Idealab now launches fewer companies than it once did -- three or four per year is an informal goal, compared with 10 per year before the crash.
How Much is 'Free' Costing You? Learn how DaveRamsey.com saw a 567% uplift in ROI with Omniture. This complimentary guide and webinar cover the most important factors in selecting an analytics solution. Download Now.
One company started as an incubator to hatch fledgling online
companies. The other invested in new and already-established
Internet firms. They both had two things in common.
First, they were among the most widely praised models of the New Economy.
Second, they were hit, and hit hard, by the implosion of the dot-com
sector. Now, incubator Idealab and investor CMGI (Nasdaq: CMGI) are in
the fight of their lives to survive.
The questions facing these companies are big ones. Can Idealab
generate enough brainstorms to survive the sluggish economy, not to mention
a shareholder lawsuit? And can CMGI amount to more than the sum of its
four letters and irrational exuberance?
Idealab: Slowly Climbing Up
Idealab, which launched early Internet pioneers CarsDirect and CitySearch, among
others, creates startups internally and provides them with such functions as corporate
finance, business development and recruiting. In exchange for its
efforts, Idealab takes large equity stakes in its offspring.
But the company ran into big trouble. Idealab poured more than US$600 million
into internally developed dot-coms prior to its planned initial public offering (IPO),
which was pulled due to unstable market conditions. And some of the company's
earlier progeny -- such as eToys, cosmetics e-tailer Eve.com and home-improvement
concern HomePage.com -- have long since gone to the dot-com graveyard.
These days, Idealab has about 20 companies in its portfolio, but not all of
them are directly related to the Internet. Evolution Robotics, for example,
has a new technology to make personal robots much more interactive and able
to work in real-world home environments.
In terms of financials, the company has about US$100 million in public
securities from the companies it created, about $300 million in cash from
now-public companies that Idealab sold its shares in, and about $200 million
to $400 million worth of private companies in its portfolio, founder and
president Bill Gross told the E-Commerce Times.
Riding Out the Crash
After the stock market imploded in 2000, Idealab
implemented a plan to turn around its business, Gross said. The company
carried out many of the usual cutbacks in personnel and offices, but it also
pledged to launch fewer companies than before -- three or four per year
is an informal goal now, compared with 10 per year before the crash.
Idealab's portfolio companies made cutbacks as well, and they faced
new ground rules established by their parent: They had to be
profitable before they were considered for an IPO, and they
had to have a "very large technological impact" on business.
The move away from pure-play Internet companies was also part of the
turnaround plan. "When we started Idealab in 1996, the kinds of companies
that could get easily funded were Internet companies," Gross said. "So when the
Internet market crashed in 2000, we said we should do Internet companies if
we can do an Internet idea, like Overture, but we shouldn't limit ourselves
to Internet companies -- we should do great ideas."
Gross credits his company's plan for creating a strong capital base and low
expense rate, as well as for creating and maintaining new companies that are
growing in value and making an impact on the marketplace. He thinks the pieces
are now in place for Idealab to succeed and generate positive returns for its shareholders.
Trouble from Within
But despite Gross' grand plans, a group of minority shareholders this month
filed the latest in a string of lawsuits against Idealab, claiming that Gross and
other company officers and directors misappropriated corporate assets for
personal purposes. Previous lawsuits have been dismissed because of a lack
of evidence, but plaintiffs now claim they have the documentation they need.
Gross called the legal filing a "nuisance suit that will go away soon." He
characterized the action as a negotiation tactic being used by some shareholders
to recoup their money from the company's last investment round. For his part, Gross
said he wants to give all of his shareholders their money back in the form of positive
returns on investment.
CMGI: On a Comeback?
CMGI is different from
Idealab. After beginning life as a database and literature fulfillment
company, founder David Wetherell made huge sums of cash from Internet
investments in the mid- to late 1990s. Like Idealab, though, the
company took a huge hit as a result of the crash of 2000.
By December 2001, the company was wrestling with questions about
its very survival, CMGI president and CEO George McMillan told the
E-Commerce Times. Could it pare back fast enough to survive? Could
it keep hold of its cash? Could it keep its employees for a turnaround it
desperately needed?
To move past this crisis point, the company took drastic steps. Last August, in a high-profile retreat, it withdrew from a stadium-naming pact with the New England Patriots for a new facility near Boston.
Today, the situation is much different and brighter, McMillan said.
