News Corp. digital chief Jonathan Miller talks MySpace with Fortune's Jessi Hempel.
(Credit: Ina Fried/CNET)PASADENA, Calif.--News Corp. digital chief Jonathan Miller said Thursday that MySpace needs a culture shift that focuses on spotting changes in consumer behavior and adapting more quickly.
"One of the things about this medium is you have to continually develop product," Miller said, speaking at the Brainstorm: Tech conference here. "You can't just put something on the shelf."
For MySpace, that means focusing on doing a few things well. Asked about Rupert Murdoch's recent comments that MySpace should focus on entertainment, Miller said: "When you get involved in companies that need to regain their way, the key thing you have to find out is who are you really."
Entertainment is a big piece of who MySpace is, Miller said. "MySpace has, since its inception, has had meaningful impact in how culture and pop culture (specifically) has been defined."
Although MySpace has fallen behind, he said that the key is becoming quicker at spotting the trends just now emerging, rather than catching up in all the areas it has missed.
"You can't play catch-up or at least you can't do it very much," he said. To spot new trends, he said that the company needs small groups specialized on specific tasks, as opposed to a large, matrix-based organization.
On the publishing side of the business, Miller said News Corp. and indeed lots of the leaders in print and book publishing will start getting much more aggressive this fall.
"The business models have to be creative," Miller said. "You have to leverage the assets you have while they are still vibrant."
While some attendees grumbled that speakers were less than forthcoming, that could most certainly not be said for Rupert Murdoch, who was plenty outspoken in his evening chat.
I posted my take earlier, but here's some video, courtesy of the All Things D site.
Part 1:
Part 2:
Click here for full coverage of the D: All Things Digital conference.
CARLSBAD, Calif.--Rupert Murdoch, who is no stranger to the Microsoft-Yahoo affair, said even he is shaking his head at the lack of a deal.
"I'm mystified," Murdoch said. "I cannot understand the whole thing. Jerry Yang is a friend who we all love and admire and he's emotional about it."
Murdoch said that Microsoft offered a price that the vast majority of shareholders wanted but that Yang managed, at least for now, to fend them off. At the same, time, he said he's surprised Microsoft didn't press the point, something he said comes from their lack of mega-deal experience.
"They're not used to big deals, to buying big things," Murdoch said.
Murdoch said if he were Microsoft, he would have put the offer out there and let shareholders do the work for them. "You aim the gun. You decide to fire the gun. You've just got to sit and wait. It will come to you."
He is dubious, though, that a Microsoft-Yahoo deal isn't a merger that will actually come to fruition. "I think that will be rejected by the board, by everybody."
Murdoch also put in his two cents about whether Yahoo deals should be held up by regulators. "It would be very sad," he said. "Google is so good. (The have the) best search engine by far. They are just going on, getting bigger and bigger. It is just gushing money. You can see why Microsoft is worried."
On Carl Icahn's move, he said, "That's not serious. He wants to make a couple hundred million dollars for himself."
The noise helps Microsoft's cause, he said, but as for the actual proxy threat, he said, "If I were a Yahoo director, I wouldn't be worried about that."
Although Murdoch himself was once a player in a potential joint venture that would combine Microsoft, Yahoo, and Fox's MySpace assets, he said that deal appears to be off the table.
Murdoch also addressed plenty of other topics.
On Hulu: "We wanted to control our copyrights and we thought this would be a pretty good way of doing it."
On Google's gripes about social-networking advertising: "They shouldn't be griping," he said. "They said they never expected to make that money the first year."
That said, "we want them, whatever happens, not to lose money at least on the third year," Murdoch said. He also praised them as "great partners."
"We love them," he said. "I think they are the greatest company in America."
He did say that the public does want choice: "You don't want anybody to be a monopoly and own everything."
On Yahoo: They made a fatal mistake. They bought Overture and sat on it for two years. "They have a huge job a head of them to hold onto their 20 percent, let alone to grow it. I wish them a lot of luck."
On Microsoft's search ambitions: "How can they build on their 8 or 9 percent? God knows. I'm not an expert, but this doesn't appear to be their expertise."
Asked about Fox News, Murdoch responded that broadcaster, like Brit Hume, have both sides represented on their shows.
Conference co-host Walt Mossberg responds: "He has both sides on, but he kicks the crap out of one of them."
Click here for full coverage of the D: All Things Digital conference.
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