Site icon Brief News

Billionaire investor Steve Case says the failure of the 2000 AOL Time Warner mega merger taught him a crucial lesson about execution

Steve CaseHollis Johnson/Business Insider

AOL’s founding CEO Steve Case embraced Time Warner head Jerry Levin and raised his fist in triumph at the press conference marking the $ 165 merger of their two companies in January, 2000. It was the largest merger deal in history, resulting in the world’s largest media conglomerate.

Two months later, the dot-com bubble burst, and AOL Time Warner’s valuation came crashing down, setting the context for years of clashes between the two companies’ cultures and ambitions. Case left the board in 2005, writing an editorial in the Washington Post shortly after his departure declaring the merger — which ultimately fell apart in 2009 — a failure.See the rest of the story at Business Insider

NOW WATCH: The CEO of a $ 445 billion fund manager speaks on the future of US tech stocks, inflation, and the next economic downturn

See Also:

SEE ALSO: Billionaire AOL cofounder Steve Case says we’re at the start of the internet’s third wave, and he’s laying the groundwork to benefit from it

Exit mobile version