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MySpace broker's $220M encore

Richard Rosenblatt helped engineer the $580 million sale of MySpace. Now he wants to build millions of sites like it - this time, in vertical niches.
Business 2.0 Magazine

By John Heilemann, Business 2.0 Magazine columnist
January 17 2007: 6:24 AM EST

(Business 2.0 Magazine) -- We meet for drinks at a Manhattan steak house, and immediately he utters a remarkable phrase - one as evocative of a bygone era as 'Tune in, turn on, drop out.' Richard Rosenblatt is explaining why he hasn't spoken much to the press since his latest startup launched last May.

"We've decided to wait to tell our story," he says, "until the IPO."

Why Rosenblatt is making an exception and talking to Business 2.0 is interesting, and we'll come to that soon enough. For now, let's focus on those three little letters and what they signify.

First, understand that Rosenblatt isn't kidding: He informs me that his company, Demand Media - an ambitious attempt to build a user-generated content powerhouse on top of a pile of generic Web domain names - intends to go public in late 2007 and attain a $2 billion market cap by mid-2008.

And Rosenblatt isn't alone in seeing these goals as achievable: Venture capitalists have already pumped a jaw-dropping $220 million into Demand.
On the road to fortune or flameout

The first conclusion here is that anyone who still thinks Web 2.0 isn't a bubble ought to have his head examined. The second is that Rosenblatt is steaming toward disaster - or a monster payday. Either way, his story captures the current upheaval in both the old- and new-media industries, especially the frantic scramble to find the next MySpace.

Few people are better qualified for that pursuit than Rosenblatt.

A 37-year-old native of Los Angeles's San Fernando Valley with a high-pitched voice and a disarmingly guileless demeanor, Rosenblatt has been pushing user-generated content for a decade. In 1999 he sold his create-your-own-storefront startup iMall to ExciteAtHome for $565 million. Five years later he was recruited to lead the turnaround of Intermix Media and its main property, MySpace.
Dot-tv gets a second chance at life

Inside of 18 months as Intermix's CEO, Rosenblatt took the company from the red to the black and then to the auction block, selling it to Rupert Murdoch's News Corp (Charts). for $580 million.

"Every major media company had looked at us," Rosenblatt recalls. "Mr. Murdoch was the last one in but the only one who totally got it."

A few months later, Rosenblatt was casting about for ideas for his next startup when he came across an article in - yup - Business 2.0 bearing the headline "Masters of Their Domains" (December 2005). The story was about how domain-name speculation had been transformed by cost-per-click advertising systems, how millions of people ignore search engines and type what they're looking for directly into their browser's address field, and how the owners of generic addresses (Candy.com, Cellphones.com) profit by setting up pages where the only content is blue-text link ads.
The perfect opportunity for sloths

The story set off a chain reaction inside Rosenblatt's head.

"I thought, it can't be that easy," he recalls. "So I talked to some domainers, and they said, 'We own 300,000 domains, we make $20 million a year, we have just four employees and some servers in the Caymans.' I thought, 'If you can make that much doing nothing, what if we added some Web 2.0 sprinkle so that people would come back - user publishing tools, social networking? What if we built a platform where we could snap that into as many domains as we wanted?' That's when the lightning bolt hit me: You'd have a company that generates its own traffic, generates its own content, and monetizes itself. It would be the perfect lazy-man's media company!"
New ways to strike it rich on the Web

Rosenblatt moved rapidly to turn this theory into practice, with Demand making nine acquisitions in the space of just six months. With two takeovers - of eNom and Bulk Register - the company became the world's second-largest domain registrar after Go Daddy. (See "Who's Your Go Daddy?")

The company has also snapped up user-driven sites such as Answerbag and eHow, and specialty content outfits such as Hillclimb Media (GolfLink.com, Trails.com).

What Rosenblatt is amassing are the resources to create a niche-driven, bottom-up online publishing conglomerate, one that can spawn an almost limitless number of narrow-focus websites at nearly zero marginal cost. Some will be existing shell domains gussied up with Rosenblatt's "sprinkle"; others will be created from scratch and turned into insta-brands. Some of the content will be professional; most will be user-generated.

"There are 59 million blogs out there, so we know people want to publish," Rosenblatt says. "You give them the tools, you give them an audience, and you pay them; then they tell you what they like - and you follow them to the verticals where they gravitate."
The need to be more 'MySpacey'

Thus Rosenblatt's answer to what comes after MySpace: a million micro-MySpaces. But he's quick to point out a key difference between his new outfit and his old one.

"MySpace was about your six-pack abs and your favorite bands," he explains earnestly. "This company is the thinking person's social network - it's not about what you show, but what you know."

