More Comcast News: 11/2/2011

NBC ownership highlights Comcast's programming investment risks (LA Times: Company Town)

On the Call: Comcast Execs on New TV Technology (AP via ABC News)

Comcast CEO: Telemundo Soccer World Cup Rights Deal 'Should Be Profitable' (Hollywood Reporter)

For Comcast, broadband grows fast, video losses slow (Gigaom)

QOTD: Cable Guy Actually Broadband Guy (All Things Digital)
"We do see ourselves, and the mantra inside the company is to think of ourselves, as an ISP". -Charter Communications CEO Mike Lovett.



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Comcast reports mixed results

Tom Paine



Comcast announced its third quarter results today, and though earnings per share were slightly below Wall Street's consensus expectations, overall Comcast's numbers helped to quelled some concerns about bigger problems for the cable business based on other recent earnings reports.

On a pro forma basis (comparing this year to last including results from NBCU and Universal Orlando from last year), revenue was up 4.9% for the quarter to $14.3 billion, and operating cash flow increased 3.2% to $4.6 billion, or 5% excluding certain Olympics and acquisition-related accounting revisions and costs. Earnings per share were $0.33 per share, against $0.31 per share last year.

Cable Communications revenue was up 5% for the quarter to $9.3 billion,  lead by Business Services, which grew by almost 40% and now has an annual run rate of almost $2 billion, and High Speed Internet, which grew almost 10%. A closely watched metric, video subscriber losses, were 165,000 for the quarter, down from 275,000 in the same quarter last year.

NBCU revenue increased 4.6% in the quarter to $5.2 billion. After adjustments, operating cash flow was essentially flat.  Cable Networks and Theme Parks showed good growth, but Broadcast Television grew only 2.9% and Filmed Entertainment revenue was off 7.8%. Operating cash flow from Broadcast Television was only slightly positive after adjustments. Operating cash flow from Cable Communication was $3.7 billion, versus $1 billion for NBCU after adjustments.

Some other key points that came up during the conference call:


  • Comcast's IP-based Xcalibur platform, currently in test market in Augusta, GA, is expected to begin rollout to other areas early next year.
  • Brian Roberts spoke of Telemundo's recently secured (Spanish-language) World Cup rights as being a big win for that network, and something that Comcast can cross-promote over many of its platforms.
  • Super Bowl advertising inventory is 90% sold out.
  • The Docsis 3.0 and Digital conversions are essentially complete.
  • Business Services is expanding its efforts to reach larger accounts.
Comcast shares are essentially flat for the day.

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Publicis integrates Philly-based Digitas Health and Razorfish Health into New York-based Healthcare group

Tom Paine

Last week the huge French ad agency, Publicis, announced it was integrating its two Philly-based digital healthcare agencies, Digitas Health and Razorfish Health, into its New York-based Publicis Healthcare Communications Group (PHCG). This is another step in an evolving strategy as Publicis aligns its many healthcare marketing assets. Publicis' announcement says the two agencies will "operate as stand-alone brands within PHCG". Though reporting to New York, both units will remain headquartered in Philadelphia. With Digitas Health CEO and co-founder David Kramer having just announced his retirement the week before, Michael du Toit and Alexandra von Plato, who serve as co-Presidents of both agencies, will report to PHCG President and Chief Executive Officer Nick Colucci. PHCG has other units based in Yardley, including Saatchi & Saatchi Healthcare Innovations, Publicis Healthware International, and Publicis Touchpoint Solutions.

Not included in PHCG is any part of Hamilton, NJ-based Rosetta Marketing, which has a substantial digital healthcare marketing business, in both the OTC and ethical categories. Rosetta, which Publicis acquired last May for $575 million, is headed by CEO and founder Chris Kuenne, who reports directly to Jean-Yves Naouri, chief operating officer of Publicis Groupe.

