Entity Dossier
Company

Ticketmaster

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Cornerstone MoveEquity Stakes for Distribution LeverageCompetitive AdvantageCableLabs Royalty-Free Standards PlayCornerstone MoveStock Architecture to Lock ControlCompetitive AdvantageBlackout as Franchise LeverageCapital StrategyTax-Sheltered Growing AnnuityCapital StrategyInsurance Company Capital Over BanksSignature MoveNever Bet the Whole FarmStrategic PatternWarrants as Industry Coordination CurrencyDecision FrameworkEmpathy as Negotiation ArchitectureSignature MoveThrow the Keys on the TableSignature MoveOwn a Small Piece of a Winner You Can't RunOperating PrincipleDecentralized Cowboys with Centralized BenchmarksRisk DoctrineWhat If Not as Decision FilterStrategic PatternScale Economics as Survival DoctrineSignature MoveAsk One Sharp Question to Crack Open IntelSignature MoveCash Flow Not Earnings as CurrencyCornerstone MoveBuy the System, Pay With Its Own Cash FlowIdentity & CultureIntrovert's Edge Through ListeningOperating PrincipleDenial as Quality ControlIdentity & CulturePrincipal or Employee, No Middle GroundSignature MoveInstinct Over Data as Decision DoctrineCornerstone MoveOne Dumb Step Then Course-Correct at SpeedOperating PrincipleCreative Conflict as Decision EngineDecision FrameworkSerendipity as Career Navigation SystemCornerstone MoveControl Hardwired or Walk AwaySignature MoveHire Sparky Blank Slates Over Credentialed VeteransCompetitive AdvantageContrarian Counterprogramming as Market EntryStrategic PatternScreens as Interactive Commerce SurfacesCornerstone MoveSeize Mismanaged Clay and Sculpt ItCapital StrategyCash the Lucky Check ImmediatelySignature MoveMaterial First, Never the PackageIdentity & CultureFearlessness Borrowed from Greater TerrorOperating PrincipleDrill to Molecular Understanding Before ActingSignature MoveSpin Out What You Build, Never Hoard ScaleSignature MoveTorture the Process Until Truth Rings

Primary Evidence

"Paul was a bona fide futurist, a believer in the societal benefits of a wired world, and by 1998 he would buy a controlling stake in one of the largest U.S. cable operators, Charter Communications, in which I own a substantial stake today. Years later, Liberty would buy Paul’s stake in Ticketmaster."

Source:Born to Be Wired

"If I had succeeded in buying Paramount or CBS, I know two things for certain. One is that I would never have been able to control either—I’d have still been an employee and most likely been thrown out at some point. And I’d never have become an internet entrepreneur. Big word, “entrepreneur.” I wasn’t a natural one. I was a tried-and-true corporatist with more than a master’s degree in managing large enterprises. It had been decades since I’d started anything from scratch and my first moves were pretty mundane. We had these two dreary assets, HSN and Silver King, and while turning around HSN wasn’t going to excite anyone, it did give us cash and some credibility to think about expansion. I wish I could say I saw the possibilities of the internet in some full-blown prophetic way. I didn’t. But inside the humdrum reason I wanted to buy Ticketmaster was the seed of what would consume me for the next twenty years."

Source:Who Knew

"Ticketmaster was a public company controlled by Paul Allen and run by a blustery caricature of a loudmouthed but incredibly effective lawyer named Fred Rosen, who had brashly led it to total domination of the ticketing business for live events throughout the world. Thank god he was a Luddite, or we wouldn’t have gotten the chance to buy it. When asked about the idea of putting ticket sales online, his reaction was “We’ll do it after everybody else does it. Right now it’s just a waste of resources.”"

Source:Who Knew

"I didn’t know any of this when I cold-called Paul, thinking he might find the idea of a combination of Ticketmaster and HSN compelling. He told me of his frustrations with Rosen, and how he believed the company should jump-start online ticketing. Eureka—that was the seed and… suddenly I did see the future and got so excited about the online possibilities that I couldn’t race fast enough to get a deal done. I told Paul that if he traded his stock in Ticketmaster for stock in HSN, I’d deal with Rosen and he could get out of that tortured relationship. I’d dealt all my life with far more obstreperous characters. Paul Allen quickly agreed and ended up with 11 percent of my company and joined our board. A year or so later he sold his shares, doubling his money (not that he needed it, but if he’d kept his shares, he’d have become far richer than the Midas he already was)."

Source:Who Knew

"I thought there were synergies with HSN’s call centers. It had 2,500 people taking phone orders for merchandise, and Ticketmaster had 1,000 taking ticket orders; we thought combining the back office of the two businesses would save money and be much more efficient. It was a basely pragmatic move, hardly inspired or aspirational."

Source:Who Knew

Appears In Volumes