'Day After' Analysis
(courtesy New York Post)
May 16
The purchase promises to transform CBS, previously an also-ran online, into one of the Top 10 biggest players on the Web in terms of traffic, with upwards of 54 million unique users per month in the US and over 200 million eyeballs around the world.
CNET, headed by Neil Ashe, claims 160 million users worldwide across a broad network of sites including CNET.com, Game- Spot, MP3.com, TV.com, ZDNet, News.com, UrbanBaby, Search.com, MySimon, and TechRepublic.
CBS currently claims 40 million users of its own branded properties like CBS.com, CBSSports.com and CBSNews.com as well as other popular sites like music site Last.fm.
"This is a chance to make sure we have complementary assets and properties in high-end premium content online where we are actually seeing real businesses being driven," Quincy Smith, president, CBS Interactive, told The Post. "Inside CBS there's more of an opportunity for CNET to unleash its assets and grow them further."
Moonves added in a statement that CBS is picking up a profitable, growing Internet business, and increased exposure to the fastest-growing online ad businesses.
SMH Capital analyst David Miller noted that the strategy is not cheap, pointing out that the price tag is "certainly expensive given the current environment."
And one online ad executive questioned whether CNET is "the answer" to CBS' digital strategy, saying that he saw more "little synergies" that involve using unused ad inventory to promote properties.