Digitas Health grew out of Medical Broadcasting Corporation, founded by Kramer and Linda Holliday in Philadelphia in 1990. Originally concentrating on video production (thus the name) before turning to interactive media, it was acquired by Boston-based Digitas in 2006 for about $30 million; Publicis in turn announced it would acquire Digitas at the end of 2006 for $1.3 billion. Digitas Health has grown rapidly, with revenue reported as being well over $100 million, though in July it laid off 57 staff out of its total workforce of about 624 employees. Digitas Health and Razorfish Health took a first step towards integration in June, when du Toit and von Plato were appointed to their current positions, reporting to Kramer.

The much smaller Razorfish Health was split off last year from Razorfish, which Publicis acquired from Microsoft for $530 million in 2009.

While there are several other sizeable or important digital healthcare agencies either based or with offices in the area (see my post from earlier this year), none of the others have that kind of scale.



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Daily Links 11/1/2011: Checkpoint reports loss, Vishay cites "unexpected drop in demand"

Obama names FCC commissioners, both agency, Hill veterans (Washington Post: Post Tech)

Earnings Preview: Comcast to report 3Q earnings (AP via MSNBC)

Baseball eyes new $1 billion TV contract in off-season (Reuters via Fox News)
Will Comcast be a player?

Broadcast networks will rake in retransmission fees, report says (LA Times: Company Town)
NBC has most to gain, report says.

On the Media: Will computer tablets help save newspapers?
In the fragmenting media landscape, a Philadelphia publisher embarks on a bold experiment.
(LA Times)

Matchbin Acquires NAVTEQ Broadcast Media Division to Form Radiate Media, Closes $22 Million Financing (Business Wire)

PANL: Gabelli, Piper Tussle Over Promise And Peril (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)
On OLED technology firm Universal Display of Ewing, NJ.

Checkpoint reports 3rd quarter loss (AP via MSNBC)

Vishay Reports Results for Third Quarter 2011 (Business Wire)
“In the third quarter, Vishay was confronted with an unexpected drop of demand", CEO Dr. Gerald Paul said.

Kenexa Announces Financial Results for Third Quarter 2011 (Business Wire)


Entercom the latest radio company to report essentially flat Q3 revenue (Radio-Info.com)

SAP in Arab Spring Push to Make Up for Southern Europe Slump
(Bloomberg)

Air Force mulls changes as major ERP system project stumbles (Computerworld)
While this story is about an Oracle implementation, an SAP project for the Army has also been reported to be in trouble.



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Highlights: Last week on Philly Tech News (10/24-10/30 2011)

I talked to PlaySay founder Ryan Meinzer about the venture's move to DC, its VC funding and product plans.

I look at some of the recent Venture news in the Philly area, including funding for DuckDuckGo, Philly-based Q&A startup Quewey, and Conshohocken-based SaaS insurance vendor Unirisx.

On the heels of Digitas Health co-founder & CEO David Kramer's retirement announcement, Publicis says it will integrate Digitas Health and Razorfish Health, both of which are Philly-based, into its New York-based Publicis Healthcare Communications Group.

NBC Sports officially announces it will move its headquarters to Connecticut (hope they have a good backup power supply), including Versus, which has been primarily Philly-based and will be renamed the NBC Sports Network in January. So much for the hope of having the next ESPN in the area.

And two of the hottest tech companies in the Philly area, Radnor-based QlikTech and Horsham-based NextGen Healthcare's parent Quality Systems both report strong quarterly results, and Quality Systems approves a stock split.



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Daily Links 10/31/2011: appMobi introduces MobiUs to accelerate Mobile HTML5 Development

Your Response to Occupy Wharton (Wharton Journal)
Continued debate over Occupy Philly's conflict with some in the Wharton community over U.S. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor's cancelled speech.

Analysis: Too many start-ups chase too little cash (Reuters)

Interactive Ads: Cable’s Future May Already Have Passed (Bloomberg Business Week)

Cable Is Holding Web TV at Bay, Earnings Show (New York Times)

NBCUniversal to Invest Millions to Enhance Local News at 10 NBC TV Stations (Hollywood Reporter)
Including WCAU in Philadelphia.

