By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times
08/06/01 10:38 AM PT
Theglobe.com said its community portal was contributing
'disproportionately' to operating losses.
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Blaming a sagging market for online advertising,
Theglobe.com, which
staged one of the first blockbuster initial public offerings
of the Internet era, said Friday it would shutter its main site,
lay off half its workers and seek a buyer.
The New York City-based company said it would close Theglobe.com
effective August 15th, as well as WebJump, which hosts e-commerce sites
for small businesses. About 60 workers, or nearly half of the company's
employees, have also been fired.
Current plans call for the firm's family of gaming-related sites,
including Happy Puppy, Kids Domain and Games Domain, to be
sold off or run individually. Theglobe.com will also leave its
New York City headquarters for a "less expensive" location later this month.
Portal Losses
Theglobe.com chief executive officer Chuck Peck said the
community portal was contributing "disproportionately to our operating losses."
Closing that site allows "senior management team to focus solely on our core
strength -- games."
In fact, the gaming sites combined rank among the top three
on the Web, according to Theglobe.com, which also publishes a
computer games magazine.
Peck said the prolonged advertising slump forced his company to
take drastic measures. In April, the company's shares were delisted
from the Nasdaq stock exchange. Since then, Theglobe.com has been sued by shareholders.
Downward Spiral
"Over the past 12 months, we have taken aggressive steps to
position Theglobe.com for a turnaround or business combination
dependent on a rebound in the online advertising sector," Peck said.
"But the sector remains severely depressed and there are few signs of
a rebound in the near-term."
Theglobe.com helped fuel the frenzy for Internet-related stocks
when its share prices skyrocketed more than 600 percent on its first
day of trading in November 1998. Priced at US$9 per share by underwriters,
the stock soared to $90 as trading began.
Community Downfall
Theglobe.com then became an aggressive player in the portal space,
moving to add services and features. For example, in mid-1999,
it struck an alliance with
the Drkoop.com to provide medical content
to the site and added its own auctions and intellectual property services.
However, Theglobe.com faced increasing competitive pressure as its
rivals found buyers or partners and consolidation made certain
Internet properties into giants, while others shrunk. Based
heavily on community, Theglobe.com targeted the same audience
as Tripod, which was bought by Lycos,
and GeoCities, which was acquired by Yahoo!.
Theglobe.com failed to find the same audience as its rivals,
however. The portal did not make either the Nielsen//NetRatings
Top 25 or the Jupiter Media Metrix Top 50 Web properties lists for the month of June.
According to a report published in June by Jupiter Media Metrix,
four Web sites
control half of all Internet surfing time by U.S. users:
America Online (NYSE: AOL), Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) (Nasdaq: MSFT)
and Napster.
Report: Internet Purchasing Picking Up Steam in Europe August 03, 2001
In Europe, more than half of purchasing managers buy operational supplies via the Net,
while one-quarter buy materials used to manufacture products, IDC found.
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Who Pays When Dot-Com Partners Fail? July 02, 2001
By striking year-by-year deals rather than long-term agreements with partners, e-commerce
firms can avoid having a major investment of capital, time or corporate goodwill lost all
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Study: Portals Get the Most Web Traffic June 11, 2001
E-commerce sites were the only Web site category to
register a decline in traffic, falling 3.4 percent since the start of the
year, according to the latest Nielsen//NetRatings report.
Report: Four Web Sites Control Half of Surfing Time June 04, 2001
Jupiter said that marketing and advertising power has replaced infrastructure investment
as the main barrier to entry and success on the Web.
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