Bob Iger Quietly Brings Big Changes to Disney - CNN.com

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  • OogieBoogie
    Supervillan Extrodinaire
    MiceChat News Team
    • Sep 2005
    • 5734

    Bob Iger Quietly Brings Big Changes to Disney - CNN.com

    CNNMoney.com has a good article on it about Bob Iger and the changes he's making to Disney.

    Bob Iger rocks Disney

    In revitalizing the Magic Kingdom, the CEO has built a compelling case that integrated, cross-platform media leviathans like Disney still make sense in the Digital Age.

    By Richard Siklos, editor at large
    January 5, 2009: 4:39 AM ET

    LOS ANGELES (Fortune) -- Bob Iger is inside the Royal Festival Hall in London on a September afternoon, geeking out with some young guys about two of his favorite things: tunes and technology. The CEO of Walt Disney Co. pulls out his iPhone and thumbs through his playlists, looking for a particular live U2 track from an Italian concert. Briefly the conversation is drowned out by the squeals of teen girls standing behind a nearby barricade of security guards and velvet ropes. "They're screaming for me," Iger says, glancing up.

    He's joking, well aware that they're really screaming for his companions: Kevin, Joe, and Nick Jonas, a.k.a. the Jonas Brothers. The collectible-lunchbox-cute trio, with a median age of 18, are pop heartthrobs who a few weeks earlier became the first musical act ever to occupy three spots in the Billboard top-ten album chart in a single week.

    They're in London to promote their Disney Channel TV movie "Camp Rock." And Iger is there - along with requisite Mickey and Minnie mascots working the red carpet outside.

    Not only do the Jonas Brothers sell bushels of CDs and downloads via Disney's Hollywood Records label; in the past year they have performed live before more than a million people, were fixtures on Radio Disney, released a book via Disney-owned Hyperion that has already sold 750,000 copies, and are preparing to star in a Disney feature film. On the Disney Channel, their own show is scheduled to debut in the spring. Action figures, T-shirts, throw pillows, and sheet sets are just the beginnings of the retail onslaught.

    The Jonas Brothers neatly fit Disney's tween machine: They are polite, reputedly abstinent boys, whose father is a musician and former pastor and whose mother is a former singer-actress. On the other hand, as their father, Kevin, 43, points out, "they are not characters" - his boys were not "imagineered" in any Disney product lab; they've been playing and writing their own music for years. (Rolling Stone called their latest release "as assured as any American rock album released in 2008.")

    Just two years ago the boys were signed to Sony's (SNY) Columbia label and playing mostly to friends. The breakout stardom and screaming girls and the private jet across the pond would not have been possible, their father says, without Disney. "This is the natural place for them to be," he says.

    The Jonases are emblematic of a creative and financial revival at the Magic Kingdom that has taken place over the roughly three years since Iger became CEO. Against long odds, Disney (DIS, Fortune 500) is back at the head of a frazzled and uncertain bunch, the fraternity of media conglomerates. In revitalizing the company, Iger has built a compelling case that integrated, cross-platform leviathans like his still make sense in the Digital Age. Who knew?

    Seismic shift

    A lot of what's new comes from two big and related strategic changes Iger has made at Disney, and the way he has managed the business. One was his subtle but seismic decision to refocus the company and most of its more than 150,000 employees around its roster of "franchises," like the Jonas Brothers - Iger defines a franchise as "something that creates value across multiple businesses and across multiple territories over a long period of time."

    The second change was unsubtle: Just days into Iger's new job, Disney acquired Pixar Films, bringing Apple's (AAPL, Fortune 500) Steve Jobs onto the company's board in the process. In recent weeks these moves have contributed to a string of hits at the box office, including "High School Musical," "Beverly Hills Chihuahua," and the animated "Bolt."

    The Disney Channel, which has emerged as a centerpiece of the company's strategy, is expected to finish 2008 as the second-most-watched cable channel in primetime. For the third straight year it was first or second and the leader among small kids and tweens.

    Meanwhile, Disney has been touting Pixar's - sorry, Disney Pixar's - "Wall-E" as a Best Picture contender for the Academy Awards. Should "Wall-E" prevail, it would be the first time Hollywood's top honor went to an animated film, not to mention to a picture released under the Disney name.

    In home video, the company released "Tinkerbell" in October, the first of five DVD films that are part of its new "Fairies" franchise, which, following the success of its "Princesses," has elaborate publishing, online, and consumer products offshoots. (Check out Disney Clickables Fairy Charms, a new line of bracelet toys. When one wearer's charm is held up to another's, both people become fairy friends in Pixie Hollow, a virtual world for the more than 7.5 million fans who had created their own fairy avatars before Tinkerbell or Clickables even hit the streets.)

