Raja Jasti’s Blog - Renaissance Thinking

April 14, 2009

Ebay announces Skype IPO plans

Filed under: Business, Internet — Tags: , — Raja @ 2:14 pm

Techcrunch reports:

After earlier reports that Skype’s founders were trying to buy back the company from eBay, the company has now released the news that it plans to spin off Skype as a separate company and file for an initial public offering. The IPO is intended to be completed in the first half of 2010.

As we reported earlier, eBay has been having trouble finding ways of using Skype across its other products (which CEO John Donahoe admits in a quote from the press release). eBay removed Skype co-founder and CEO Niklas Zennstrom in October 2007, reportedly due to frustration at the financial performance of Skype. Ebay also negotiated down the huge earn-out due to Skype stockholders and took a $936 million one-time loss around the transaction.

Last year, Skype generated revenues of $551 million, up 44 % from 2007, and eBay recently announced that it expected its subsidiary to top $1 billion in revenue in 2011. Registered users reached 405 million by the end of 2008, up 47 percent from 2007. Skype now accounts for 8 percent of all international calls by one estimate, and that number is going to keep on growing.

April 13, 2009

Ebay dumps stumbleupon

Filed under: Internet — Tags: , — Raja @ 12:42 pm

Acquring web startups is risky. Here is an example. Techcrunch reports ebay sold stumbleupn to its original founders. Will ebay dump skype next?

Back in September, we reported that eBay was attempting to sell off its stake in StumbleUpon, the website recommendation service it bought for $75 million in 2007. That didn’t happen. Instead, the company has been bought back by its investors and original founders. It emerges once again as an independent startup.

The new company is led by co-founder Garrett Camp, who now steps into the CEO role.

Yes, StumbleUpon is once again a startup. “The company is amply funded. And everyone is glad that the company is away from eBay,” a source tells us. It had been looking for at least $75 million we hear but wasn’t able to find a taker for that amount.

April 11, 2009

Founders to buy back skype?

Filed under: Business, Technology — Tags: , — Raja @ 8:11 am

Ebay’s acquisition of skype has been a disaster for ebay so far. Now there are reports that Skype’s founders Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis may be in talks with Ebay to buy skype back.

SAN FRANCISCO — The European duo who created Skype and sold it to eBay for billions may have another trick up their sleeve: buying it back.

 

Niklas Zennstrom, left, and Janus Friis, founders of Skype, are said to be raising money to buy the Internet phone service back.

Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, the founders of Skype, have approached several private equity firms and are pooling their own substantial resources to make a bid for the Internet calling service, say several people with knowledge of their plans.

The two men sold Skype to eBay in 2005 for $2.6 billion, and later received bonus payouts that increased the final price to $3.1 billion. Since then, Mr. Zennstrom, a native of Sweden, and Mr. Friis, of Denmark, have created the venture capital firm Atomico and backed the online video service Joost, both based in London.

Skype has more than 405 million registered users, up from 53 million when eBay bought it, and the service had $145 million in revenue in the fourth quarter of 2008. Calls are free between Skype users, and rates are a few pennies a minute for international calls to non-Skype users; the low cost has helped the company gain 8 percent of the world’s international calling minutes, according to TeleGeography, a market research firm.

Skype also currently has one of the most popular applications for Apple’s iPhone, and has said it is developing software for the BlackBerry, which is expected in May.

EBay has admitted, however, that Skype has few synergies with its core e-commerce and payments businesses. In addition, John J. Donahoe, eBay’s chief executive, has repeatedly signaled his willingness to sell Skype for the right price.

Skype is a case study of how innovation stagnates after acquisiton by a wrong company. It can happen even when the match is right if the acquisition happens too early. I believe skype still has a huge potential to disrupt the telecommunications industry. Can it get its mojo back if the founders succeed in their attempt to buy it back? Do the founders have what it takes to manage the company at this stage in its evolution? It will be interesting to watch the story as it develops.

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