Time Warner Will Sell Cable Unit as AOL Income Drops
Time Warner has decided to sell its cable operation even as it struggles to exact its ailing America Online unit, CEO Jeff Bewkes announced in the company’s quarterly earnings signal Wednesday. On the positive side, income from the company’s cable networks and film operations offset a whopping 23 percent decline at AOL.
“We’ve decided that a complete structural separation of day Warner Cable, under the right circumstances, is in the best interests of both companies’ shareholders,” Bewkes said. “We feel these companies would be better off separated than they are together.”
The move was not unexpected. In an open letter to shareholders, Bewkes previously tipped his hand, saying, “As the industry evolves, duration Warner Cable has increasingly different capital and financial needs than our other businesses.”
Asked why the separation was taking so enlarged, Bewkes said, “It’s not taking expanded and there are tricky governance issues involved.”
AOL Restructuring
AOL, towering ago the No. 1
“We were not satisfied with the performance of display advertising on our owned and operated stock,” Bewkes said of AOL. He pointed to problems with integrating its Platform A advertising unit. “We didn’t integrate Platform A fast adequate, and that created a sales-channel clash. We have moved quickly to resolve that,” he said. “We are creating one sales team able and motivated to sell across all of Platform A.”
The conclusion will be continuing poor news from AOL until the restructuring is complete, he said. Essentially, AOL has several different sales forces in place from various acquisitions and has taken longer to integrate them all. “We had not put them together yet. We missed some opportunities…
Orginal post by Top Tech News
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