August 2, 2006 4:00 AM PDT

AOL: You've got free e-mail

AOL could start looking a lot more like Yahoo.

Time Warner on Wednesday announced it will give away e-mail, software and other Web services for free to high-speed Internet users in a bid to boost online advertising sales.

"This is the next logical step for AOL to capitalize further on the explosive rise in broadband usage and online advertising," said Time Warner President and Chief Operating Officer Jeff Bewkes.

The AOL transition is set to be completed in early September, and the services to be offered for free include e-mail, instant messaging, a local phone number with unlimited incoming calls as well as safety and security features. AOL said it would continue to offer dial-up Internet access but will not aggressively market the service.

The move will further transform AOL, the country's largest Internet service provider--primarily through dial-up--into a Yahoo-style media portal specializing in offering free content and communications. For several years now, AOL has been moving toward focusing its resources on the Web in an effort to staunch losses from subscriber defections and take advantage of the lucrative online-advertising market.

This isn't the first time AOL has tried to reinvent itself to keep up with the Googles and Yahoos of the world.

"AOL has gone through at least four revisions of how it was going to evolve as people connect (to the Internet) via broadband instead of via dial-up," said Joe Laszlo of JupiterResearch.

"AOL's core strategy is still dial-up...but (dial up) is clearly waning and they do need to find a way to stay relevant in the broadband world," he said. "Longer term, the AOL strategy is definitely one of being a media company that maybe makes a little money on the side off subscription revenues."

What began in the 1980s as a bulletin board service and online game provider became, under eventual Chief Executive Steve Case, the most popular online service for newcomers to the Web.

"As long as millions of people are satisfied paying AOL $25.90 a month for dial-up, it doesn't make sense to kick them out the door."
--Joe Laszlo, analyst, JupiterResearch

In the mid-1990s, the company began charging a flat-rate fee for dial-up Internet access, adding a broadband service in 2001. It moved to a "Bring Your Own Access" plan in 2003, which let customers layer their AOL service on top of their existing broadband connection from a different provider.

In June 2005, AOL revived a strategy of bundling high-speed access, and a year ago it relaunched its AOL.com site, opening up to all Web users content previously available only to paying subscribers.

The moves were designed to stem the tide of subscribers who have been abandoning the legacy AOL service in recent years. The company has lost nearly 30 percent of its subscribers since September 2002. Meanwhile, Google has seen advertising revenues push its earnings and stock through the roof.

Time Warner earnings, AOL ad revenue up
Time Warner on Wednesday also posted a second-quarter profit on more digital phone and high-speed data customers and reported strong growth in online advertising as it disclosed its plans to offer the free services on AOL.

The company raised its full-year forecast for adjusted operating income before depreciation and amortization growth in the low double-digit percentage range from the high single digits after factoring in the purchase of cable operator Adelphia Communications and other items.

See more CNET content tagged:
America Online Inc., Time Warner Inc., Joe Laszlo, amortization, online advertising

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 15 comments
I got a few suggestions to help out their Dial-Up...
by jmasta264 August 2, 2006 6:11 AM PDT
Firstly, their current dial-up connection speeds are slow even from a narrowband point of view, for example I'm connecting to a local access point in Metro Detroit at 24000 Bits/s. They also need to stop so much advertising on a service that I pay to use, their application is crowded with Ads on just about everything from the welcome screen to the Inbox and settings menus. Their application is way too complicated and freezes up on the average home PC consistently. Even when the megaapplication isn't being used to connect to the internet, various other add on processes like "topspeed" are sucking up system resources. The only way they are going to turn around AOL is to start listening to the user's comments, complaints, and suggestions instead of piling on useless and inefficient features.
Reply to this comment
Do they expect us to go back???
by usualsuspect87 August 2, 2006 6:58 AM PDT
I hope they aren't expecting past AOL users to flock to their free services... I had enough of AOL a long time ago. I used AIM up until a few months ago when they started forcing you to use their browser. After that, i am refusing to use anything remotely related to AOL.
Reply to this comment
R.I.P.
by TV James August 2, 2006 8:14 AM PDT
This has gotta be one of the longer swan songs in corporate history. They've been swirling the drain for eons.
Reply to this comment
AOL is SOL and 5 years to late...
by jdgarner August 2, 2006 9:31 AM PDT
Being an X AOL subscriber it is so very easy to see why they have no chance at gaining back market share. they are the dino of the industry and have proven themselves as poor business execs time and time again. Netscape anyone? "I got a great idea! lets give away what everyone has to many of anyway! Everyone needs ANOTHER email account!" please, RIP AOL.
Reply to this comment
Free email not enough
by rmiecznik August 2, 2006 9:41 AM PDT
AOL will have to comeup with a bundle of useful features and things that people can do on their AOL web site other then free email.

