Mike Arrington reports in Techcruch that Myspace is close to acquring iLike the social music site for $20M.
MySpace is close to acquiring popular social music service iLike
, we’ve confirmed with multiple sources. The deal, which should close this week, will be MySpace’s first acquisition since new CEO Owen Van Natta
took control of the company in April 2009. The price is “around $20 million.”
iLike, which launched in late 2006, is a social music recommendation service that now has more than 50 million registered users. It tracks what you listen to and like and gives you recommendations on new music based on that data as well as what your friends are listening to. It is the top music application on Facebook, Bebo, Hi5 and just about every other social network other than MySpace, which has MySpace Music.
iLike also hosts band pages which are second in popularity only to MySpace Music. By acquiring iLike, MySpace solidifies their already leading position as the most popular online identity for bands. Last week iLike also launched their own music download store.
Details are still flying in, but at first blush the deal is particularly interesting for two reasons.
First, simply because iLike is so deeply integrated into the Facebook experience. Nearly 10 million Facebook users use the iLike application every month. And iLike has also been a key part of Facebook’s ongoing struggles with what-to-do-about-music. MySpace is now going to own this.
Second, it’s MySpace, not the MySpace Music joint venture with the music labels, that is acquiring iLike. We’ll have more to say on this shortly. We’re hearing that a key driver of the deal is the iLike team, particularly founders Ali Partovi
, Hadi Partovi
and Nat Brown
, and the underlying technology.
Competitor Last.fm was acquired by CBS in 2007 for $280 million. June 2009 Comscore stats show Last.fm with 12.9 million monthly unique visitors. iLike had just 3 million monthly unique visitors, but that doesn’t take into account the massive usage of the service on social networks.
The company has raised a total of $16.5 million
from the founders, Scott Banister
, Bob Pittman
, Vinod Khosla
and Ticketmaster to date. But their last round of funding was in 2006, where Ticketmaster put the bulk of the capital in via a third round of financing that valued the company at a whopping $53.2 million.
This is a nice deal for Myspace and excellent tactical move agaisnt Facebook for just $20M. It is synergistic to Myspace because of their entertainement/music focus. It is not a great outcome for iLike investors and its founders. I suspect they know something we don’t know about facebook’s own music plans. The fact the facebook did not go hard after iLike (if they did the price would not be $20M) tells me that they plan their own music service.