cyut How turf wars and miscues crippled SpiralFrog

March 6th, 2010

Schrieberg, a former IBM executive, had no operational experience in advertising or in music. In e-mails sent to several SpiralFrog employees, Mohen called some of Schrieberg’s decisions “insane.”

The start-up’s short, troubled history saw other clashes among managers. At the center of most of them was Mohen. He butted heads with his handpicked CEO, as well as SpiralFrog’s board of directors and financial backers.

Certainly, SpiralFrog, which was trying to succeed with an unproven business model, wasn’t exactly in an ideal position from the start. But former insiders, most of whom requested anonymity, say inexperienced managers who allowed petty squabbles to cloud their judgment didn’t do themselves or their company any favors.

How turf wars and miscues crippled SpiralFrog
How turf wars and miscues crippled SpiralFrog

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Could have been a contender
In December 2008, cash-strapped SpiralFrog appeared doomed. Entertainment conglomerate Viacom had expressed interest in acquiring a minority stake in the start-up three months beforehand, but the deal fell through. Yahoo would also eventually kick the tires on SpiralFrog but it also passed. Stagg, in a December 11, 2008, e-mail to SpiralFrog’s board, from which he had recently resigned, sized up SpiralFrog’s bleak financial situation.

The board wants him removed now,” Mohen wrote in a July 21, 2008, e-mail exchange with Amir Khan, an executive at 3V Capital Management, SpiralFrog’s biggest financial backer. “He adds no value at this time. The management will be very demoralized, if he remains.”

To Mohen, SpiralFrog “was all about him controlling the company, no matter who was in charge,” Schrieberg, who maintained his CEO title from January 2007 to October 2008, told CNET News in a phone interview. But Mohen, who had founded the pioneering voting site Election.com, hardly deserves all the blame for what went wrong.

On March 13, 2009, the music service was forced to turn over assets to creditors and shut down. To find out how a company that some called a potential iTunes killer so quickly turned into yet another dot-com flameout, CNET reviewed numerous documents and interviewed 13 people formerly associated with the company, including former board members, executives, and employees.

Adding to the management dysfunction was Scott Stagg, who managed 3V (now called Stagg Capital), the company that loaned SpiralFrog $34 million. For nearly two years, Stagg paid all of SpiralFrog’s bills. Only sumo wrestlers are more likely to throw their weight around than Stagg, former employees have indicated, and even Mohen says management couldn’t do much without first checking with Stagg.

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