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Is FiLife Running On Borrowed Time?

Less than two months after talking up the turnaround at Dow Jones-IAC (NSDQ: IACI) personal finance JV FiLife, paidContent has learned the site’s continued existence is no certainty. It survived the multiple trimmings as Barry Diller cut back on IAC’s portfolio of emerging businesses, but the company is now exploring options that range from leaving it open to a sale or a full shut down. When Ezra Kucharz, president and GM for just over a year, left for CBS (NYSE: CBS) in January, both IAC and DJ credited him publicly with turning around the site and building it to the #4 personal finance site with 4.4 million unique visitors in December. Now both companies are declining comment about the site’s future.

One possibility for IAC could be selling its stake to Dow Jones (NYSE: NWS), which recently bought out SmartMoney partner Hearst. But that’s a well-established brand with an 800,000-circ magazine. Whether DJ would even want to own FiLife outright is unclear—as is whether a deal actually would involve much money. What FiLife does have—more traffic than SmartMoney.com, where personal finance is just one category, and a digital mentality. Is there a way to combine the two?

FiLife has had a bit of a tortured life from its beginning: taking more than a year to move from an idea to a blog, then taking so long to emerge from that status the plans appeared to be dormant. Dave Kansas, brought in from the Wall Street Journal to launch the site, was replaced by online vet Kucharz in late 2008. Adam Wiener, executive editor and VP-content was promoted to GM when Kucharz left, but not given the title of president.

It’s made strides on the editorial side. Just last month FastCompany picked it as the most innovative company in the finance area for using “a Q&A format with a host of social and game-like features to get Americans talking about money. More as warranted—and please feel free to e-mail me if you have details.

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Mar 19, 2010 11:15 PM ET

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Posted In: Features, Exclusive, Media & Publishing, Online News, Companies, IAC, News Corp., Dow Jones

  • Fruitless Apple

    I was an idiot and got an Iphone when I renewed my cell contract.
    If I had known then that flash content was unavailable on the Iphone, I would have NEVER gotten one.
    It is almost useless for browsing the web, as almost all websites nowadays have flash content or java embedded in them.
    Apple products really are a joke, they just want you to pay for everything over and over again.
    The idiotic commercial that so wonderfully informs you that “there is an app for that”, should say, “there is a fee for that”.

  • This would be good news for flash developers. It's not the number of handsets, obviously. But Apple's customers are used to paying premium prices for Apple add ons, (regardless of value). I could see iPhone users paying 2 to 5 times the usual cost for a quality flash application. The major challenge for Adobe will be capturing input from the touch screen and accelerometer using the robust flash lite 3 APIs.

  • This is exactly like Sun's announcement with Java - Adobe have announced they will port the platform, but Apple have no requirement to allow it to reach consumers and actually this kind of runtime environment is explicitly against their terms and conditions for the iPhone SDK.

    What is funnier about this one is that a lot of the kind of people who form the Apple diehard fans are also the kind of people who are flash designers - will this make them begin to question St Steve? Who knows…

  • marco

    release it tomorrow, please

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