    There is more to Disney, of course, than Disney. It counts ABC and part-ownership of cable channels Lifetime and A&E among its assets. Sports juggernaut ESPN - 80% owned by Disney - is estimated by Doug Mitchelson of Deutsche Bank to have generated around one-third of the company's $8.4 billion in 2008 operating income.
    There are 2 more pages to the story. To read the rest, please go to Bob Iger quietly brings big changes to Disney - Jan. 5, 2009
    Growing older is manditory
    Growing up is however, optional
  • sediment
    Banned User
    • Jan 2005
    • 14975

    #2
    Re: Bob Iger Quietly Brings Big Changes to Disney - CNN.com

    On page 2, regarding the pixar purchase:

    Jobs told Fortune that Iger won him over when he said that as soon as he found out he was going to be CEO, he spent a day at Disneyland going on every ride and watching every show - and observed that all the new ones were based on Pixar characters.
    I ask that he tell Rasulo to do the same.

    Comment

    • sediment
      Banned User
      • Jan 2005
      • 14975

      #3
      Re: Bob Iger Quietly Brings Big Changes to Disney - CNN.com

      On page 3, regarding the "Cars" "franchise":

      Franchises writ large
      Several years ago - with Eisner's blessing - Iger began convening monthly meetings with the company's top executives in which binders are handed out for particular brands, showing how they are doing across divisions and in different markets. Recent topics have included new animated shorts for Winnie-the-Pooh, and brand extensions of the Pixar films "Toy Story" and "Cars."
      "Cars" may be exhibit A of Disney's franchise machinery at work. Three years after the movie came out, sales of licensed merchandise are running at more than $2 billion annually. A "Cars" sequel is in production. Disney will soon launch an elaborate Cars virtual world. But the biggest bet on "Cars" is Cars Land, a 12-acre stretch of Disney's California Adventure theme park set to open in 2012.
      I thought I read somewhere that the Cars merchandise was going to be a big failure and that's why Disney should not have bought Pixar, blah, blah. I don't think read that web site anymore.

      Comment

      • sediment
        Banned User
        • Jan 2005
        • 14975

        #4
        Re: Bob Iger Quietly Brings Big Changes to Disney - CNN.com

        Further down Page 3:

        On a Monday afternoon not long after Iger's trip to London, he was at Disney's famed (and so hush-hush there's no sign outside) Imagineering offices in Glendale, Calif. He was joined by John Lasseter, who was enjoying the early buzz on "Bolt," the first decent Disney animated film in years, and one on which the Pixar folks had made major modifications.
        Lasseter and Iger were eyeballing wood and foam scale models of Cars Land. The biggest draw in the mini-park will be a ride featuring animatronic characters from the movie and "cars" that go 40 miles an hour but seem much faster in places, thanks to new projection technology. Lasseter crouched as he made his way through the 1/8 scale mockup, adding his own sound effects for each twist and turn. "Look at this! Have you seen this, Bob? Lean down and take a look. It's like the movie, except you're there."
        Upstairs, designers were doing what's called "pre-viz" work, wearing headgear that allowed them to explore a virtual 3-D rendering of the ride and stroll around (or fly above) Cars Land.
        In an industry with a miserably low success rate for mergers, Iger gets high marks for Pixar. And he notes that Cars Land would not have been possible on this scale - or with Lasseter and his colleagues' hands-on input - if not for the acquisition.
        Sure glad Disney "overpaid" for Pixar.

        Comment

        • Coheteboy
          Starcruiser.. crash crash
          MiceChat Moderator
          • Sep 2005
          • 21719

          #5
          Re: Bob Iger Quietly Brings Big Changes to Disney - CNN.com

          The man even has good taste:

          The CEO of Walt Disney Co. pulls out his iPhone and thumbs through his playlists, looking for a particular live U2 track from an Italian concert.


          Visit my mice chat toy shop!
          http://micechat.com/forums/merchandi...oy-shoppe.html

          Track Disney Animation Presence in the Theme Parks Worldwide!
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          Comment

          • Alice's Wonderland
            Directly directed
            • Feb 2005
            • 4450

            #6
            Re: Bob Iger Quietly Brings Big Changes to Disney - CNN.com

            Facsinating. So does this mean that my stocks will sometime in the near future go up?

            Comment

            • Uncle Bob
              MiceChatter
              • Jan 2008
              • 5634

              #7
              Re: Bob Iger Quietly Brings Big Changes to Disney - CNN.com

              This is a really fascinating article. Not that I wasn't familiar with most of the info before, but that's a really interesting summary of the philosophies of Iger and quite illustrative of the logic behind many of Disney's recent decisions. While I don't agree with all the things he's done it's clear he's thoughtful, has strong reasoning behind everything he does, and is a good manager. My only fear is that the focus on franchises leaves little attention for small creative projects that could be new future franchises. Hopefully the freedom he gives the department heads allows them enough freedom to give some of these things a try.
              Please check out my website, UncleBobDisneyGuy.com!

              Thanks for your support!

              Comment

              • sediment
                Banned User
                • Jan 2005
                • 14975

                #8
                Re: Bob Iger Quietly Brings Big Changes to Disney - CNN.com

                Originally posted by Alice's Wonderland View Post
                Facsinating. So does this mean that my stocks will sometime in the near future go up?
                You can hold them over your head, instead of on your lap.

                The price? Well, the price didn't drop as much as other entertainment stocks, and Disney gives out dividends, which, all other things equal, leads to less stock appreciation than a non-dividend counterpart.

                Comment

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