BUSINESS BLOGS
BUSINESS BLOGS
category: business
18 Jan 2008

Slide.com raised $50M in a $500M round.  Wow.   That’s a lot of money.  How much?

The $500M represent s85% of MySpace’s price tag or 33% of YouTube’s price tag.  It’s also the same valuation Facebook got when Greylock invested in Facebook in April 2006.

More importantly, I think, is that this is 33% of what Paypal sold to eBay for. That’s important because Levchin is maniacal on building a company that will sell for more than what Paypal did.  Then again, as Business Week’s Sarah Lacy reports, Levchin is aiming for an IPO, and not an M&A.

Time will tell if this is as prescient as the Facebook deal (which technically remains to be seen) or the MySpace acquisition (definitely a smart move in hindsight).  But Slide is indeed a way to monetize the social networks, or rather, a theory on how to monetize social networks.  I must say (not to compare WatchMojo.com to Slide.com at all) but I tend to agree that building the most valuable apps for social networks will be able to generate high returns.  Where my philosophy differs is that I personally do not think that slides and what not are what marketers will really want to advertise, and conversely, users won’t want brands advertising on their personal images; we do it via high-quality video programming… but right now, that is moot.

I must say, reading the following made me chuckle:

No doubt the valuation will revive talk that we’re in the midst of a bubble. How could a widget company be worth half a billion dollars? What is the revenue model? How could it ever make a profit on slide shows running on other people’s sites? The naysayers have a point, but I’ve long thought Slide was a far more valuable property than the Silicon Valley masses gave it credit for.

Why?  Does this cover remind anyone of anything?  Also written by Lacy:

Too funny.  It will be interesting to see if 2008 adds momentum to digital media asset prices.  I tend to think that yes, because there is a bull market somewhere at all times and in an otherwise slow offline landscape, online seems relentless in  its growth.

Allen & Company helped with the round, incidentally, the funding came from Fidelity Investments and T. Rowe Price.

Told you, Max doesn’t mess around.

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