Bertlesmann selling G+J USA: I don’t typically blog magazine transactions or personnel stories. However, I’ll make an exception…

Quote from behind the cost-wall of the Wall Street Journal::

The Germany-based publisher of titles including Fast Company and Family Circle will as early as today announce it will sell its U.S. magazines, people familiar with the matter say. Gruner + Jahr’s U.S. operations are the sixth-biggest magazine publisher in the U.S. Details of the deal, including its price and whether the magazines are being acquired by one buyer or several buyers, couldn’t be learned.

The move, which comes after a series of recent setbacks, including an ugly court battle with Rosie O’Donnell and revelations that Gruner + Jahr executives manipulated circulation figures, amounts to a tacit admission that the company’s longstanding goal of conquering the U.S. has failed.

The sale follows an ultimatum last year by G+J parent Bertelsmann AG, which told the unit’s management they had a year to solve the problems in the U.S. or find a buyer. G+J publishes six main titles in the U.S. Kurt Otto, a spokesman for G+J in Germany, declined to comment.

Possible buyers of at least some of the magazines include Meredith Corp., the Iowa-based publishing and TV concern. Meredith owns magazines such as Ladies Home Journal and American Baby which would fit with G+J’s Family Circle, Child and Parents. It is unclear whether Meredith would want G+J’s business magazines, however, which could be sold to a separate buyer. Patrick Taylor, a spokesman for Meredith Corp., didn’t return calls. Possible acquirers for the business magazines include CurtCo Media, owner of Worth magazine. CurtCo, based in Malibu, Calif., declined to comment.

Update: Adage.com - Meredith purchases four G+J titles for $350 million, could purchase and flip the business titles, Inc. and Fast Company.






cue

Okay, it’s smackdown time: I lied. I said I wouldn’t be blogging about smallbusiness.com here. But I just could not help myself when I saw this item by Staci on PaidContent.org about Allbusiness.com.

Quote:

“Founded in 1999 with $20 million-plus in VC funds, in web years
AllBusiness.com is far from a start-up. The company was sold to a GE
subsidary (NBC Internet Inc.) in March 2000 for the internet-bubble sum
of $225 million and was sold again in 2002 to a privately held
corporation. Last July, it picked up $10 million from VantagePoint
Venture Partners so it’s essentially in start-up mode. At the time,
VantagePoint managing director David Carlick said, “We think that
AllBusiness.com is poised to become the Yahoo for small business.”


Okay, so last night I blogged that I am relaunching smallbusiness.com:

Start up VC funding: $0.
Burn rate: $0 (what the hell’s a burn rate?)
The domain name smallbusiness.com vs. allbusiness.com: priceless*

That said, the concept of smallbusiness.com is to drive traffic to
allbusiness.com or any other place where there is helpful information
and are conversations taking place that will assist small businesses. We’re
already linking to stories at allbusiness.com on news.smallbusiness.com. Glad to do it.

But I’ve just got to ask,
who in their right mind would want to be compared to something with no
mojo?

As for me, I’d like to think smallbusiness.com is poised to be the Google of
small business, except with RSS all over the place and none of that crap where they try to
take over somebody’s web content.

(Note #1: For those who may not be familiar with me, this post is in jest.
Really. Who do you think I am? Jason Calacanas? By the way, that was
said in jest, also.)

(Note #2: Also, for the record, I think (mojo, or no mojo) Yahoo! wants to be the Yahoo! of small business.)

*figuratively speaking

Update: Rafat at PaidContent.org just gave smallbusiness.com equal time. Thanks, Rafat. (oh, wait, except for when you pointed back to one of the storied stories (damn those newspaper websites that don’t make you pay for their archives) of smallbusiness.com, part I’s demise. Nah, heck. Thanks for that, also.)





May 23rd, 2005

Huh? When I wake up to news that “Rex died last night,” I get curious about just who they’re talking about.