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CEO Tim Armstrong Makes Case (Again) That AOL Is Finally On The Mend

Tim Armstrong - Forbes

AOL has been the sad sack of online media for so long now that it almost makes Yahoo look good. But at least the latest quarter showed the first year-over-year revenue growth in eight years–eight!–so it’s worth looking a little more closely at whether CEO Tim Armstrong has a handle on what can bring the Internet pioneer back from irrelevance.

 

AOL's Armstrong Reportedly Wants To Sell To Yahoo

AOL's Armstrong Reportedly Wants To Sell To Yahoo

From the department of weird ideas: AOL CEO Tim Armstrong is apparently out peddling the idea that the company could sell itself to Yahoo. Question is, what makes him think Yahoo is buying? Reuters is reporting that Armstrong has been meeting with shareholders in recent weeks pushing the notion that an AOL/Yahoo combination could result ...

Senh: I could see how this could work, but like what everyone else said - how can two sinking ships float? If each of them can't make this work individually, how can they make it work together. It would be better if Yahoo just buy AOL's star properties individually (Techcrunch and other tech sites) and leave the rest (Huffington Post). Merging the two will just sink both companies.

 

Exclusive: Arrington out at AOL (for real this time)

Exclusive: Arrington out at AOL (for real this time)

It has been a very long week for AOL. And it's about to get even longer. Last Thursday, word leaked that one of its employees, TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington, was launching a venture capital fund that would include an $8 million commitment from AOL (AOL). Then came a more official version via the NY Times, which included positive quotes from both Arrington and AOL chief executive Tim Armstrong.

 

AOL’s Comeback Trail Is an Uphill Climb

AOL’s Comeback Trail Is an Uphill Climb

Tim Armstrong, the chief executive of AOL, says he has not lost faith that his overhaul will reverse its decline.

 

AOL CEO Says Ad Declines 'Self-Inflicted'

AOL's earnings more than doubled amid gains from asset sales, though ad revenue dropped 27%. CEO Armstrong said AOL is on the path to recovery, with much of the revenue declines "self-inflicted."

 

Early Trading Values AOL At $2.5 Billion

AOL won't officially become an independently traded company again until December 10 when CEO Tim Armstrong is scheduled to ring the bell on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

 

AOL turns to ex-Google exec for fresh start

AOL turns to ex-Google exec for fresh start

Shortly before taking over as head of AOL in April, Tim Armstrong ripped out some office doors.

 

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