David Cassel (destiny@wco.com)
Thu, 31 Oct 1996 01:04:43 -0800 (PST)
Those of you who read Wednesday's Netly News (http://www.netlynews.com) saw a quote from AOL's Vice President of Product Marketing last May: "An all-you-can-eat for $9.95 option will never happen in my lifetime." In the interview with Interactive Week, he continued, "the challenge facing us now is to create a bundle of packages and services that customers will pay for." But if that's the challenge, AOL's abandoned it; even non-TCP/IP accounts will now get unlimited access for $20.00! "Our phones have been ringing off the hook fro members who are really enthusiastic about the pricing changes," AOL's Corporate Spokeswoman Melissa Andrews told me. Unlimited chat, unlimited games of Federation, unlimited access to the Motley Fool. But there's some lingering doubts in the air--"AOL is reinventing itself," Gary Arlen of Arlen Communications told USA Today. "It has to." Less than a month ago, Case said he believed subscribership would pass 10 million by the end of the summer. I heard defensiveness in his voice as he said in a conference call, "It's not our god-given right to wave our hands and get 10 million members. We'll get there by doing a better job than anybody else." But he won't. At least not by the end of the summer, Case conceded Tuesday. AOL's other big move: "deferred subscriber acquisition" costs will be eliminated. That means the money AOL spends on marketing will be deducted from their profit margins--instead of being deferred over two years. Last quarter that figure was $71 million--if AOL's marketing remains unabated, they'll need to pull in $71 million in profits to offset it. One business consultant told me "With that kind of uncertainty and a decreasing subscriber retention period, it's just not acceptable to keep putting off what are, essentially, marketing expenses." But AOL's moves received mixed reviews. The Washington Post described it as "an emergency overhaul", and added AOL was "abandoning an accounting policy that critics said had turned huge financial losses into paper profits." In fact, AOL's accounting decisions received almost as much press attention as their price cuts. "The old approach had allowed AOL to report profits," the Post reported; "the new one will put it deeply in the red." Using AOL's new accounting techniques, the Post reported last quarter's $29.8 million profit would instead have been a $124.2 million loss. But all those losses disappear in a single "charge" taken this quarter. The Business columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle asked "Is AOL performing the ultimate accounting switcheroo?" An accounting professor emeritus at a New York University complained to him that "They're talking about a third of a billion dollars as if it's chopped liver." The logistics are interesting, too. Several papers reported that all subscriber bills will automatically be switched to the $20 rate. Though 4.5 million members still pay $9.95, they'll have to proactively notify AOL that they wish to retain their current pricing. To push the new model, AOL announced users can sign up immediately (though the pricing plans don't go into effect until December 1.) AOL will drop their price to $18 per month for users who pay in advance for one year. This locks in $215 while offering a two-dollar-a-month reduction (or a $5-a-month reduction for any customer who ponies up $359 in advance for two years worth of service). But how many takers will they get? It's been estimated the service has a yearly "churn" rate near 100%. AOL's new chief, Robert Pittman, told Media Daily subscribers would pay *more* than they had under the hourly rates--and gladly, to avoid metered access. But users also can reduce their monthly bill to $4.95 a month--and earlier this year, C|Net quoted AOL's spokeswoman as saying 95% of AOL's customers don't go over 5 hours a month... The San Francisco columnist also questioned whether AOL's new model will work. One short-seller told him, "If they couldn't make money doing it the wrong way, what makes you think they can make money doing it the right way?" The Post echoed their doubts--an analyst at Cowen & Co. noted "The jury is still out on whether AOL can really make money under this new model," But it got a lot of coverage. The Associated Press described it as "Embracing a tactic that has hammered it," the accounting moves "an acknowledgement that its financial statements might not have been accurately reflecting the company's condition. An analyst at Arlen Communications told C|Net AOL's move was "risky", but added it's not clear they had a choice. In any case, AOL's recent announcements of expanded access through BBN make more sense now--subscribers lingering online would clog the phone lines. The only drawback: the expansion will cost $340 million. In other news, Cincinnati's Bell Telephone Company found AOL was blocking mail from their ISP, Fuse.net. AOL hadn't notified them; they only found out when Ron Newman--a subscriber to the wrongfully-blocked Cybercom.net-- contacted them after seeing their name on the list. (In a related note, the spam block doesn't appear to be working--tonight one test AOL mailbox contained eight pieces of junk mail.) And despite the optimistic announcements, our anonymous tipster, "TrustNo1", says "the large layoffs soon to come have not yet been announced." THE LAST LAUGH Though GNN will be eliminated under the restructuring, visitors to their web site still find the original page: "Why Join GNN", "AOL Member's Choice"--and a large picture captioned, "Do something!" Destiny More Information - http://www.wco.com/~destiny ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~ 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. ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~