Seth Gilbert, 07-18-2007
Just last week Peter Moore, the former president and COO of Sega America and current VP of Microsoft’s Interactive Entertainment business (responsible for the Xbox), was sitting down with the press and talking about present problems and plans for future of the Xbox 360 gaming platform. Now it appears in September, Mr. Moore will be talking about Electronic Arts and Madden 2008 instead.
It was announced yesterday that Moore resigned his post at Microsoft to return to the San Francisco Bay area. He won’t have time to be idle. He’ll take on new challenges at Redwood City based Electronic Arts as head of their highly regarded EA Sports division; home to game franchises like Madden Football and Tiger Woods golf.
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Seth Gilbert, 07-17-2007
In the first of this week’s big earnings announcements, Yahoo (NASDAQ: YHOO) reported Q2 2007 Financial Results today.
Largely as expected, Yahoo met consensus analyst expectations but overall results were, from the first quarter to include revenue from their new Panama advertising platform, unimpressive. Guidance was lowered for the rest of 2007.
For the second quarter, Yahoo earned total revenue excluding Traffic Acquisition Costs (“TAC”) of $1,244m, up 11% over the same period last year but operating income was down 19% to $185m compared to $230m for the same period last year. Total ad revenue was up 7% to $1.49 billion. Click to Read More
Seth Gilbert,
When MTV began in the early 80s its edgy counter culture appeal helped build its foundation. When YouTube took off and became a household word, it too benefited heavily from its alternative, under-produced content (which was arguably similar in form to what MTV aired decades earlier). Across the board in media and entertainment, from websites like MySpace to Indie Music production back to Facebook online, appealing to the fringe, to a smaller group, focusing on a niche of “hip and cool” has often helped push companies forward.
That narrow focus is doubly beneficial. It helps keep a company off the radar of bigger competitors and it helps them build a loyal, dedicated fan base from which to expand. But as companies grow in appeal and audience, they all face one of the most difficult challenges in marketing: bridging the gap between counter-culture edge (and niche market focus) to mainstream popularity and an expanding sphere of influence.
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Seth Gilbert, 07-16-2007
Just when it seems everyone is getting into Internet video, in a reverse twist, Sony is backing out; at least with regard to their strategy.
Last year, Sony bought video sharing site Grouper for a crisp $65m. It was to by Sony’s portal for sharing video, Sony’s clone of YouTube. ….now, the towels been thrown in and the fight called. Instead of trying to compete with established players, Sony will rebrand the property and redeploy it toward a new end: video creation.
Henceforward Grouper will be called Crackle. And lest there be any doubt about a change of direction, there is the official pronouncement of its demise from Josh Felser, a founder of Grouper and the man in charge of Crackle. He said unequivocally, “User Generated content is dead to us. … We are definitely leaving video sharing and focusing on emerging talent.” Crackle will help to finance, promote and syndicate the work of Internet video auteurs.
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Seth Gilbert, 07-15-2007
It’s reporting season for public companies. That means, over next few weeks we’ll see a large number of quarterly earnings reports and all kinds of volatility in the stock markets.
This week market watchers will be waiting for Internet news with Google and Yahoo reporting. Also this week: Microsoft, Dow Jones, newspaper publishers McClatchy and Gannet and chip maker, Intel.
Next week will have reports from Amazon, Sony, The New York Times, Netflix, Apple and possibly Nintendo (Nintendo’s announcement date is not yet confirmed).
In anticipation of the earnings season and to keep track of who reports when, Metue has assembled two printable calendars Click to Read More
Seth Gilbert, 07-14-2007
Brightcove, the Cambridge Massachusetts Internet TV syndication and service provider announced this week they are officially crossing the pond.
After previously signing UK based media programmers British Sky Broadcasting, Sony BMG UK and others, Brightcove will open London offices.
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Seth Gilbert, 07-13-2007
It’s a green light for Yahoo’s purchase of advertising auction company Right Media. Today, the FTC waiting period expired with a request for more information.
Under the terms of the Hart Scott Rodino Antitrust Act (HSR), companies are required to give regulators a 30 day window to request further information. The expiration of the waiting period absent further inquiry means there will be no further anti-trust review. Legally the transaction is deemed to have satisfied the requirements of the Act.
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