As tenures at companies go, Steve Case's trajectory at AOL was similar to that
of a bullet fired straight up -- it ascends at a fast rate but eventually plummets.
Case is widely credited as a visionary who grew AOL from a run-of-the-mill Internet
service provider into a tech bellwether. But on the heels of the much-touted merger with
old-media giant Time Warner, which was supposed to leverage both companies' content,
advertising and broadband capabilities to drive growth, Case has encountered little
else but failure.
Last week, Case resigned his chairmanship under pressure from stockholders who have
lost tens of billions of dollars since the merger. Is his departure an isolated event, or does it reflect a general failure of new-media executives at old-economy companies?
A Whole New World
IDC analyst Jonathan Gaw told the E-Commerce Times that the question
does not revolve around old versus new economy, but rather around an
entrepreneurial attitude versus a mature company approach.
"Entrepreneurs are great at startups, and they're really crappy at big
companies," he said. "It is more of a function of stages. Every company is
at a different stage, and you need different kinds of leaders for different
stages."
In Case's case, his hard-charging attitude and vision of AOL as an online mecca
for fun-loving consumers and audience-seeking marketers were just the ticket
when the company was growing from a small Virginia-based company into
the world's largest Internet service.
In essence, Case was almost restarting AOL with each evolution of the
online service, making him an ideal leader for the company in the
pre-Time Warner days. But the rules changed after the merger.
Case's Problem
When AOL bought Time Warner, Case attempted to meld his entrepreneurial spirit
and new-media approach with Time Warner's traditional culture and mature
management style. Those efforts failed -- likely because the skills required
at an old-economy company are so different.
Yankee Group program manager Andy Efstathiou told the E-Commerce Times that
although the heads of Internet startups have diversified backgrounds and roles, in
general they all work on developing a product and trying to identify a market need.
These executives also build their workforces from scratch.
On the other hand, execs at mature companies spend a much larger percentage of
their time selling existing products, as opposed to developing brand-new innovations.
Old-world company executives also have established workforces, so they need the
political skills to deal with those employees.
With such differing required skill sets, Internet executives likely are not a good fit
to run old-world enterprises, Efstathiou said.
Enlisting the Old Guard
Like many entrepreneurs, Case is not disappearing entirely from his role with
the media giant. He will remain a member of the company's board of directors
and will co-chair its strategy committee.
AOL officials were not available for comment on this story.
Case's Next Case
In a press release announcing his resignation, Case did not detail his future plans.
Efstathiou noted that Case's skills could be useful in starting another company, or
possibly entering the venture capital or investment banking fields. It seems
relatively safe to say, though, that he will not become head of a Union
Pacific Railroad or Dow Chemical (NYSE: DOW) anytime soon.
"He would understand essentially what the value of the different assets are
in order to provide more accurate pricing as well as better corporate fits
for these types of consolidations," Efstathiou said. "Over and above that,
he has lots of contacts in the industry as well."
Although Case's future career path is uncertain, the eventual outcome for AOL Time
Warner is even murkier. After posting the largest quarterly loss on record last
year, the company is in dire straits. Under new leadership, will AOL Time Warner
succeed in integrating its disparate corporate cultures, reviving its stock price and
emerging as a unified force to be reckoned with? Or will it scrap the stated goals
of the merger and rely on its old-economy properties to generate revenue, eventually
spinning off the AOL division entirely? Only time will tell which way this merger
tale will end.
Sounds like Monday-AM soothsaying, asking tea leaves why the warlord led his army to the ...
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