McDermott addresses questions over SAP BusinessObjects 4.0, HANA (SearchSAP.com)

MobiUs Accelerates Mobile HTML5 Development, Aims to Kill Mobile Flash (ReadWriteWeb)
New browser released by Lancaster-based appMobi.

TicketLeap Ticket-scanning comes to iPhone with Launch of iOS App (PR Web)

Exclaim Mobility Acquires SmrtGuard Mobile Security Cloud-service Applications (BusinessWire)

Once Hot Startup SimpleGeo Sells For A Loss To Urban Airship (Silicon Alley Insider)
First Round Capital was an investor in SimpleGeo.

Newspaper Next, Five Years Later (Recovering Journalist)

Philly daily newspapers in search for new home (Philly.com: Philly Deals)



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Comcast cranks up its research labs to quickly create new video products (Denver Post)



Here's How Much VCs Actually Care About Their Investments Making Money (Business Insider)
Article features a look at David Nevas of Edison Ventures.

Motorola to cut 800 jobs (Marketwatch)
Including some in its Horsham-based Home business segment.


Philly Tech News VentureWatch: 10/28/2011: DuckDuckGo, Quewey, Quiq and more

Tom Paine


The amount of funding for Gabriel Weinberg's search engine DuckDuckGo was $3 million, according to an SEC filing. The main investor was prominent New York-based VC Union Square Ventures, joined by several individual investors. DuckDuckGo has only a miniscule sliver of the overall search market, but its different model-not algorithm driven, no user tracking-has gained some traction. Union Square Ventures' Brad Burnham wrote in a blog post: "We invested in DuckDuckGo because we became convinced that it was not only possible to change the basis of competition in search, it was time to do it". Weinberg, who said he held off on taking funding as long as possible, will use the funds to finally hire some other employees and expand infrastructure.

Unirisx, the Conshohocken-based provider of a SaaS platform for the Insurance industry, recently raised another $1 million in debt-based financing, in addition to $1.4 million in debt-based financing it raised earlier this year, according to an SEC filing. Investors raised $7 million in equity in 2009 to acquire the company. Past investors have included Jaguar Capital Partners, Permit Capital LLC and MIM Capital. The highly respected former Harleysville Group CIO Akhil Tripathi is CEO, and Zurich Financial Services is a major client. Unirisx started as a spinoff from Unisys' British subsidiary.

Quewey, a Philadelphia-based business oriented Q&A site, has apparently raised $250,000, according to a filing hot off the press. They haven't launched in Beta yet, but you can see their blog here.

Blue Bell-based Quiq, Inc., which provides a system enabling perscriptions to be dispensed directly to patients in a physician's office, has raised over $2 million, according to SEC filings shown by FormDs.com.

OpenDesks' (Conshohocken) recently released iPhone app for locating temporary work spaces in 133 cities around the country got a nice mention in the New York Times (at the bottom of the article) .

The New Jersey Technology Council has named mVisum a finalist for its Early-Stage Company of the Year Award, the Cherry Hill Courier-Post reports. mVisum, which is based in the Rutgers-Camden Technology Campus, allows medical professionals to securely receive, review, and respond to patient data recorded at the point of care.



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Daily Links 10/28/2011: Publicis to merge Digitas Health, Razorfish Health into larger group

Publicis merges digital agencies into larger group (InPharm)
Philly-based digital agencies Digitas Health and Razorfish Health are to be merged into the larger Publicis Healthcare Communications Group (PHCG).
Publicis Press Release. This comes shortly after the announcement of David Kramer's retirement.

SunGard Announces Third Quarter 2011 Results (Business Wire)

SAP hiring 'a few hundred' here, more in 2012 (Philly.com: Philly Deals)

Sprint Said Near Deal With Clearwire for New Multiyear Agreement (Bloomberg)

Comcast commits to bring more broadband to Innovation District (Mass High Tech)
Does Comcast have similar plans for parts of Philly?

Google TV Software Update Ready, but New Hardware Will Have to Wait (All Things Digital)

Cablevision Shares Plunge
Nears 52-Week Low After Disappointing Quarter
(Multichannel News)

Lockheed Reports Flat Space Revenue (Space News)



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