MySpace sold for $35m to Specific Media (and Justin Timberlake)

Jul 1, 2011 | Uncategorized

US ad firm Specific Media and singer-turned-actor Justin Timberlake have teamed up to buy News Corp’s Myspace for a reported $35 (£22m). The sale figure, reported by the Wall Street Journal, is much less than the $100m Rupert Murdoch’s was seeking for the once market-leading social network. News Corp had bought Myspace for $580m in […]

US ad firm Specific Media and singer-turned-actor Justin Timberlake have teamed up to buy News Corp’s Myspace for a reported $35 (£22m). The sale figure, reported by the Wall Street Journal, is much less than the $100m Rupert Murdoch’s was seeking for the once market-leading social network.
News Corp had bought Myspace for $580m in 2005, and it will now retain a minority stake in the company. For the last two years, the site has been struggling to compete with new players such as Facebook, which now has over 30 million registered users in the UK alone.
01/07/2011


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In April this year, a report said that News Corp was expected to receive bids from about half a dozen private equity firms and companies for its social networking site Myspace.
Private equity firm THL Partners, Redscout Ventures and Criterion were among the names expected to bid for Myspace. Other names include Chinese Internet holding company Tencent and Myspace co-founder Chris De Wolfe.
Myspace was relaunched last year as a social entertainment site with a focus on celebrities, music and movies.
However, MySpace’ Web traffic dropped from 73 million to 63 million unique visitors between January and February this year.
Digital market intelligence provider comScore found that MySpace lost 10 million unique users in just one month. It also said that traffic to the social networking turned entertainment site is around half what it was a year ago.
MySpace had around 95 million unique users in the first quarter of 2010 when it began its major relaunches.
In November 2010 MySpace chief executive Mike Jones said that the site had changed its focus from a social networking site to a social entertainment site.
Jones said, “MySpace is a not a social network anymore. It is now a social entertainment destination.”
At the start of the year, Jones announced job cuts in both the US and in its international operations.

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