Given how fast Rosenblatt is moving, it's easy to imagine him getting too far in front of the bandwagon he purports to be leading. Perhaps he's misread the lessons of MySpace: that exhibitionism is not peripheral but essential to community-driven sites.
Staking a claim on domains beyond dot.com

But however imperfect, Rosenblatt's thinking about user-generated content and its implications is miles ahead of almost anyone else's in media, which is why so many of its majordomos - Barry Diller, Viacom (Charts), the New York Times (Charts) - are clamoring to meet him.

Among the media titans, the prevailing wisdom is that Murdoch made them all look like retrograde morons when he stole MySpace out from under their noses. Everyone is desperate not to miss the boat this time around. Everyone knows that their online offerings have to change, to become more MySpacey, but no one is exactly sure what the hell that means.

All of which puts Rosenblatt in an enviable position. Given his track record and what he claims about Demand's business even at this early, nascent stage - "We're very profitable," he says, "and we could go public now if we wanted to" - he'll soon be facing a barrage of buyout offers.

"We're not selling this one; this is a company we're going to build," Rosenblatt insists. But why would he say anything otherwise? My educated guess is that Demand's VCs value it at about $500 million. If Rosenblatt truly thinks the company will be worth at least $2 billion in 2008, the argument for holding out is unimpeachable.

And it has one other attraction. For six years now, the Internet industry has been waiting for a revival of the moribund IPO market. Rosenblatt would relish being known as the guy who jolted it back to life.

Sure, he's from the wrong valley - San Fernando, not Silicon - but who cares? As Rosenblatt says with a shit-eating grin, "Someone has to do it!"

John Heilemann wrote "Pride Before the Fall." His next book is "The Valley." He lives in Brooklyn.

___________________________

More from Business 2.0 columnist John Heilemann:

Architect William McDonough: The buildings of tomorrow

Anthony Volodkin: The Hype Machine

Martin Nisenholtz: The New York Times' digital makeover Top of page
To send a letter to the editor about this story, click here.

From the December 1, 2006 issue


Not all Demand Media's acquisitions are listed in this article. It will be interesting to see how .tv channels will integrate into the virtual communities he is creating. What I foresee is a "Mashup" in a virtual world loaded with user and expert content. All the resources are there waiting to be assembled.
So far the tools Enom.tv has provided are very neat to play around with and am sure this is just the beginning. Take a look at what I was able to do in under fifteen minutes: www.BargainChannel.tv It is not bad for 19.95 that includes these tools and hosting. If anyone is having trouble using the tools, here are some steps I wrote:

In you account make sure you have a green check under the dns column.

Then then click your domain name. The scroll down to website settings and click change service.

Under available option you will see website creator, click it and save changes.

Then on enom's menu on the left side of the screen find the we site creator tab and when you click it you will see two choices, sign-up and easy manager, click easy manager. The you will see a window to edit website.

The article can only hint to what is coming. I think things will be kept secret prior to the IPO coming.
 
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Finally they made this available online! GOSH! i subscribe with to this mag, this mag is what made me start domaining. Apparently the same article had an impact on Rosenblatt too. I got this latest article late in November. Sorry SKG not trying to hijack your thread, but this story is what I have been quoting for over a month. All the time I felt like a crazy man because no one else had read it. :yell: It prompted me to write this thread:

http://www.namepros.com/domain-name-discussion/268524-what-tld-shows-most-promise-next.html

After reading what he is doing with the "million myspace" idea, It dawned on me, we really need to invest in highly searched Keyword Domains that could be developed into a site regaurdless of extension. When I read this article, I was constantly picking up .Net names with massive ovt scores everyday. Eventually I think every parking program will be just as Rosenblatt envisions; each site will be a myspace like self supporting economy. Why not? It is why I have been buying .Tv like a maniac! I have soooo many meaningful names, but currently no one wants to venture into the .Tv extension due to cost, so there are many high ovt names available! All the best for us! I really think within 1 year there will be a parking program like Rosenblatt has, but it will be availble to the public.
 
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Nice article, will add rep, it looks like this Rosenblatt guy knows what he is doing.

IMO for domainers this can only mean one thing, there will be a huge demand in personal, hobby related, etcetera, domain names and if they manage to integrate .tv in their plans, the demand in .tv names will be huge :)


Edit: wanted to add to your rep, but got this message:
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We're glad that you're fond of this member, but please give some rep points to some other members before giving it to SKG again.
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Looks like I already gave rep some time ago :hehe:
 
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johntv said:
Edit: wanted to add to your rep, but got this message:
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We're glad that you're fond of this member, but please give some rep points to some other members before giving it to SKG again.
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Looks like I already gave rep some time ago :hehe:


Thats funny I get the same message when I tried to give you some too SKG. LOL :hehe:
 
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Thanks guys! If we look beyond this article and use it as a "footprint" to where it might be leading I foresee a big "MASHUP" of his vertical acquisitions drawing from each other for content. IT IS MY INTERPRETATION THAT TV CHANNELS will play a key role in this between ehow, wehow, deals.com, etc. It makes perfect sense to have virtual communities interdependent on each other but still maintain their respective niches. It is a matter of accounting like we see all the time as one department charges another for services, etc all under the same roof. The virtual economies as I would describe it, maybe the solution that myspace, facebook and others were missing. THIS IS THE NEXT BIG BANG! These ecomonies will boom because for the first time people (ANYONE) will have the tools to run there own startup without savvy knowledge of big VC monies. The social atmosphere creates the Viral energies needed:)

I have no evidence of this, nor have I spoken to anyone in the corporation to confirm this. This is merely my vision of why Mr. Rosen has spent 250 million acquiring these different niches.
 
