34. Cox Enterprises
Diversified, United States (Private)
Last year’s rank: #14

Digital Content Revenue
$1,200,000,000 (8% of total)
Digital Snapshot
The bulk of the internet revenue at Cox Enterprises comes from Cox Media Group, which includes more than 100 internet services for its newspapers and TV stations; Cox Target Media (direct mail coupon service Valpak with Valpak.com and syndicated coupons to 150+ sites, and recently-acquired Savings.com with social savings service DealPros); online advertising unit Cox Digital Solutions; and from AutoTrader.com, which includes auto bible Kelly Blue Book (kbb.com).
Key Move
Cox Target Media completed its acquisition of Savings.com and Savuu.co.uk this past June, adding the online savings sites and the DealPros social network of savings experts to its Valpak.com service. With the deal, Cox Target Media picked up at least five million monthly uniques from Savings.com and broadened its reach to bargain shoppers at a time when more households see the value in saving.
Our Methodology
Cox Enterprises is private but releases overall revenues and some specifics. By far, the bulk of its digital revenue comes from its majority ownership of AutoTrader.com, contributing $1 billion in revenue in 2011. We estimated digital advertising revenue at $120 million in 2010, but it’s more difficult to build a reliable estimate for 2011. Valpak had revenues of $260 million in 2008 and has been aggressively expanding digitally. Conservatively, we’ll estimate digital revenue in 2011 at $1.2 billion.
Source: Our estimate.
– Dan Frankel
“Creating this list wasn’t easy.”
I can imagine. Manipulating the numbers to get Microsoft into the top 10 must have been really tough.
lol. but seriously, they didn’t manipulate anything. this info is from public data on revenues and their entire methodology is described here: http://paidcontent.org/2012/07/31/pc50/52/
Yes, but they still should have had time to comment on the fact that MSN is no longer part of Microsoft and hasn’t been for several weeks. Sure that means they get to claim the revenue for this year but at least point out that they won’t have it next year.
AlanL:
The Microsoft profile page says: “Microsoft recently sold its stake in MSNBC.com.”
And the research period for all companies here predates that sale.
Any revenue change as a result will be reflected in next year’s pC50.
Thanks.
Does this list distinguish between companies that charge users for access and those that do not, or was that weighted in the rankings?
Why is eBay not in this list? They have an ad business on eBay.com and their classified sites, and the seller fees they collect are essentially paid ads since the platform doesn’t handle the items. This list is also missing Alibaba Group from China (including Taobao), and Gree from Japan.
Groupon and Monster are’t really media companies. I’m not even sure that ad agencies should qualify in the same category as Viacom or Time Warner. Totally different business model.
What about Valve and their digital games platform: Steam. I know they are a private company and figures are hard to come by but in 2011 Forbes reckoned they have more than 50% of the 4 billion dollar PC games download market. That is huge.
I would really love to see Paid Content do some investigation on Valve because they are an incredibly innovative company who really push digital retailing to its limits.
+1 on looking into Valve
Google+ is a big strategy shift for Google and could, if executed well, become another digital revenue stream ti augment the search cash cow.
I think this is a terrific list despite any reservations some people have about the methodology. It really demonstrates the huge growth potential of digital media companies in some of the emerging markets. Also, as a scientist – I note Elsevier being top 5 in revenue (Elsevier is publisher behind many of the top scientific journals).
Thanks for the pointer on Valve.
Groupon/Monster/eBay – yes, all interestingly debatable.
What makes me wonder ist, taht there under th etzop 50 is not a single company from Germany. Germany is the biggest market in EUropa, but no German Hundefutter among the big player. I don’t buy that.
kenhasselblad – Axel Springer is at #33.
You might want to add Hubert Burda Media (Germany). Digital Revenue 2011: 937.2 Euro (see http://www.hubert-burda-media.de/chameleon/outbox/public/86cee9e5-720f-fba9-3dc2-33982b8b5069/Media_in_Transition_2012.pdf , page 131)
Best, Sebastian (Hubert Burda Media)
Thomson Reuters?! After Eikon failure & loss of half staff..? Are you mad.
If you want to rank things on revenue, fine. But then don’t call it the ‘Most Succesful List’: Microsoft might ‘make’ $3.9b on digital content, but it also loses around $3b every year too.
i know a thing that advertising is the best method to rank your own thing in front of the people
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I am a freelancing SEO and SMM professional. The recent update of google penguin and panda has changed the SEO pattern radically.
And google has done this algorithm change to spread their digital ads business nothing than this.
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Tripadvisor is all digital media and is around $750 M in yearly revenue and should likely be included on this list.