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AOL acquires Bebo for 850 million

centernetworks.com

54 points by DarrenStuart 18 years ago · 17 comments

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fleaflicker 18 years ago

AOL is a massive company desperate to stay relevant.

A good look at their internal dysfunction and struggles over "Platform A" was published yesterday in the NY Times:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/12/technology/12aol.html

iamelgringo 18 years ago

Hmmm... so, AOL paid $850 M for 3.5 million visits a month. That means that they're paying about $250 a user.

At the same valuation per user, that values Facebook at a paltry $ 7 billion.

Another thought... if users are worth $250 a piece, maybe my blog that has 100 readers a month might actually be worth $25,000! Anyone wanna buy it? :)

  • xirium 18 years ago

    This type of valuation has been mentioned before ( http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=121206 ).

    Yahoo purchased GeoCities for US$1100 per user. Microsoft purchased a stake of Facebook for US$300 per user. So, AOL buying Bebo for US$250 per user is a relative bargain.

    Regarding your blog, its only worth US$25000 if you can sell it. Otherwise it is worth nothing.

    • aston 18 years ago

      >> Microsoft purchased a stake of Facebook for US$300 per user and an exclusive advertising deal.

      fix'd.

  • ojbyrne 18 years ago

    That's US visitors. They're based in the UK and that's where they've been most successful. Techcrunch says 22 million uniques.

  • aneesh 18 years ago

    Want to pay me $249 to read your blog? :)

    On a more serious note, the average facebook user spends more time on facebook (and views more pages, ads, etc) than the average reader spends on your blog.

wallflower 18 years ago

AOL has some cash flow - about 9 million subscribers paying $10-$25 for Internet access monthly (http://tinyurl.com/ytnz3d)

  • henning 18 years ago

    so they're roughly on par with World of Warcraft, except they have a much weaker brand?

    • samwise 18 years ago

      kinda sad when you put it that way.

      • alaskamiller 18 years ago

        except, you know, not... when you factor in their push into online advertising and consolidation/acquisitions as well as their publications.

staticshock 18 years ago

i've tried reading up on "engagement advertising", but i continue not to understand it. it seems like a fairly empty buzzword for saying that the ads will be micro-targeted (maybe via social networking information you've revealed, like facebook's attempts?), which, to my knowledge, is a concept that hasn't seen much success yet.

  • poppysan 18 years ago

    Engagement advertisement is an idea that I think successfully addresses the problem of click fraud. Instead of just measuring clicks or impressions, they would base the results on a desired user experience. Hard to do and track also, imho.

whacked_new 18 years ago

As per the YouTube acquisition, perhaps there will be a new surge in social networks! The talent pool proceeds to filter itself.

omnipath 18 years ago

I thought AOL didn't really have any extra cash laying around? Where did they get the money?

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