Thursday, September 9th, 2010

AOL Tries To Recapture That Startup Feeling

0

It might seem an odd move for a company that relies on money from advertising. Yet AOL is reducing the number of ads it shows on its home page and some other Web sites it runs.

The maneuver is one of the changes new CEO Tim Armstrong, 38, has brought to the long-struggling World Wide Web company since he took by AOL in April. The former Google Inc. executive was hired to recharge AOL and lead its spinoff from date Warner Inc., undoing a legendarily disastrous deal.

To prepare for AOL’s rebirth as an independent company later in the year, Armstrong and other executives say they are trying to recapture elements of the culture AOL had when it was a startup — back when it was America Online and on its way to becoming the dominant provider of dial-up Web access.

These days, AOL is focused on getting revenue from ads it sells for its own Web sites, like celebrity gossip blog TMZ, and for third-party sites, while the dial-up business slowly evaporates (though it still has 6 million subscribers). It’s been a profitable formula, but revenue has been falling: In the first quarter, sales fell 23 percent to $867 million.

With 7,000 employees spread around the world, it’s a stretch to think AOL can feel like a Silicon Valley startup, with employees whizzing down the halls on skinny scooters. But Armstrong says undoubtful decisions — like getting rid of some advertisements — will alter AOL’s culture and help it regain favor.

“I think AOL’s return to higher prominence in terms of being an Net leader is purely dependent on the work that we do here,” the tall, affable Armstrong said in an interview.

For instance, he said, pulling back some ads — a step that reduced clutter on AOL pages and made them load faster — showed…

[Source] dhiram

Speak Your Mind

Tell us what you're thinking...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!

Page 1 of 0