Posted on 01/25/2019 12:36:52 PM PST by Red Badger
BuzzFeed is cutting costs and getting leaner, but it still wants to get bigger by exploring a deal with Group Nine.
BuzzFeed began laying off 15 percent of its staff about 200 employees on Friday. Its next move could be a merger with Group Nine, another big digital publisher.
Speculation about a tie-up between the two companies has been bubbling in the media industry for months, and sources familiar with both companies say the two have indeed been discussing a merger. The two companies arent close to a finalized deal and may ultimately find different partners. If there is a merger, sources say, it wont happen imminently.
A BuzzFeed rep declined to comment; Ive asked Group Nine for comment.
There is some logic to a deal, as both BuzzFeed and Group Nine specialize in generating relatively low-cost, high-volume video designed to travel around the internet with the help of platforms like Facebook and Google. Last fall, BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti publicly floated the idea of merging big digital publishers together so they can get better terms from Facebook and other distributors.
BuzzFeed and Group Nine also share a link via digital investor Ken Lerer. Lerer, who along with Peretti was a co-founder of HuffPost, is the chairman of BuzzFeeds board; his son Ben Lerer runs Group Nine. Group Nine was created in 2016, when cable TV giant Discovery contributed cash and some assets to a joint venture with three companies with ties to the Lerer family: Thrillist, a lifestyle publisher aimed at young men; the Dodo, a site dedicated to animals and people who love them; and NowThis, a video news publisher.
Any deal would require the companies array of backers to reach an agreement on valuation. Most intriguingly, it would require Discovery, which owns the largest stake in Group Nine, to sync with rival TV giant Comcast*, which has put $400 million into BuzzFeed and is the publishers biggest backer.
Last fall, Discovery told investors it values its 42 percent in Group Nine at $212 million, which implies a $500 million valuation for the whole company. In 2016, BuzzFeed raised $200 million from NBC Universal at a valuation of $1.7 billion. Its quite possible that number would drop in todays market, after a couple years where other digital publishers have folded, sold at fire sale prices, or seen their valuations slashed.
Both Peretti and Ben Lerer built businesses that were supposed to thrive in the social media world, in particular with the help of Facebook. But while Facebook spent several years courting media companies, its now clear that Facebook (along with Google) will continue to dominate the internet advertising market and wont be sharing that wealth with publishers. (Its new pitch to publishers: Well help you sell subscriptions, which is a business were not in.)
In response, Peretti has been trying to find new revenue streams, and now hes cutting costs. Once thats done, he may try to bulk up.
* Comcast is an investor in Vox Media, which owns this site.
Almost always makes sense to clean up the balance sheet if a company is trying to sell itself.
Meanwhile, the investors might want to start cleaning up their books, as well.
Merge it with Beavis and Butthead and call it ButtFeed
They must be on the verge of bankruptcy. Because if they weren’t, they wouldn’t be laying off and seeking a buyer.......................
That’s what i call them anyways........................
Who would want to merge with that dumpster fire?
Another dumpster................
Could be just “gettin’ out whiles the gettin’ is good” and trying to make the numbers look better for a sale. Laying off a couple of hundred employees with an average cost (salary and benefits) of $100k each reduces payroll by about $20 million a year. One time charge for layoff related expenses, and the going concern numbers will look better.
If one was heading for bankruptcy, it might be better to just wait and do your trimming inside a Chapter 11.
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