Robert Levitan

Robert Levitan (born April 22, 1961) is an American businessman best known for his multiple entrepreneurial activities in New York City’s Silicon Alley,[1] the cluster of web and technology businesses stretching from Manhattan’s Flatiron District through SoHo and TriBeCa.

Career

iVillage

In 1995, Levitan co-founded iVillage, one of Silicon Alley’s “first settlers”[2] and a startup that would eventually become the web's largest community for women, with Candice Carpenter, former president of Time-Life Video, and Nancy Evans, ex-president and -publisher of Doubleday.[3] Having never sold ads before, except for his sixth-grade yearbook,[4] Levitan was charged with building the company’s advertising department, and he conceived of a strategy beyond selling the nascent standard: the web banner.[3]

Levitan's model gave sponsors, paying between $75,000 and $150,000 for 6- or 12-month terms, the option to build “bridge sites,” which sat between iVillage editorial pages and the sponsors’ own corporate sites. Straight links to sponsors' corporate websites, which often had no relevance to iVillage readers, were discouraged.[5] Bridge sites, alternatively, could fulfill marketers' objectives and at the same time provide content as engaging as the iVillage websites themselves, much like what advertisers, nearly 20 years later, call native advertising[6] and tout as an effective banner alternative.

Once Levitan made a sale, iVillage’s sponsorship department provided the assistance of an ad agency and web development shop combined - with one fundamental difference: they had the experience of being a web publisher. Services included site concepts and wireframes, content and design, community-building techniques, sweepstakes and other promotions, site creation and maintenance - all for an additional fee.[5]

Parents visiting Polaroid’s bridge site, for example, learned how to increase their child’s self esteem using instant photography via weekly confidence-boosting activities, informational articles and live chats with psychologists and other experts. "I love the notion that they're working with us collaboratively," said Carol Phelan, the senior marketing communications manager at Polaroid, which bought a one-year sponsorship. "I don't even think of this as advertising."[5]

By May 1996, Levitan had sold out a year's worth of sponsorships for iVillage's debut site, Parent Soup,[5] and that September, he was named one of Advertising Age’s 20 Digital Media Masters.[4] In March 1998, Levitan sold the company's highest-ticket sponsorship to date to Charles Schwab: a $5-million-plus exclusive sponsorship of “Armchair Millionaire,” a financial-planning site produced by iVillage, Intuit and Schwab.[7]

By 1998, sponsorship revenue exceeded $12 million, and momentum was building for iVillage’s initial public offering of shares. When the company went public in March 1999, iVillage was worth $1.86 billion.[8] (In 2006, the company was acquired for $600 million in cash by NBC Universal,[9] which operates the women’s network within its Digital News Group.)[10]

Flooz

By early 1999, Levitan had left iVillage and launched Flooz.com, a digital currency company. A consumer could go to the company website to buy Flooz, which was e-mailed to someone in a digital greeting card; the recipient could then spend the Flooz at any participating ecommerce site [11] including J.Crew, Barnes & Noble and Tower Records.[12] Levitan hired Whoopi Goldberg as company spokesperson and launched a series of television commercials.[13] The company sold $3 million of Flooz currency in the first year and $25 million in 2000.[12] The marketing director for TowerRecords.com, Russ Eisenman, said Flooz attracted new shoppers to the online site. On certain days, he said, gift recipients redeeming Flooz made up half the site's business.[14]

In 2001, the Federal Bureau of Investigation notified Levitan that the company had fallen victim to Internet fraud – specifically from money-laundering credit-card thieves in Russia and the Philippines. Declaring Chapter 7 bankruptcy, Levitan announced the company would cease operations in late August 2001.[15] The Flooz bankruptcy was unprecedented for a few reasons:

Pando Networks

In 2004, Levitan built his third Manhattan-based technology business, as CEO of Pando Networks. The company specializes in hybrid peer-to-peer plus server-based cloud distribution of large files.[17] From the beginning, the company launched a freemium consumer business for sending large files over any email account,[18] later adding tools for media distributors and publishers to distribute games, video and software to consumers. Levitan noticed that game publishers, many with extra-large installation files and frequent patches and updates to deliver to its customers, were particularly interested in Pando’s solutions and drove sales and product development in that direction.[17] Numerous game companies signed on for Pando Networks’ services,[19] and, in 2011 alone, Pando software had delivered 200 million unique video games onto computer desktops.[20]

