sanoma

Is There An Online Future For Old Media?

The two big Finnish “old media” companies, Sanoma and Alma Media, published their 2009 results yesterday and today, respectively. However, as seems to be the common policy, neither of them was too open about the state of their online business. But luckily Alma still offered some nuggets of information for constructing a picture of what’s going on.

The two online legs of an old media company are typically classifieds and editorially driven news sites. Alma’s classifieds segment, which includes such assets as the housing site Etuovi.com and jobs site Monster.fi, posted a loss of €0.7m with an €27m revenue. Sanoma doesn’t give out any information on its online classifieds.

On the online news side, Alma publishes Iltalehti.fi, the biggest website in Finland by unique visitors. Although the full year figures for the asset were not disclosed today, the Q1/09 report from April states a revenue of €1.2m, so the annual income is likely to be around the €5m mark. Given that Iltalehti.fi relies mainly on journalistic content, the site is – after full allocation of editorial costs – most likely loss-making or, if they’re lucky, posting a very small profit.

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Fruugo’s Ownership Structure Revealed

Fruugo logo

Adding to the yesterday’s news on Fruugo’s service launch plans, just this morning the Finnish business media Talouselämä has published the ownership structure of Fruugo.

Risto Siilasmaa, founder and chairman F-Secure, is the biggest owner with 30,9 % share. Fruugo’s founder and Evangelist, Nils ”Nippe” Forsblom is the second biggest owner with almost 30 %. Risto Siilasmaa came aboard in the very beginning and brougth in Nokia chairman Jorma Ollila and the ex-CEO Reijo Syrjäläinen. Jorma Ollila owns 9,4 % of the company. A year ago, Seppo Sairanen (the previous main owner of FIM financial group) invested in the company, and last summer the Finnish media group Sanoma, who’s Kim Ignatius recently entered the board. Sixth biggest owner is Kalle Vuoristo, the CTO of Fruugo.

The full ownership structure of Fruugo, as published by Talouselämä:

Ownership %
First Fellow (Risto Siilasmaa) 30,9
Queensway Dev. (Nils Forsblom) 29,2
Kestrel (Jorma Ollila) 9,4
Optiopaja (Seppo Sairanen) 6,8
Sanoma 5,9
Kalle Vuoristo 5,0

According to the article, Fruugo has burned around 10-15M  euros so far, maybe even more. They have slightly above 60 own employees at the moment, plus tens of consults.

Fruugo is an aggregator bringing the online web stores under one service. Pan-European web commerce is still difficult, but through Fruugo the European web stores can sell their products to the whole Europe, and all consumers can buy the products of all merchant integrated with the service, using their native language and local payment methods. The business model, as we reported yesterday, is based on transaction commissions. The cut Fruugo takes is around 10 percent, more or less depending on the product category. The company believes the rate is justifiable to merchants, as using the service Fruugo will take care of payment systems, fraud management, customer service, and currency exchange.

Fruugo’s public launch is coming up in Q2, but the exact countries are not disclosed. Next Fruugo faces the challenge to make itself known to the millions of European online shoppers.

(See our previous coverage on Fruugo.)

Fruugo Goes After EUR 60 Billion Market with One-Stop Online Mall

Fruugo logo

Fruugo, the ambitious Finnish e-commerce startup (see our previous coverage) has announced (see Reuters’ press release Tarmo Virki’s interview news below) the company is on track to launch closed beta still in January, as stated previously. The service will next open in Sweden by early February. The public opening is planned for April, while the news does not specify in which countries it will be available.

Siilasmaa states in the press release interview they “are working to create a European marketplace, so that all those merchants would find all those consumers and all consumers would find all those merchants.” Fruugo has said before the company wants to be the trusted 3rd party of e-commerce. Based on the latest press release news, this means Fruugo aims to unite the online shopping market by opening a “one-stop mall” for Europeans (Europe is the firm’s main target market for now, as it has declared before as well). Fruugo will have hundreds of links to different online stores available in its mall. This explains why the company has been using user experience and website optimization and monetization consults. The initiative could certainly become something big if the company is able to execute the vision.

The addressable market is around EUR 60 billion ($79.50 billion), the company states, half of the total online shopping market in Europe last year. As Fruugo stated in the autumn, it targets all consumer durables and content sold in physical boxes. According to the news, there are some 30 merchants currently integrated with Fruugo, while further 100 in the process. The merchants carry brands like Lego, L’Oreal, IBM, Nokia, Adidas, Lacoste and Nike.

The big question speculated a long time has been, what is the business model? Fruugo now states it does not collect any sign-up or monthly fees from the merchants, it only charges transaction commissions. Fruugo’s business model is said to mix “online retail with search and price comparison capabilities”, and in addition, social networking, which allows consumers utilize their online networks when seeking the best shopping deals. There isn’t more information given on the last point, but it certainly sounds interesting if Fruugo has created some way of utilizing social search (cf. Google speculations) while shopping for products, which might lead to much more relevant search results and recommendations.

Just recently, to add to Fruugo’s well-known board members Nokia chairman Jorma Ollila and founder and chairman of F-Secure Risto Siilasmaa, Kim Ignatius has joined the company’s board (the news in Finnish). Ignatius is Director of Finance and Administration in the Finnish international Sanoma media group, while he served before as Finance Director of TeliaSonera, the biggest mobile carrier in the Nordics. In the same General meeting the board also allowed usage of stock options. Sanoma has been very active in the past years buying internet and media startups so we will see if the corporation plays any role with Fruugo.

Apparently Fruugo’s cash position is healthy after all, as the owners are reportedly not after quick profits – Siilasmaa states confidently “The day will come when this firm is cash flow positive.”

See full press release interview news below.

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Finnish Blog Platform Vuodatus.net Scores An Exit

Vuodatus.net logoFinnish blog platform vuodatus.net (in Finnish) has scored an exit. Large Finnish media house Alma Media bought vuodatus.net for an undisclosed sum from its founder Tuomas Rinta. Just back in July, Finnish blog Vierityspalkki.fi reported (site in Finnish) that Rinta had stated the site is not up for sale and he was only going to develop it a bit further. Vuodatus.net has around 55,000 blogs on its platform and claims to have around 1,500 new blog posts every day.

The part of the Alma Media that acquired the blog platform, Iltalehti, is the publisher for the third largest printed newspaper in Finland as well as one of the most popular online media in Finland. Clearly Iltalehti has the synergies in mind here and probably aims to cross direct the readers to find new content in Iltalehti and in Vuodatus.net respectively. Iltalehti also bought Telkku.com that we covered previously as well.

There is some clear gathering of web properties here to be seen from the large media houses in Finland. Another big player especially in the Finnish markets, Sanoma, has been buying up web services at an increased pace. Their latest acquisition was the Igglo.fi property, which promised to change the housing business forever.

Edit: Fixed the surname – it’s Rinta and not Rintala, like we falsely quoted.