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Karmazin's Task: Selling Satellite Radio to Investors
With the once-improbable merger of XM and Sirius near completion,
the consummate salesman needs to persuade Wall Street that satellite
radio has a future.
By Scott Moritz
April 4, 2008
Mel Karmazin has proven throughout his career
that he's a world class salesman. But with the merger of the
nation's two satellite radio broadcasters Sirius and XM nearing
its once-improbable completion Karmazin has a real sales challenge:
Convincing investors that there's a profitable future ahead
for a medium that has conspicuously failed to turn a profit
at any time since it was founded a decade ago.
Until now, satellite radio has depended on subscription fees to
service the huge debt it has piled on to build out its business,
but investors and even the companies recognize that they must
find more sales avenues to have any hope of turning a profit.
As a service, the
$13-a-month, 100-plus-channel programming has its fans. The
combined company also has 17 million users—if you count
new cars on dealers' lots. But it has never had a winning
business model. In fact, the two companies have operated with
staggering losses. At the end of 2007, the combined accumulated
deficit for both companies was a deep pool of red ink totaling
$8.6 billion. And last month, both companies stopped offering
any financial guidance or predictions on when or if the business
could swing to a profit.
One option that
could open a spigot of revenue—an approach that Karmazin,
who will serve as CEO of the merged operation, has known since
he was 17—is to sell radio ads.
Analysts and investors
viewed Karmazin's arrival in 2004 as a sign that Sirius was
entering maturity. Karmazin's media industry savvy could help
bolster the subscription revenue model with a second prong:
ad sales. Under Karmazin, ad sales eventually grew to about
4% of all revenue.
A Sirius representative
said the company hopes to make advertising 10% of total revenue.
As the combined company gets closer to 20 million subscribers,
it becomes a "tier one" player and "able to
charge more and get more money" from advertising, the
rep said. "Our goal is to have a dual source of revenue."
The Sirius chief
has had some practice in the art of selling. He ran Infinity
broadcasting for 15 years and sold it to CBS, then sold CBS
to Viacom for $37 billion. He joined Sirius in 2004 and sold
it to Wall Street as a new digital media for the mass market,
rather than a cash-burning furnace. He sold Howard Stern on
the idea of leaving free radio and his 12 million—according
to one count by the LA Times—fans for the artistic freedom
of an unregulated format enjoyed by hundreds of thousands
of paying customers. (A $500 million pay package didn't hurt.)
The Stern deal was one of Karmazin's first moves and tellingly,
it included an ad revenue sharing arrangement with the shock
jock.
Now, Karmazin is
poised to close his biggest sale of late: The merger of two
companies that had a no-combination clause written into the
terms of their licenses. The Federal Communications Commission
is expected to approve the deal in the next few weeks. Analysts
expect its OK will carry some conditions like price caps,
combined programming packages and possibly a requirement to
reserve some channels for outside media or divest some small
portion of its airwaves.
But does a win
in satellite radio really count as a win?
The need to diversify
revenue streams has become increasingly evident. New user
signup rates have dropped dramatically from their peak in
2004, and without sky's-the-limit growth prospects, the companies'
glaring cash consumption and huge ongoing financing needs
scared investors away. The stock trades at $3.09, or about
5% of its peak value of $63.25 in 2000.
To make matters
worse, Karmazin must now navigate his way through a rapidly
weakening economic environment and much less friendly credit
markets too. Consumers focused on the price of bread and milk
are likely to be less interested in paying for premium radio.
And lenders are likely to force higher interest rates on Karmazin,
if he attempts to refinance about $1.5 billion in XM debt,
and seeks additional financing for continued operations, as
analysts expect.
The pressure could
be enough to push Karmazin into an ad selling frenzy—or
at least that's the hope of long-suffering investors.
As the recipient
of a brand new gift—a monopoly on the national satellite
radio market—it is easy to see how appealing the advertising
opportunity would be. Not only does satellite blanket the
country and serve largely affluent customers, the format has
ideal niches for very targeted ads.
There is a rub
here however. Satellite radio's pitch has typically been a
commercial-free departure from conventional radio. The company
says it plans to keep its music channels commercial free.
Channels like talk radio, news and sports have carried ads,
but there's been little if any advertising on the music channels,
at least to date.
"If that is
the growth plan, then there is a problem in the road ahead,"
says one former Sirius and XM investor. "I find it hard
to understand why people would need to pay for radio if they're
going to be deluged with the same ads that made them shift
to paid radio to begin with," the money manager added.
Of course, if there
is one person that can sell it, it's probably Karmazin.
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