a new content management system, to run on Facebook, Twitter and other social products.

“We now have a multibillion dollar ad engine underneath it,” he said. “We can now partner with 10,000 organizations if we wish. We have six times the amount of video now as we did only four months ago, with 70-80 content-specific properties such as Black Voices and Stylist. We will go to hundreds over the next couple of years. Our product is 80 percent our own content. Seed.com will allow us to continue delivering mass quantities of content. There’s still a church and state between ads and news but we’re snapping them together much closer.”

If these two executives are right, the AOL/Time Warner split will turn out well for both. Now, if AoL. can just hire some more creative graphic designers.

  • Share/Bookmark

AOL hires first Seed.com employee

While today is the day AOL becomes AoL., a company independent of Time Warner, the old name and logo are still on the site. Seed.com beta has finally launched, however, and its first hire has just been announced – by the hire himself, on his own blog.

Saul Hansell, formerly of The New York Times, will be join AOL as Programming Director, reporting to Mike Rich, SVP AOL Entertainment. His responsibility will be leveraging Seed across all of AOL’s platforms.  

Saul joined The New York Times in 1992 and most recently was covering the telecommunications beat, including wired and wireless communication of voice, data and video, including companies involved in telephone, Internet backbone, cable TV, Internet video, cellphone handsets, and other devices connected to networks, as well as communications policy and privacy. Launched in 2007, he was the founding editor of Bits, a blog on nytimes.com covering a wide range of technology topics with particular interest in Internet media, digital marketing, consumer electronics and the evolving business models for music and video.

For more on what Seed is all about, see AIM Group’s earlier post on the changes at AOL.

  • Share/Bookmark

Gentle reminder…

Clients' passwords change with every PDF issue of Classified Intelligence Report -- basically, once every other Thursday. Look in your latest edition for the newest password.

Not a client yet? Drop us a line about becoming one.

Categories

Archives …

AIMGroup.com/jobs


eBay Classifieds Group
is hiring! See all jobs

Find media jobs!

Search for jobs in classifieds, ad sales, editorial, marketing, publishing, broadcasting, new media and more. Post your resume, get alerts and save searches!

Search listings' text for these words:

Search job titles for these words:

Employers start here.

E-mail newsletter (free!)




* = required field