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Not a Bump, but a Boulder on
Media Companies' Information Superhighway
by Laura Asplund
The Financial Manager, May/April Issue
With its limitless potential and current financial implications,
new media remains the hot topic of the day and at the forefront
of this year's Conference issues.
This special section offers a glimpse into new media at present;
the Conference will provide lessons to survive - and flourish -
in the future.
Only a year ago internet companies were cautiously considered successful
new business models, until just after the holidays when the bottom
dropped out. Now "dot-com" is spoken with trepidation,
layoffs and shutdowns are common and the future of internet companies
no longer blazes like the sun.
But is that true of internet properties held by traditional media
companies?
While some broadcast corporations that have spun off internet
divisions are still operating soundly, others actually have followed
the stand-alone internet sites into the ground - a la Disney and
Go.com. And although the revenue generation of traditional media's
internet properties has continued to increase, profit accountability
might see them headed for the same fate.
Realism
Part of the reason for media internet sites' continued existence
and growth is the profitability of media companies overall and their
more realistic approach to advertising, says Amando Madan, director
at communications industry analyst BIA Financial Network, Chantilly,
VA. Madan says that although reliance on advertising hurt internet
companies, it wasn't because advertising isn't a solid revenue source.
"Much of the valuations of internet companies were predicated
on the cost per thousand really exponentially growing," Madan
says. "Given that it's interactive, you can click through -
you're not just staring at a newspaper. The idea was that the new
medium of advertising would be worth more per view, per thousand
views, per impression that over time this internet ad revenue would
be growing at an increasing rate."
"While we continue to see growth year after year, much of
the valuations were based on explosive growth and the speed of that
growth has been tempered."
Smart move
Madan says the traditional media companies' ability to "cross-pollinate"
helped the value of their internet holdings, particularly if the
properties were kept under the company umbrella.
"When there is a true company behind it, that obviously gives
it a tremendous amount of staying power," he says. "In
some cases people considered it cannibalization, but basically it
was the ability to be there. It was the hedging of bets and one
that I think was, although costly in many cases, a smart move."
Slow down
Veronis Suhler & Associates, New York, foreshadowed the internet
implosion when it reported internet companies' operating losses
of more than twice what it reported in 1998, from $1.5 billion to
$3.9 billion. Traditional media, on the other hand, reported operating
cash flow margins of between 28% and 40%, except for newspapers,
which reported a margin of 17.6%, according to Veronis Suhler.
Last fall Zenith Media, New York, was predicting a major slowdown
in advertising revenue by 2001. Ad revenues increased 13% from 1998
to 1999 and 9% from 1999 to 2000 - to $49.8 billion. The company
projects only a 5% increase for 2001 to $54.5 billion.
Principals at Bond & Pecaro, Washington, DC, say even that
kind of projection may be overly optimistic, citing reports that
advertising revenue has been flat so far this year.
Tim Pecaro says Go.com was one of the top visited sites and still
is, even though Disney is abandoning it. The number of pages or
ads viewed isn't being converted into dollars generated.
"The air is out of the balloon and expectations are going
to have to be more reasonable," Pecaro says. "Internet
businesses are going to have to justify themselves through profitability
and a solid business model."
"I'd be surprised if you didn't see more people pulling back,"
Pecaro says. "Operating an internet site is very costly and
takes a lot of money to make it work - you've got to change the
content, make it graphically interesting. The question is whether
all that will be a return on investment."
Back seat
Jeff Anderson, principal at Bond & Pecaro, says it isn't unusual
to see revenue growth even now, but the bottom line is profitability
within a 12- to 24-month period, which Anderson said is unreasonable.
"I don't think the market has fully adjusted," he says.
"Companies have very stringent expectations. Whether it's funded
privately, publicly or through a parent company, the bottom line
is that it better be generating some profitability soon."
Anderson says more companies are now taking a wait-and-see approach,
taking a back seat until the technology that will allow quality
content, not just content, is fully developed.
"Until the infrastructure is built, you won't get a lot of
content and advertising-based companies," Anderson says. "Everyone
is waiting for broadband and people will be looking to invest in
those companies that are broadband-based."
Value now
Pecaro says the value in broadcast internet sites will materialize
when broadcast audio and video can be delivered comparably to what
viewers watch on their television screens.
"It's now painful to watch video unless you have a high-speed
line," Pecaro says. "It doesn't add a lot of value right
now."
Size doesn't seem to matter
The merger of Time Warner and AOL created the largest media conglomerate
in the US, with combined revenues of $13.4 billion in 1999. AOL's
22 million subscribers are equal to one quarter of all households
who use the internet. Madan says the merger was a good example of
a needs-based combination - with Time Warner having the cable delivery
capabilities and AOL bringing additional content and subscribers.
Many of the communication consulting firms are revising white
papers and company analyses based on the internet downturn of the
past few months. Bond & Pecaro's "CyberValuations"
was expected to be completed by March and BIA's white paper on valuing
the internet is scheduled to be published on its web site in May.
Chicago-based Laura Asplund is feature writer, The Financial Manager
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