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CNBC: Ad Revs Up 17 Percent In ‘07, 15,000 Webcast Subscribers

By Joseph Weisenthal - Tue 01 Apr 2008 05:36 AM PST

Yep, CNBC still dominates the cable news game, even if it let upstart rival Fox Business News have MLK day—when foreign markets imploded—all to itself. In fact, as Fortune’s Jessi Hempel points out in a glowing piece on the network, the combination of the credit crunch and line-up of high testosterone programming has fueled higher ratings and profits—ad revenue was up 17 percent in 2007, by one outside estimate to, to $211 million. And really, it’s not so slow footed: on the Monday that Bear Stearns fell to $2 per share, the channel had a documentary ready to go that night (no doubt we’ll be seeing this documentary for some time, probably even next MLK day. Hey, it beats another special on Wal-Mart.).

One dull spot: Digital. The network has significantly beefed up its web presence in recent years, housing it at its natural home, CNBC.com and playing up blogs by its on-air talent. But by one measure, it’s still just the 21st-ranked business site, barely ahead of FBN, which comes in at 23. As for the network’s premium service CNBC Plus, a live streaming webcast that was launched in late 2006, 15,000 subscribers pay either $9.95/month or $99/year. That works out to around $1.5 million per year, so a very narrow sliver of the overall pie. (Ed. note: A little more about CNBC Plus: the subscription includes three commercial-free streams—Asia, Europe and US—and VOD.)

Posted in: Companies, NBC Universal, Information, Biz & Fin


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1 Response:
  • From SlickDealer Tue 01 Apr 2008 01:21 PM

    Who in their right mind would actually subscribe to such a service? If NBC broadcasted their entire lineup online, then maybe, I mean a big maybe, I would consider paying a subscription (definitely sub $5).

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paidContent.org, flagship of the ContentNext Media network, provides global coverage of the business of digital content.

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