You might as well take your losses and go our of business now.

Once people go to AOL, they need to be able to do a lot of things, like they can on other web sites.

Free Chat, Free Bulletin Board, Free Ads, All that stuff that you have now, Let it all go FREE.

I would bet you would turn around, because AOL is designed for simple minded folks who like to click and view.

I ignore all ADS anyways, no matter of what network they are, MSN, AOL, GOOGLE, I never click on any banners or crap like that.

I understand the value to pay money to be on top of a search list on search engines, but POP Ads and banners are evil, I hate them.

Does anyone know if there is a Company that studies people online behavior from AD point of view ?

Because I bet educated people never click on that crap to begind with, only dumb *****.
Reply to this comment
Their Brilliance Cost Them A Company
by kybudman August 2, 2006 11:56 AM PDT
One day, I found unsolicited "free" ads on the header to my AOL Journal. Ads which, as a paying subscriber, I did not request, pay for, or (in many cases) ethically agree with. One week later, 2 million of their customers (including me) had migrated to different services. Our complaints were answered with a thinly veiled disclaimer on the bottom of the header which STILL contained the ads. Another 1 million defections later, they asked what we were so upset about! The changes to the bulletin boards, the ads, and the careless and absolute disregard for customer feedback showed those of us who knew the absolute arrogance of a company that, for the greater part, we helped (significantly!) to build.

And, when we reiterated our absolute discontent, they did....nothing.

I was an alpha tester on the Bulletin Board, before version 1.0 hit the street. I was a beta tester for the last security edition upgrade. This wasn't a free Roadrunner account, I paid for it. I voted with my dollar, and do not regret the vote. I hate losing the community that I loved there, but tempis fugit, baby.

Now they want to....what, exactly?

They've addressed zero complaints of their long-standing customer base because, as one of their Senior VP's told me directly "We don't have to!"

Umm, neither do I, buckwheat!

Sorry, once burned, twice not that stupid.
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AOL wasted alot of money and forgot about its customers
by grdaven August 3, 2006 1:04 PM PDT
AOL had vast wealth at one time. What it did was forget it
customers. Their interface is so complicated and slow that
people just get fed up with it and go some where else. I left in
1999 because of the Ads and pop ups and slow response. I from
time to time fix my roomates computer he uses AOL. The new
9.0 is the worst designed browser I have ever seen. It looks like
a cartoon browser with way too much going on on screen. I now
like simplicity in design and switched to Apple/Safari about two
years ago. Even when my 62 year old mother switched to Apple
this month asked not to be set up with AOL software on her
own!!!!!! These are the people who would never leave. So just
giving away a crappy service will not save them. Maybe a total
redo of there interface and give away security with email and
chat.
Reply to this comment
"Free" AOL
by CRHONEY August 5, 2006 8:22 AM PDT
I've just tried to switch a family member from paying to FREE, with
no luck and much frustration. Why did AOL not have a process
set up for consumers to switch with ease? Is this another case of
AOL promising the consumer one thing and actually doing another?
Did they not carefully plot out the operational side of their
announcement?
If we aren't able to switch easily on our next try, we're dropping
AOL altogether.
Reply to this comment
So when do I start saving money?
by zimmecl May 3, 2008 2:00 AM PDT
As someone who has been paying a little under $10/mo for "Bring Your Own Access" (just to hang on to my long-time email address), when and how will I make the switch to free? Wonder if it will be automatic or will I have to jump through hoops. I'd bet on the later, at least to some degree.
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Watch out for security
by Nkully86 May 3, 2008 2:00 AM PDT
AOL is the original email program, and now its exposure is going to increase ten fold now that it doesnt cost a cent to set up an email account. AOL's encryption software has always been up to par for its number of users (128-bit encryption), but now they might have to upgrade, seeing as the number of accounts is increasing.

AOL was also able to encrypt so many accounts because their users were on paid accounts, I don't know how they can afford that nowadays with customer revenues dropping and accounts to encrypt increasing. In order for new users to encrypt their messages they might have to consider third party software to assure themselves protection.
http://www.essentialsecurity.com/products.htm
Reply to this comment
<rant>
by thedreaming May 3, 2008 2:00 AM PDT
If aol wants to be another google or yahoo, they should completely ditch their software and start anew. Take a lesson from google, minimal is the new large! Use the K.I.S.S. Principle!

Give the people what we want, a portal that gives us what we want, when we want it and nothing else. I don't need an aol branded browser or an aol branded antivirus or spyware program. I don't need an aol branded firewall!
</rant>

Sorry about that, had to be done. I'm not sure why, I'm not even an aol user, but I can't stand the fact that aol keeps saying, "what are we doing wrong?" and when their users speak up, they ignore them! What's up with that?
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