Salto Partners

  • Home
  • About
  • Services
    • Board Advisory Services
    • Corporate Governance
    • Sales Excellence
  • Verticals
    • Technology
    • Life Sciences
    • Privately Held Companies
  • Blog
  • Contact

November 14, 2012 by admin

Groupon November 2012

Talked to ECommerce Times about Groupon this week. Here is the upshot.

Groupon reported another quarter of disappointing earnings as its core business stagnated. It’s stock went down 30 percent to an all-time low of $2.76 and this might not be the end of it. Also one of its major rivals, Living Social, is piling up losses. Amazon.com was forced to write down its Living Social investment as result. There are a number of reasons why companies such a Groupon are struggeling. The macro economic headwinds are one of them. But they won’t explain the landslide in the stock price from $25 in November of 2011 to sub $3 only 12 months later.

The key question is: Is Groupon’s current model good business. Let’s take a look at the merchant side first. A Raymond James survey of roughly 115 merchants that used daily deals services during the fall found that 39 percent of merchants said they were not likely to run another Groupon promotion over the next couple of years. That is a big blow. The top reasons were high commission rate and low rate of repeat customers gained through offering a promotion. 32 percent of the merchants reported are losing money on the promotions. Nearly 40 percent said the Groupon offer was less effective than other types of marketing.

Let’s take a look at the consumer side. Existing customers interested in signing up for daily deals has waned too. Groupon reported last week that the average revenue per active customer (defined as an account that has purchased a deal from the site in the previous 12 months) fell to $63.96 in the 12 months to September 30 from $76.49 a year earlier. Meanwhile, Groupon has to knock on increasingly more doors to find willing merchants who want to participate. What’s even more important is that this approach scales with the size of the sales work force. It doesn’t scale as a function of its superior technology. In short this means high operating costs, less profits, increasingly higher management complexity.

It’s time for Groupon to reinvent themselves. The daily deal aspect of its business doesn’t have to go. It needs augmentation. Other companies have successfully transformed themselves. Take eBay as an example. They were once the leader of the “used goods” market place. It’s now one of the dominating e-Commerce platforms for all types of merchants featuring a same day delivery service rivaling Walmart and Amazon.com. A similar transformation for Groupon is needed. Groupon Goods is the right step in this direction.

Here you find the full story: http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/Groupon-Loses-Its-Grip-76600.html

Filed Under: Blog Posts Tagged With: Andreas Scherer, ECommerce Times, Groupon, Living Social, Salto Partners

October 24, 2012 by admin

Facebook Q3 2012 Earnings

Facebook’s earnings report was better than expected. The company had revenues of $1.262 billion in Q3 2012. That’s a 32.285% increase from the same period last year.  GAAP Net income was a loss of $59 million mainly due to share based compensation costs and related tax roll expenses. Otherwise the company posted solid operating margins. Wall Street expectations had been slightly lower.

During the earnings call Mark Zuckerberg highlighted some major breakthroughs. First, Facebook has more than a billion people using the site each month. Second, 600 million people are using mobile devices to share and connect. The last three months were crucial for Facebook in terms of its mobile strategy. Facebook made $153 million in sales from mobile advertisements, a revenue stream that didn’t exist seven months ago. Mobile revenue is 14% of advertising revenue in Q3.

 Zuckerberg made mobile a strong priority for the company. And it showed. Facebook completed the rebuild of its app for iOS. It improved of the platform for mobile developers by launching new software development kits for iOS and Android as well as a deeper integrating into iOS 6.0.

Facebook had a positive Q3 2012. But the exciting results of its mobile ad business are not the answer to all questions either. Facebook is still playing catch-up. eMarketer estimated the size of mobile at revenue at $2.61 billion this year.  $153 million mobile ad revenue is just a fraction to the total market opportunity. Investors will keep watching how aggressively Facebook is able to ramp up its mobile business.

You can read the full article here.

Filed Under: Blog Posts Tagged With: Andreas Scherer, Earnings, ECommerce Times, Facebok, Q3 2012, Salto Partners

October 19, 2012 by admin

eBay Earnings Q3 2012

Yesterday I had commented on eBay’s latest earnings. Here is the upshot.

eBay reported GAAP net income of 45 cents per share or $597 million. This is up 22% compared to  same period a year ago. Revenue was $3.4 billion in the quarter, up 15% from $2.97 billion in the year-ago period. The adjusted net income was 55 cents per share or $718 million. This is an increase of 14% from the last year Q3 numbers. Profits were a tad higher than expected. Revenue a tad lower. Overall a good performance.