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nice find sanchay. great article.
 
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aaamaretto said:
nice find sanchay. great article.

I will be adding more to this thread. There is a lot to talk about:)
 
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SKG where are you seeing $19.95 I see $9 and $17 and they have not added the new tools yet the video and user generated upload tools or if they have I don't see them but Like I told you in pm I still cannot get the free demo model to work
 
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equity78 said:
SKG where are you seeing $19.95 I see $9 and $17 and they have not added the new tools yet the video and user generated upload tools or if they have I don't see them but Like I told you in pm I still cannot get the free demo model to work


EQ, when you checkout you will see 19.95 per year to register a .tv domain. Renewal however is $50 at least for now. Thus I usually do a two year reg at enom.tv for 19.95X2=$39.90

They do not have free tools to upload video yet. They do have tools to make a small macromedia flash movie that is very basic. What browser are you using? I had trouble operating the tools with firefox but no trouble with explorer. Also, make sure you have all pop up blockers set to off.
 
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OH ok I know the price of the domain I thought you meant you upgraded WEBSITE CREATOR ok TY. No I use explorer no pop up blocker when I click a template the REAL DOWNLOAD thing comes up but always TIMES OUT
 
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equity78 said:
OH ok I know the price of the domain I thought you meant you upgraded WEBSITE CREATOR ok TY. No I use explorer no pop up blocker when I click a template the REAL DOWNLOAD thing comes up but always TIMES OUT


EQ, if it is timing out, then only thing I can think of is that something is BLOCKING you. Either a security feature of your virus protection or popup blocker.
 
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I agree with any strategy that involves

verticals (look what happened in the TV space after the advent of cable), sharing content (advertisers can't have relationships with 1000s of web sites), personalization, and social networking (and video).
 
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SKG said:
I will be adding more to this thread. There is a lot to talk about:)

Yes, please do Sanchay,

As I mentioned on another thread today......... I am frustrated at the total lack of direction and information available regarding the release of premiums for 2007 - and in turn info regarding .TV as a whole......

Hands up whomever has the slightest idea as to when premiums are going to be released for general sale? No? Could Rosenblatt & Enom TV handle things any worse??

Sorry to bring up a quote from you Equity, but when you heard that Enom TV was taking over at .TV, your initail reaction was - oh shit!!

Whilst you did retract that feeling, I am starting to run with it myself!!
 
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MILLERSCROSSING said:
As I mentioned on another thread today......... I am frustrated at the total lack of direction and information available regarding the release of premiums for 2007 - and in turn info regarding .TV as a whole......

Didn't I read somewhere though that you were stopping on the reg front, Millers? :guilty:
 
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dottvfan said:
Didn't I read somewhere though that you were stopping on the reg front, Millers? :guilty:


Yes, just one more reg though!

the more important point though is that why put the ext on hold in this way??

Certainly, Mr Rosenblatt is helping me to cheapen my addiction, but it seems like the whole ext has gone quiet...why the uncertainty.....?
 
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The calm before the storm, my friend
 
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Web Site Creator Lite

SKG: Thankyou so much for posting this article, and thankyou so much for telling how to get web site lite going.

I managed to get lite going last night, I think its great for typing out some ideas.
ENOM actually emailed me and told me they had some bugs with the web site creator program too, but its now fixed.

I have some questions for web site creator lite, which maybe some of you can answer:

1. Is there anyway to get the splash page (The flash page at the begining) to stay up longer than a few sec?

2. Is there anyway to add sound/mp3 file to the splash flash page?

3. Im trying to figure out how to imbead some youtube videos on the home page, (just for a start) how do you get the HTML to imbed?
I tried to do a cut and paste, but it shows the HTML.

Please excuse my ignorance, im not a web designer.
 
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1. No way to get it to stay up longer at this time as far as I know.

2. Some of there splash pages already come with sound, no option to change it or add. However within the site you have a macromedia flash movie builder and you can create a simple flash movie to which you can add sound.

3. They do not have an editor to alter/add html at this time. What you see is what you get as far as I know so far.
 
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Yeah I saw the flash movie builder, havent used it yet.
Have u tried it? How does it look?

I think Lite is great, just to get some ideas up, without spending and money.

It sort of like a little blueprint.
 
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