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Jan 8, 2009

CLIP @ CES: Norwest's Chang: Things Could Get Scary For Facebook, Slide in '09


Despite all the predictions for slashed VC spending and stagnant growth in new media this year, clearly there is still money to be spent, as we'vealready seen a number of fundings in the past week. But some unlikely companies may be stretched thin this year, Norwest Venture Partners principal Tim Chang told us.

"I'm concerned about Facebook," Chang said, when I asked him about the companies that he'd be watching this year. "Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) isn't likely to renew its search-advertising contract—at least not at the same rate—and Facebook makes a significant amount of money from that deal. Imagine if you lost $300 million worth of revenue—how would you make it up? It's not going to come from advertising, even if they have other ad platforms." (That also begs the question of what will happen to MySpace when Google (NSDQ: GOOG) renegotiates its search deal—though the social net has been branching out beyond ad sales as well). But what about Facebook's newly booming virtual-goods business? Chang said that the social net has actually missed the boat on that revenue stream. "They didn't figure out the value in virtual goods until it was too late, and now third parties are doing it instead. That's money they've left on the table."

Meanwhile, Chang said widget-maker Slide, which closed a mammoth $50 million round last January, is the "poster child of the Web 2.0 bubble. And if Slide spends through that money and has to raise again—I'd hate to be in their shoes. The onus is on them to find a business model beyond just advertising right now."

Chang wasn't all doom and gloom, however—he said that social gaming startups and the gaming industry as a whole would likely see stable revenue streams (not just from advertising) and continued investment from VCs in 2009. "We invested in myYearbook because they're making really nice money on virtual goods and microtransactions. Social gaming site Zynga is another one—they're making something like $30 million to $40 million per year mostly from people buying Texas Hold 'Em chips on Facebook."

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