Saturday, October 13, 2012

Aol to Trim Headcount, Incur Restructuring Charge

AOL Inc. (AOL) recently declared that its Board of Directors has approved a plan to trim one-third of its headcount, as a part of its restructuring program, which also involves shedding some assets.

AOL will incur a restructuring charge of $200 million, including approximately $150 million related to employee severance and benefits. AOL’s divorce from Time Warner Inc. (TWX), a global leader in media and entertainment businesses, took place on Dec 9, 2009.

AOL had been striving to revamp itself to become an independent online company preparing to compete with Google Inc. (GOOG), Yahoo! Inc. (YHOO) and Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) in the U.S. market for online advertising valued at $29 billion. The company will now focus more on capturing online readership by increasing content offerings and providing an online advertising platform.

AOL’s revenue dipped 23% to $777 million in third-quarter 2009 due to a 29% drop in subscription revenue, resulting from sustained subscriber losses and an 18% fall in advertising revenue. AOL lost nearly 438,000 subscribers during the period.

AOL owns and operates more than 80 branded and niche content sites, which include independent music site Spinner, sports site Fanhouse, Engadget for tech news, MapQuest site and social-networking service Bebo.

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