| Red Herring magazine is an Internet technology and financial news magazine, sponsor of technology business conferences and publisher of
financial research papers. It is based in Mountain View, California.
History
Red Herring was originally launched in May 1993 by Anthony B. Perkins,
Christopher J. Alden, and Zachary A. Herlick out of the home of Mr. Alden's parents in Woodside, California. The first product of Flipside Communications Inc. (which was eventually
renamed Red Herring Communications), the magazine was quickly popular with Silicon Valley entrepreneurs, venture
capitalists, and the Valley community of lawyers, accountants, bankers and the like who were part of the technology
entrepreneurial ecosystem.
Although not launched as an Internet publication (the commercialization of the
Internet was in its infancy in 1993), as one of the leading publications covering high-tech entrepreneurialism in Silicon Valley
and beyond, it became a journal of record for the dot com boom.
In October 2003, Red Herring relaunched as a website. The first official issue of the relaunched print publication was
published in November, 2004.
Editor in Chief - Joel Dreyfuss
Journalists on staff as of November 2004: Bronwyn Barnett, Falguni Bhuta, Ryan Blitstein, Lee Bruno, Brian Caulfield, Eydie
Cubarrubia, Meriah Doty, Katie Fehrenbacher, John Fitzgibbon, Liz Gannes, Alex Gronke, Alex Haislip, Jennifer Kho, Kaiser Kuo,
Greg Lewicki, Cassimir Medford, Heather Moylan, Alex Pang, Anna Petherick, Mitch Ratcliffe, Jennifer Schenker,
Priyanka Sharma-Sindhar, Ucilia Wang.
Notable former journalists: Richard Brandt, Kenneth Neil Cukier, Jim Daley, David Diamond, Michael Fitzgerald, Marc Frochtzweig, Kim Girard, Beverly Goodman, Debbie
Gravitz, Stephan Herrera, Lisa Kalis, Vishesh Kumar, Robert LaFranco, David Lipschultz, Om Malik, Duff McDonald, Niall McKay, Mark Mowrey,
Jason Pontin, Bonnie Powell, Mark
Powelson, Jarred Simpson, David Speakman, Tom Stein.
Corporate History
Mr. Perkins had previously founded Upside Magazine with Rich Kalgaard (who later became publisher of Forbes). Mr. Alden and Mr. Herlick, friends since junior high-school, had started a computer consulting company
and taught computer science prior to partnering with Mr. Perkins.
Ron Conway, of Angel Investors, was an early advisor and board member.
Red Herring launched an event and an Internet division on the same day in May 1995 when Venture Market West premiered in Monterey
California, accompanied by the company's first web site. The Venture Market series (including West, East, South, and Europe)
ran successfully until 2001 and were accompanied by other events, such as NDA, Venture, and Herring on Hollywood.
The Internet operation grew steadily and peaked in 2000 when it acquired Stockmaster.com.
Ziff Davis invested $2 million in Red Herring in 1997 for approximately 10%
of the company, with Eric Hippeau, then CEO of ZD, joining the Red Herring board. Scott Briggs, a former president of Ziff Davis,
joined the board in 1997 as well. Broadview Capital Partners invested $25 million into Red Herring in 2000, with Steven
Brooks and Stephen Bachman joining the board.
Red Herring was joined in the late 1990s by competitors such as IDG's The Industry
Standard, Imagine
Media's Business 2.0, and Time Warner's eCompany Now. It was also compared to Wired magazine and
Fast Company.
Hilary Schneider was hired by the founders as CEO in late 2000 and succeeded Mr. Alden (who succeeded Mr. Perkins as CEO).
Red Herring's revenues peaked in 2000, nearing $100 million with a staff around 350, but contracted significantly in
2001 and 2002. BCP invested in several additional rounds to help stabilize the organization, which went through several rounds of
layoffs. Through these financings BCP obtained control of Red Herring and in 2002 put the company through an assignment for the benefit of creditors (ABC), which is a California state process similar to a federal bankruptcy. RHC Media,
owned by BCP, bought the Red Herring assets out of ABC and kept the business operating.
After trying unsuccessfully to sell the company, RHC Media decided in early 2003 to cease operations and sell the company's
assets. The subscription obligation was sold to Time Inc. and the Red Herring
brand, URL, and IP (such as back issues on online content) were sold to Alex
Vieux of Dasar.
Since October 2003, the Red Herring has published as a web site.
Currently under the editorship of Joel Dreyfuss, who moved from New York City's financial publications to Mountain View, Red
Herring publishes several new articles a day on the website at redherring.com. The first print issue since the shut down of the
first Red Herring has been released, but in small numbers mostly for advertisers. The first official Red Herring issue for the
public is expected to be printed in November 2004. The editorial section of Red Herring is separate from any other functions Red
Herring or Dasar may have. The editorial integrity of the magazine is essential to its survival.
External Link
|