From spring 2005 until summer 2007, News Corp. went on a digital media acquisition binge that could only be described as dizzying:
- Intermix, parent of MySpace
- Scout Media
- IGN (how they inherited me for six months via IGN’s acquisition of AskMen)
- Photobucket
- Flektor
- Strategic Data Corp.
Then Chief Architect Ross Levinsohn resigned, signaling an end to the shopping spree. Then Heather Harde - who supported Levinsohn in the M&A capacity left, too, to join Michael Arrington at Tech Crunch.
Within weeks, CBS picked up the baton, and it then went on an impressive shopping spree:
- Last.fm
- Wallstrip
- Spotrunner (investment)
- CNET - which we called, by the way, 8 weeks before it happened.
Today News Corp. hired Erik Moreno as SVP of M&A, reporting to Mike Lang.
My take: this is Rupert Murdoch reacting to his pal Sumner Redstone’s shopping spree.
In fact, money man Jim Cramer apparently viewed CBS’ buying of CNET as a “watershed” transaction that basically signaled the acquiescence of old media. “The big networks won’t be able to maintain the cash flow to subsidize loss-making digital investments, so now they’re shelling out big bucks to get in the game.”
I could hyperlink back to a dozen stories on CBS and News Corp. where this has been building up… but I agree with Cramer on this: big media’s erosion of offline revenues is starting to accelerate and you will certainly see an uptick in acquisitions, especially in this more sane (or read: less crazy) valuation atmosphere.