Angelia Seetoh
Jan 14, 2011

News Corp considers selling ailing MySpace

GLOBAL – News Corp is strongly exploring the sale of MySpace, as the once wildly-popular site sinks in popularity.

The future of myspace is unclear
The future of myspace is unclear

Despite a revamp of its site to gain more profiles, the future of the once-popular MySpace which used to compete neck-to-neck with Facebook for followers, does not appear so bright.

The social-networking site posted losses as much as US$156 million in the last quarter. A few days ago, it closed its Australian office in a bid to axe 500 – or approximately half - of its global staff. This was on the back of a 2009 employee cutback of 1,000.

News Corp, which acquired MySpace for US$580 million in 2005, has revealed that it was considering a sale, or a merger, of the once-popular networking site. A spin-off to MySpace was also one of the options, which might alter MySpace’s ownership structure.

While none of the options has been seriously explored, News Corp has announced that it would be willing to help fund a spinoff as well as bringing in partners, push for privatising, and offering stock options to its employees.

In October last year, News Corp made a last-ditch attempt to turn around the ailing fortunes of MySpace with its second redesign of the site in two years.

The revamp of the site that targeted younger users and musicians seemed to work, picking up over three million more profiles since the change. “MySpace’s niche has always been in music, and it’s great for music and musicians, and the way to resonate if it develops its niche better,” said Joe Nguyen, Comscore’s vice president, Southeast Asia.

Just Published

4 hours ago

Mark Read on WPP’s creative agencies slump, big ...

CEO dismissed idea WPP might sell AKQA in Campaign interview.

7 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Yong Ping Loo, TBWA

With a winning mix of creative and commercial acumen, Loo is a social media maven whose out-of-the-box ideas have been instrumental in driving TBWA's growth.

8 hours ago

Hakuhodo announces new leadership in planned transition

A leadership reshuffle at the Japanese ad powerhouse sees experienced executives step aside for a new crop of male leaders taking the helm.

9 hours ago

How AI is reshaping the dynamics of ad fraud

Faced with an an alarming rise in invalid web traffic due to the rise of AI-powered crawlers and scrapers, Campaign explores the strategies advertisers can implement to mitigate the impact of evermore sophisticated AI ad fraud schemes.