Skip to the content
Context
Search for:
Context
  • Categories
    Analysis article
    20
    Analysis report
    28
    Book
    2
    Byline article
    244
    Conference report
    322
    Feature article
    51
    Interview
    209
    Interview story
    3,438
    News article
    481
    Opinion article
    2
    Promo article
    7
    Session
    45
    Uncategorised
    6,408
    Vendor report
    8
  • Focuses
    Company earnings
    494
    Company funding
    401
    Company hires
    608
    Company IPO
    56
    Company M&A
    638
    Company research
    7
    Company strategy
    3,771
    Consumer indicators
    76
    Essays
    15
    Interesting
    44
    Market trends
    109
    Views of analyst
    61
    Views of executive
    3,836
  • Companies
    2,419
  • Sources
    181
  • Series
    388
  • Topics
    189
  • People
    2,427
  • Clients
    130
  1. Home
  2. Categories
  3. Uncategorised

SixApart Sells LiveJournal To Russian Company; All About Growing Up

By Robert Andrews
Originally published by paidContent paidContent, paidContent paidcontent:uk • 3rd December 2007

LiveJournal, the pioneering online journal-writing/blogging service which was bought by MovableType parent company SixApart almost three years ago, is now being sold off to Russian online media company SUP. The terms were not disclosed. LiveJournal’s history here, on Wikipedia.

SUP, which already been running LiveJournal in Russia as part of a licensing agreement, plans to set up a new company in San Francisco to steer LiveJournal here and elsewhere, reports AP. Nine SA employees who worked on LJ will move to the newly formed company. Six Apart will be left with about 150 workers worldwide. More in the release and FAQs here.

LJ has seen its core audience move to other social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook, and others, as it failed to add more features on top of the core. SUP has plans to revive and invest between $10m-$100m, and will have an advisory board consisting of industry experts and members of the LiveJournal community, including Brad Fitzpatrick, the founder of LiveJournal who is now at Google.

Meanwhile, SixApart has gone through its own set of missed opportunities and changes, and appointed Chris Alden as new CEO in Sept. It has been rumored as an acquisition candidate for a while, and with the disposal of this consumer service, being bought by an enterprise/CMS player might make more sense (even though it stil has the consumer services TypePad and Vox).

Updated: BW: “I think the world of LiveJournal, but we felt like we needed to figure out our focus,” Alden says. “It’s all about (Six Apart) growing up.”

CategoriesUncategorised
Tagsmergers & acquisitions
FocusCompany M&A
TopicSocial Media, Weblogs
Companylivejournal
SourcepaidContent, paidcontent:uk
ClientContentNext


© 2025 Context