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Microsoft Advertising Businesses The Almighty Buck

Microsoft Writes Off $6.2 Billion From aQuantive Acquisition 115

An anonymous reader writes "Microsoft had high hopes for aQuantive when it paid $6.3 billion to acquire the combo online marketing services vendor/advertising agency in 2007, evidently in response to Google's acquisition of DoubleClick. 'Microsoft is intensely committed to creating a thriving advertising business and to partnering closely with all key constituencies in this industry to help maximize the digital advertising opportunity for all,' declared CEO Steve Ballmer. Yesterday Microsoft wrote off $6.2 billion of its investment in aQuantive, as its online division continues to struggle. MS-watcher Mary Jo Foley points out this is one in a list of bad purchases from Microsoft. On the bright side, Microsoft managed to recover an estimated $500 million three years ago from the deal when it sold off the Razorfish ad agency (not sure why this amount wasn't subtracted from today's writedown)."
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Microsoft Writes Off $6.2 Billion From aQuantive Acquisition

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  • by Compaqt ( 1758360 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2012 @03:07PM (#40532073) Homepage

    Any accountant want to explain exactly what "wrote off" means?

    Granted a unit might not be making as much profit as desired, but does this mean they gutted the whole thing, sold the desks, and gave the chairs to Steve Ballmer?

  • Wow, 6.2 Billion... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by NalosLayor ( 958307 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2012 @04:29PM (#40533321)
    Wow, 6.2 Billion. That's a damn big chunk of change to spend and get nothing to show for it. I'm pretty sure Elon Musk could build a permanent manned moon base for 6.2 billion, and Microsoft, apparently can't even sell an ad. Of course, this is emblematic of Microsoft's lost decade (the years since Bill became a philanthropist): Microsoft decides a field is going to be hot, buys a reasonable player, mangles it, and then six months later shuts it down as a "failure". They have become like a child with ADHD -- abandoning things as soon as the next shiny object passes into view. It's sad, because they seem to be unable to learn from their experiences.

An Ada exception is when a routine gets in trouble and says 'Beam me up, Scotty'.

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