David Cassel (destiny@crl.com)
Fri, 8 Nov 1996 02:23:57 -0800 (PST)
S l a m s a n d S p a m s ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~ Thursday after the stock market closed, AOL released their first-quarter profits. Before their $385 million write-off: a profit of $19 million. With the write-off: a loss of $3.80 per share. "[W]e have not operated this company for purposes of earnings," AOL's chief financial officer told the New York Times. "We would be missing a lot of opportunity by focusing on earnings instead of our huge opportunity to build market share." Upside magazine's Christopher Byron sees it differently. Referring to the charge as AOL's "big bath", he writes that the new accounting move "totally wipes out all profits--indeed, all operating income--this 11-year-old company has ever made." What about AOL's original accounting? "The ploy created an illusion that AOL was healthy when, in fact, it had been losing money from day one...all AOL was doing was snowplowing its biggest (and fastest-growing) cost item into the future and pretending it wasn't there." He makes a damning observation about the company's 1996 numbers--that actual marketing and operating costs increased more in 1996 than revenue. Indeed, the New York Times reported that AOL spent $130 million to bring in 400,000 subscribers--which comes out to $325 for each subscriber added. "AOL has in effect been hiding this situation from investors..." Byron writes. "In 1995, subscription acquisition costs amounted to 22.9 percent of on-line service revenues. By last June they amounted to close to 32 percent." AOL's fiscal statement isn't encouraging, either. Over the last three months AOL's marketing costs increased $39 million from the same period last year--and the broader "cost of revenue" figure increased $69 million. But a year ago, AOL added 714,000 members in the same 3-month period--which represented a 19% increase in size. This year, though spending more, they added 314,000 *fewer* members--which is now an increase of just 6%. Upside's Byron noted that "AOL is currently selling at 92 times trailing earnings." In other news, the Associated Press reported Cyber Promotions filed a 17-page motion in their ongoing Philadelphia suit. In fact, the latest spam in AOL mailboxes was a press release. Sent to "fulldatabase@cyberout.com", it announced that "Cyber Promotions, Inc., has filed a motion with the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania...alleging that AOL's e-mail blocking software is a direct violation of federal anti-trust laws." The president of CyberPromotions outlined his philosophy. "We have felt all along that AOL's motivation to block Cyber's commercial advertisements was not implemented to protect AOL members, but instead monopolize direct electronic advertising to 7 million people who have e-mail addresses that are within AOL's stranglehold. We do not feel that a few powerful media companies, like AOL, should be able to control commerce on the Internet simply because they are the exclusive connection for millions of people to the Internet." The press release notes that AOL's pop-up advertisements appear by default, whereas e-mail is *blocked* by default--and it uses AOL's own words against them. "In defending AOL's practice of selling its members' personal information to direct mail companies that engage in unsolicited postal mail, AOL wrote, "For many people, advertising mail is informative and provides value, convenience, and fun." "How can one form of unsolicited commercial advertisements be informative and valuable, and another form, from outsiders, be offensive and intrusive? What's good for the goose should be good for the gander." THE LAST LAUGH Christopher Byron's article notes that AOL's actual profits are "far enough below zero as to make the Arctic seem tropical." At the top of the page was a banner ad for AOL's intranet service. It said "AOL. The company that makes online work." Destiny More Information - http://www.wco.com/~destiny/time.htm ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~ Please forward with subscription information and headers in-tact. To subscribe to this moderated list, send a message to MAJORDOMO@CLOUD9.NET containing the phrase SUBSCRIBE AOL-SUX in the message body. ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~