Dead
set on profitability, AOL has dropped the axe on Patch.
About 350 editors in the local news unit can expect pink slips today, a source close to the situation tells Online Media Daily.
Meanwhile, another 150 or so will be told to sit on their hands while AOL tries to find placement for them at other properties.
“Patch, as previously announced, is taking steps to move
to profitability,” AOL said in an official statement on Friday. “Unfortunately, with these changes we are announcing today, we will be reducing a substantial number of Patch
positions.”
AOL would not confirm the number of layoffs, or the number of editors likely to transition to other properties, on Friday.
Going forward, “Patch’s
strategy will be to focus resources against core sites and partner in sites that need additional resources,” AOL said on Friday. “Additionally, there are sites that we will be
consolidating or closing.”
On its quarterly earnings call earlier this month, AOL announced plans to significantly cut Patch’s national network.
Last week, Tim Armstrong
told Patch employees to prepare for the worst. AOL’s head did so during a meeting (and conference call) with Patch editors, immediately following the dismissal of Patch CEO Steven Kalin and the
naming of his replacement, AOL executive Bud Rosenthal.
On that call, Armstrong fired one editor on the spot for taking a
picture of the proceedings. “Put that camera down … You’re fired,” Armstrong told the staffer.
Of Patch’s roughly 900 local news sites, AOL plans to continue
supporting about 540 of them, a source told Online Media Daily.
Determined to bring Patch to profitability by the end of the year, Armstrong said earlier this month that the unit was being
segmenting into three buckets: sites that are successes in terms of traffic and revenue generation; those shown to have the potential to be successful; and ones that lack either traffic or revenue
traction. Regarding the latter two buckets, Armstrong said: “We have operations there that need improvement.”
Earlier this month, Armstrong -- who founded Patch in 2007 when he was
still at Google -- said AOL had already decreased the cost structure of Patch by roughly 25%.