CMGI is concerned with building on its new core businesses, re-investing in
those businesses as well as new ones, and maximizing cash flow and
operating income once it reaches breakeven.
The company says it will reach that goal on a pro-forma operating basis in
its third fiscal quarter ending April 30th, following an anticipated pro-forma
operating loss of $10 million to $15 million in its second quarter. It expects
second-quarter revenue in the $150 million to $155 million range, and estimates
it will have $169 million in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities at
the end of Q2.
From Net Investor to Operating Company
Probably the biggest mission for CMGI was to transform itself from
a concern that invested solely in Internet firms to a business that more closely
resembles an operating company by "building a highly disciplined, clearly streamlined
operating culture run by division heads who had experience running
businesses," McMillan said.
As part of the turnaround plan, McMillan said he had to set criteria on
which businesses to keep and which to sell, focusing on far fewer businesses
in the process. CMGI also narrowed its attention, primarily concentrating
on e-business and supply chain management, plus a limited subset of enterprise
software and services firms, including AltaVista.
"We're running this business tightly and running our companies well,
whether they're sexy or not," he said. "We've always been long on sex
appeal. Right now, what's sexy is cash positive."
Another quality that is attractive to the company and its shareholders is profitability,
which is CMGI's number one goal, CFO and treasurer Thomas Oberdorf told the
E-Commerce Times. To that end, Oberdorf has cut a lot of debt through
several measures, including canceling the stadium deal .
Not So Fast
Although both companies' head honchos are quick to praise their own turnaround
plans and chances for success , at least one analyst thinks they do not have a lot to
crow about. IDC research manager Jonathan Gaw told the E-Commerce Times
that CMGI and Idealab have similar problems.
"Their portfolio companies aren't performing particularly well," he said.
"They're both facing all sorts of investor lawsuits -- that can't help. Both
of them have taken hits to their brand name, and they're losing employees."
Gaw said the companies in CMGI's portfolio are "second-run" firms
like AltaVista, which "had its
moment, but the moment is gone," and uBid.
Also, CMGI has had limited success in the past with its investments, he added.
"With that history in mind, how do you attract new investors?"
Idealab's big problem, he said, is the same thing that Gross tagged as the company's
new strength: It has branched out beyond the Internet space. "The problem is
when you start to do that, you've diluted the message you've got for your
investors," Gaw said. For example, he noted, investors who buy into an
international fund do not want to see their money sunk into domestic
firms. "That's not why they bought the fund."
Data Storage Trends To Watch January 31, 2003
Because some companies are not prepared to invest significant resources in networked storage, IDC analyst Brad Nisbet expects to see increased demand for ATA storage units -- solutions based on the same type of disks as those found in garden-variety PCs.
Related Stories
New Respect for the Internet Bubble-Blowers January 13, 2003
Today's business models must be solid, even if the underlying e-commerce ideals are the same as those heralded during the dot-com heydey.
Is High-Tech Fever Gone Forever? January 03, 2003
Over the course of the next year, the environment will remain difficult for high-tech firms seeking capital infusions, the NVCA's Jeanne Metzger said, noting that venture capitalists have told her they foresee little change through late 2004.
The Junkyard of Bad E-Commerce Ideas August 15, 2002
While some bad ideas have been salvaged, others remain in the e-commerce junkyard. Near
the top of the scrap heap is the sale of online pet food, which was practiced by Pets.com.
E-Tail's New Comeback Kids August 09, 2002
A funny thing happened on the way to the dot-com graveyard: Stamps.com managed to hang
on long enough to hit some milestones.
Furniture.com Returns from Dot-Com Graveyard April 15, 2002
Customers will enter their ZIP code and will be shown only products that
are available in their area, allowing average delivery time of seven to 10 days.
Related News Alerts
More by Bob Woods
The Myth of the New Economy February 06, 2003
The e-commerce-fueled boom can be likened to other periods in history, including the rise of the railroad and the electrification of the factory, when new, hot ideas were expected to change businesses' and consumers' behavior in radical ways.
A New Starring Role for E-Commerce January 29, 2003
Many companies can track online customer demographics, then use that data to determine whether or not they are attracting their target audience. They also can examine e-commerce demographics in the context of their overall customer base.
The Case Against Case January 21, 2003
Executives at mature companies spend a much larger percentage of their time selling existing products, as opposed to developing brand-new innovations.