It’s worth to point out that its PayPal unit did well. It reported 117.4 million active accounts. This is an increase of 14% from a year. Revenue was $1.367 billion, up 23% from a year ago. PayPal is a success story within eBay.

Still, eBay has the image of selling used goods. Of course this is not what company is all about these days. Many retailers use the site as an outlet to sell their goods online. eBay responded earlier this month. It has given its website a make-over with a fresher Pinterest-like touch and feel. Around the same time, it launched eBay Now, a new same day shipping service that enables people to get products delivered from local retailers. This positions eBay well against Walmart that is piloting a similar service in selected markets. It also counters Amazon strategy of deploying more local warehouses.

The holiday season is ahead of us. Prime time for eCommerce retailers. eBay appears to be ready.

You can read the entire article here.

Filed Under: Blog Posts Tagged With: eBay, ECommerce Times, Q3 2012, Salto Partners

October 19, 2012 by admin

Google Earnings Q3 2012

 Talked with ECommerce Times about Google’s Q3 numbers.

Google earnings report came as a surprise. It was earlier than expected. It was worse than expected. The company posted third-quarter earnings excluding items of $9.03 per share, down from $9.72 a share a year ago. However, revenue increased 51 percent to $11.33 billion from $7.51 billion a year ago.

The good news first. There is growth. The company is operating relatively well in a slow macroeconomic environment. But even Google is feeling the heat – at least a little.

First, the company revealed that its average cost-per-click declined 15 percent compared to the third quarter a year ago. This is a key metric to watch since it is core to Google’s business and income potential. Click prices have been under pressure for a number of quarters. It’s in Google’s best interest to stop this trend.

Second, Google has to absorb operational losses from Motorola Mobility. Investors hope that this will be only a temporary phenomenon as executives are working hard to turn this business unit around.

A 51% top line growth year over year would be for most business excellent news. For Google the expectations were higher. It missed analyst expectations by $530 million. The market has hoped that they would report earnings excluding items of $10.65 a share. They didn’t. Google slipped in Q3 of 2012.

You can read the article here.

Filed Under: Blog Posts Tagged With: ECommerce Times, Google, Q3 2012, Salto Partners

October 18, 2012 by admin

IBM Q3 2012 Earnings

It’s earnings season. Talked to ECommerce Times this morning on IBM’s Q3.

IBM reported third-quarter sales of $24.7 billion . This is below Wall Street expectations of $25.4 billion. The weak performance was across all IBM business segments, including services and software. IBM hardware sales fell 13% to $3.9 billion. Net income was flat at $3.8 billion, which means IBM did a good job managing its costs. It was able to increase its gross profit margin by 0.9%. Well done. The big issue is growth.

IBM is dealing with two major issues.

Like any other tech companies IBM is battling a weak world economy. Things in the US are slow. The Europeans trying to avoid an economic Armageddon with Greece being on the brink of default and Spain being on the verge of having to request a bailout. These countries are followed by Italy, Portugal and Ireland. Other European economies do better but overall things are not looking good. China has slowed down as well. IBM’s business depends heavily on companies making expensive infrastructure decisions. Those are easily postponed in times of uncertainty.

The second problem for IBM is that it doesn’t have any “cool gadgets”. They sell PCs which are more like office workhorses than fun devices. However, people buy with their discretionary income tablets, smart tvs, smartphones and gaming consoles. IBM has no market share in these market segments.

It’s unlikely that IBM will be competing against the Apple’s of this world anytime soon. For IBM the hope is that its bets on higher-profit software and services, such as data analysis and cloud computing, are paying off.

You can read the full article here.

Filed Under: Blog Posts Tagged With: ECommerce Times, IBM, Q3 2012, Salto Partners

  • 1
  • 2
  • Next Page »

Social Media

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Five Key Phases of a Turnaround

Turnarounds are not for the fainthearted among us.  Turning around a troubled entity is complex. There are many stakeholders: a nervous board, a thin-skinned management team and worried employees are just the beginning. There are customers who might run for the exits, partners second guessing their alliances. Public companies need to deal with the stock market expectations while […]

Bubble 2.0: Is It Happening Again?

Facebook bought Instagram for $1 billion. It paid that kind of money for a photo sharing app that can be used for free. Instagram has no revenue. For those of us who have been around the block for a while, deals like this are like déjà vu. We have seen this all before, way back […]

Lessons Learned from the Facebook IPO

After months of media hype we sobered up rather quickly. The Facebook IPO revealed some surprising lessons learned about the US stock market system. We learned that the NASDAQ, a trading platform that is in business since 1971 and that supposedly has more trading volume than any other electronic stock exchange in the world, can […]

Copyright © 2025 · Executive Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in