Because of the massive amounts of data delivered over its networks worldwide, Pando Networks was able to compile and release two studies on broadband delivery speeds, one domestic and one global.[21] The domestic report prompted observations that the best speeds were recorded in wealthy suburbs like Andover, Massachusetts versus the sluggish performance seen in more rural areas, such as in Pocatello, Idaho where downloads were at one-tenth the speed of Andover’s.[21] Discussing this with a Bloomberg television reporter, Levitan spoke out about the regional disparity, calling it a business, political and social issue. “From a political standpoint, the FCC [U.S. Federal Communications Commission] and others are looking at this, but we all know it’s hard to find agreement in Washington on what to do. If we all believe that fast Internet speeds are good for the economy and development … and if we believe they are as important as the Internet was in developing commerce, then it’s important that this [vast speed discrepancy] is addressed.”[22] Pando Networks was acquired by Microsoft in 2013.

Other activities

From 2000 to 2009, Levitan served on the board of Mobius Management Systems, an enterprise archiving and record keeping company acquired by ASG Software Solutions in 2007. From 1992 until 2010, Levitan served on the board of directors of New York Cares, where he remains an honorary board member.[23]

References

  1. St. John, Warren (2006-03-12). "Alive and Well in Silicon Alley". The New York Times.
  2. Kaufman, Joanne (2001-03-01). "iVillage: Learning The Hard Way". Fortune. Retrieved 2013-04-23.
  3. 1 2 Larson, Erik (1999-10-11). "Free Money: The Internet I.P.O. that made two women rich, and a lot of people furious.". The New Yorker: 79. Retrieved 2013-04-15.(subscription required)
  4. 1 2 Hodges, Jane (1996-09-23). "Digital Media Masters: Robert Levitan, iVillage". Advertising Age. Retrieved 2013-04-15.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Aho Williamson, Debra (1996-05-20). "iVillage Stirs the Pot for Web Advertising". Advertising Age. Retrieved 2013-04-20.
  6. "This Infographic Explains What Native Advertising Is". mashable.com.
  7. Warner, Bernhard (1998-03-30). "Schwab Deal Could Signal Greener Web Future". Adweek. Retrieved 2013-04-16.
  8. Kawamoto, Dawn (1999-03-19). "iVillage hits the roof on its debut". Retrieved 2013-06-02.
  9. Gonsalves, Antone (2006-03-06). "NBC Universal Acquires Women's Site iVillage". Information Week. Retrieved 2013-05-03.
  10. NBCUniversal (2012-07-14). "The NBCUniversal News Group Adds iVillage to its Portfolio". PR Newswire. Retrieved 2013-05-01.
  11. "Flooz". The Free Dictionary. Retrieved 2013-06-05.
  12. 1 2 Tedeschi, Bob (2001-08-27). "Seller of Online Currency May Have Been Victim of Fraud". The New York Times.
  13. Schneider, Gary P. (2008). "Flooz and Beenz". Electronic Commerce, Eighth Edition. Cengage Learning. p. 512. ISBN 1423903056. Retrieved 2013-04-15.
  14. Birch, Dave (2001-09-26). "Second Sight". The Guardian.
  15. Enos, Lori (2001-08-27). "Flooz Blues: Web Currency Site To File for Bankruptcy". E-Commerce Times. Retrieved 2013-06-01.
  16. Boyd Meyers, Courtney (2011-07-30). "Where are they now? New York City’s Dot Com Entrepreneurs: Part One". The Next Web. Retrieved 2013-05-20.
  17. 1 2 Tassi, Paul (October 6, 2008). "Talking Digital Delivery with Pando's Robert Levitan". Forbes.
  18. Mossberg, Walter S; Boehret, Katherine (July 12, 2006). "An Easier Way to Send Large Email Attachments". The Wall Street Journal.
  19. "More Game Companies Select Pando Networks to Optimize Game Downloads". tmcnet.com. 2013-04-15.
  20. Shapiro, Adam (2012-05-30). "Pando Networks CEO on Peer-to-Peer File Sharing". Fox Business. Retrieved 2013-06-02.
  21. 1 2 Catone, Josh (2011-09-21). "Which Country Has the World's Fastest Internet?". Mashable. Retrieved 2013-05-21.
  22. Chang, Emily (2011-08-02). "Levitan Says Internet Speed Is Economic, Political Issue". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2013-04-18.
  23. "Executive Profile, Robert Levitan". Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved 2013-06-02.
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