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Inevitable that Caxton and I would fall out - Alec HoggMany in the industry really felt for Alec Hogg in October 2012 when he walked away from Moneyweb, the company he built from nothing into a highly respected player in the media industry. Hogg tells Bizcommunity why he's philosophical about the move, what he's doing with his year's restraint of trade and what was so different about the values of majority shareholder Caxton and his own that made it impossible for him to stay on as Moneyweb CEO and a member of the board. ![]() Alec Hogg
Remember, I'd been in the media world most of my career and there were lots of things I didn't like about the way the industry was structured and run - primarily because I felt the talent was not being adequately rewarded. In hindsight, something started going wrong when we listed on the JSE (in July 1999). On the one hand, it was good because we raised R10-million and, as a result, we were always going to survive. But on the other hand, it brought completely different priorities into play. We saw that it wasn't too long before we started differentiating salaries... Then, for instance, we started hiring sales people on commission - not on salaries (as was the case previously)... We were told when we listed that we had to hire a financial director who was a chartered accountant. Then we had to bring in auditors... If it was today, I would probably go to a private investor to raise money and say: "Come along for the ride. This is why we're going to conquer the world". To make it worse we listed right near the top of the market (of the dotcom boom). The share price had a couple of good days but then it started declining...
And you know, corporates sometimes do that. It's funny that when people get a lot of money to play around with, they become professional managers and they like using the power. They sometimes forget that we're all human beings and that we all have our own points of view...
We were then in a situation where I felt: "We must always be profitable. If you're profitable, you can't go out of business". It was that simple... The internet was booming. We were growing very rapidly. Our task was to avoid becoming roadkill and let the sector's growth take care of the rest. People like David Mckay came on board to start Mineweb but only after we'd guaranteed his salary would be generated. Mineweb's an amazing business today in its own right. But that was the way it worked - on the basis that we never did anything unless we had the money in the bank to pay for it and, as a result, we were profitable. And we survived when almost everyone else went out of business. But after listing, the radio show started becoming more important, especially when we left 702 and moved across to Classic FM where we were partners in the revenue generation. Our radio revenues grew by ten times through the Classic deal but, of course, we put a lot of our money into it. We rescued Classic FM. It was losing R400,000 a month and nobody wanted to fund it anymore. It was about to go out of business. We put in R8-million in shares and cash, paid off some of the creditors, injected working capital, downsized the staff and a couple of years later it made R6-million a year. Then came another big decision: stay with the regional Classic FM or partner with the SABC. We'd been working for three years on a deal to enter the bigger Afrikaans market with RSG. It brought a national footprint with the promise of other opportunities at the SABC (owners of SAfm and Radio 2000, with which Moneyweb also had a relationship). It was a great decision in the long-term, but we hurt a lot to begin with. That's another reason why being a listed company was not a smart idea: you've got to make these tough decisions sometimes and you've got shareholders watching your every move and asking: "But why are you going from a really healthy profit to making a loss in the next?" The stockmarket does not reward long-term decisions and long-term investments - and media is all about long term.
Technology is transforming our industry radically and, when you're in it, it's very hard to see. When you're outside, you can quite quickly get a grasp of the threats to the old system - and (of the opportunities) in the disruption... In South Africa we haven't really experienced the massive changes that have happened elsewhere in the world. The tide is coming. You can hold it back for a period but you can't hold it back for ever. I've got a year to think about this.
I don't think internationally - let alone in South Africa - we can really see how the business is going to change. I don't know. The only way to learn about it is by actually trying to find out more and by listening... A part of me is saying: "No, I'm going to fight this (losing Moneyweb)"... But that's a very immature and emotional response to what happened. I think anyone who has built a business and sweated the way I did - and was so heavily invested emotionally and financially and every other way - if you have it taken away from you - and that's what's happened with Moneyweb; there's no other way to describe it - would understand this. I actually encouraged Caxton to increase their shareholding. My ex-wife sold them 20-odd percent but it was my decision as to where those shares went. And I encouraged them to take it so that they would build up a bigger stake because I was under the impression that we could be partners. But corporates don't think like partners. It's not a case of them being bad people. It's just the way of the world. Corporates have a different mindset - a different culture - to the way that the entrepreneur thinks. An entrepreneur is somebody who wants to build something because they think that they can do it better. They don't really want to be told what to do. A corporate on the other hand is there to live off momentum and take the low-risk option. It has a relationship with its employees that is: "We will give you a job and we will pay you well but you do what we say you must do". So we had this clash of cultures that made it inevitable that at some point Caxton and I were going to fall out although (Caxton CEO) Terry Moolman tried his best to make me a part of everything that they did...
I think the challenge here (for all in the industry) in the years to come is to choose whether talent attracts capital or the other way around. I've always been a firm believer that the world is changing; that the old hierarchical structures of capital making all the rules no longer hold true - that the future belongs to the talented, the geniuses, and the entrepreneurs. Not to someone just because he has a fat bank balance. For more:
About Gill MoodieGill Moodie (@grubstreetSA) is a freelance journalist, media commentator and the publisher of Grubstreet (www.grubstreet.co.za). She worked in the print industry in South Africa for titles such as the Sunday Times and Business Day, and in the UK for Guinness Publishing, before striking out on her own. Email Gill at gill@grubstreet.co.za and follow her on Twitter at @grubstreetSA. View my profile and articles... |