Showing posts with label AOL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AOL. Show all posts

Oct 1, 2013

AOL’s Sullivan to Take Over Its Homepage Business

AOL’s longtime marketing exec Maureen Sullivan has been given purview over its highly trafficked main homepage, part of an effort to reinvigorate core products, such as AOL.com.
The latest reports by comScore show AOL’s total traffic for August was 117.4 million unique monthly visitors.
Sullivan has been overseeing the New York company’s Women’s and Lifestyle Group, including the development of the Makers brand that documents women’s stories, and she will continue to oversee it. She also worked on the rebranding of the AOL identity several years ago.
As part of the Sullivan appointment, longtime AOL exec Francis Lobo is departing the company.

READ MORE: Beta for Bungie game 'Destiny' launching early next year

117903-Maureen-SullivanIn addition, AOL has named exec Graham Moysey to become head of international, located in London. In a memo, AOL Brand head Susan Lyne said that Moysey will “oversee all international business for AOL with a dual reporting structure — including AOL Brands reporting to me and AOL Networks reporting to Bob Lord.”
Sullivan will report to Lyne.
Courtesy: allthingsd

Sep 30, 2013

With Gathr’s Custom Bundles, AOL Tries To Build A Subscription Business Beyond Dial-Up

One of the more awkward things about AOL is the fact that its profits are still entirely driven by subscriptions and memberships. Given the subscription busines’ roots in dial-up Internet, it’s not surprising that that those revenues keep falling— but with the launch of a new service called Gathr, the company is trying to turn things around.
“It’s really about bringing in new subscribers,” said David Smith, vice president of marketing at AOL’s paid services and membership division.
What are these new subscribers actually going to pay for? AOL (which owns TechCrunch) is pitching Gathr as a way to access your favorite online services in a single place for a discounted price, with partners including Pandora, iTunes, Redbox, and Amazon.
gathr logoBundling isn’t a new concept, but Paid Services and Membership President Bud Rosenthal argued that people think of it as “something that’s done for them.” When you pay for a cable TV bundle, you end up with lots of channels that you don’t care about. Or if you want a specific feature for your new car, it probably comes bundled with other features that are less important to you.
With Gathr, on the other hand, users get to choose the services. I currently count 19 of them in Gathr (Smith and Rosenthal said there are plenty more lined up), and users can combine any three, paying a combined $15 per month. Gathr also offers prepackaged bundles, tailored to different interests. For example, I’m trying out a “4 Fun” bundle that includes five one-day DVD rentals from Redbox (I don’t own any devices that can play DVDs, so, uh, maybe I should have thought this through), a subscription to Pandoara’s ad-free service Pandora One, a $25 e-gift card to Restaurant.com, and a bonus $10 gift card with Amazon.
gathr
Entertainment is the category with “the sex and sizzle,” Rosenthal acknowledged, but Gathr goes beyond that, with partners such as Norton AntiVirus and LifeLock.
Behind the scenes, he said AOL is paying wholesale prices for these services, and everything on top of those prices is profit. He noted that many partners already have a big audience in the US, so continued domestic growth can be a challenge, and these discounts can help convince “fence sitters.” In addition, he said that even though Gathr offers users a dashboard for managing and accessing their subscriptions, those users also need to create accounts with and log into the partners services themselves: “We’re not disintermediating the partner and the consumers.”
Smith described said Gathr is currently in a “marketing beta” in Atlanta, Minneapolis, and Seattle, with AOL testing out the response to a number of promotional tactics (including TV ads) before a broader national launch next year. Anyone in the US can already sign-up here, however.

Courtesy: techcrunch

AOL to Start Advertising on TV Again, With Commercials for New Subscription Service Gathr

More than nine months after AOL shelved plans for a hip-hop-inspired TV commercial that would have been the first TV ad of CEO Tim Armstrong’s tenure, the company has decided to make a return to TV advertising.
AOL is planning a multiplatform ad campaign that includes TV commercials to promote Gathr, a new service it is launching publicly today, the company’s membership and paid services chief Bud Rosenthal said in an interview on Friday. The TV spots will air this fall, but won’t run nationally, instead focusing on three markets: Seattle, Minneapolis and Atlanta, according to an AOL spokesman.
Gathr, which has been in a private testing period since early this year, bundles together offerings from companies such as Pandora, LivingSocial, and Amazon into one monthly subscription. At launch, AOL is offering a choice of six pre-bundled packages, ranging in price from $15 to $30 a month, with an option to customize bundles, as well.
Gathr pre-bundled packages are loosely organized around themes. The “4 Fun” package, for example, costs $20 a month and includes a subscription to Pandora One, the streaming music service’s ad-free option; promo codes for five free one-day DVD rentals from Redbox; a $25 gift card to Restaurant.com; and a $10 promo code for LivingSocial.
aol_handOther subscriptions offered through Gathr include magazines such as Cosmopolitan and National Geographic, and services such as LifeLock and Norton AntiVirus.
The company is betting that Gathr may become a new growth driver in its subscription business, at a time when its revenue from subscriptions bundled around Internet access continues to fall. And that the lessons it learned by bundling different products and services with its Internet-access service to give people a reason to keep spending money with AOL can provide guidance for this new subscription business.
“We’ve made a huge amount of progress in fighting churn,” Rosenthal said, referring to the Internet-access business. “And some of the things we’ve done there gave us the platform and core competencies we knew we always wanted to leverage for other growth.” While shrinking, AOL’s subscription business still generated $332 million in revenue in the first half of this year.
Gathr will continue to add new partners to its subscription bundles, and hopes to eventually incorporate services from startups, he said, citing Dollar Shave Club and Birchbox as hypothetical examples.
While AOL still has a sizable subscription customer base to market to, Rosenthal said that the main focus would be on acquiring new customers. As it pursues this new initiative, AOL seems to have abandoned plans for Bling Thing, a subscription commerce business idea that AllThingsD reported on in May.


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