Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Legacy Archives

LinkedIn files IPO; could it unleash a flood of initial public offerings?

Add as a preferred source on Google

linkedin ipoIPO rumors have been surrounding LinkedIn for awhile, and now the professional social network has filed for an initial public offering with the SEC. The offering is being led by investment firms Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, and J.P. Morgan Chase, which all courted the company earlier this year as it took sought advisors on going public.

According to its S-1 form, LinkedIn revealed its net revenue for the first nine months of 2010 was an impressive $161 million, and it managed to earn a profit of $10 million. Compare that to 2009, when it raked in $3.4 million. Despite the monumental increase, the company admitted that “We expect our revenue growth rate to decline, and as we continue to invest for future growth, we do not expect to be profitable on a GAAP [U.S. accounting standards] basis in 2011.”

Recommended Videos

While it may not expect to stay in the black, the site’s members are growing at astounding rates. Earlier this year, LinkedIn reported that it was growing at a member a second, and today has more than 90 million registered accounts.

It’s been widely thought that LinkedIn would file to go public this year, and additions to its board as well as careful selection of financial underwriters were less-than-subtle indications. Facebook’s own 2012 IPO aspirations have also been a factor in LinkedIn’s own process, as one insider told Reuters, “If Facebook went public before LinkedIn, do you think anyone would pay attention to LinkedIn?”

No official numbers have been released yet, but an insider told The Wall Street Journal that LinkedIn expects to pocket $200 million in its IPO, which would boost its valuated around $2 billion. LinkedIn can be considered the first social network IPO, at least stateside (German site XING filed its initial public offering in 2005), unless you see Google as a social network (we don’t – especially not when it went public). This could trigger the various social tech companies rumored to be ready to file.

Here are few items worth mentioning LinkedIn publicly disclosed in its S-1 form:

  • 27 percent of its net revenue comes from customers outside the U.S.
  • CEO Jeffrey Weiner makes $250,000 a year, not including his $211,055 bonus.
  • From October to December 2010, the site had 5.5 billion page views.
  • About 27 percent of its revenue comes from premium account fees. This amount is down from 53 percent in 2007.
  • As far as risk factors go, LinkedIn claims “we process, store and use personal information and other data, which subjects us to governmental regulation and other legal obligations related to privacy, and changes in these regulations or our actual or perceived failure to comply with such obligations could harm our business.”
  • Nearly two billion “people searches” were performed on the site last year.
Molly McHugh
Former Social Media/Web Editor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
UK’s film body is saving internet memes and viral videos. Yes, “Charlie bit my finger” is on the list.
Old memes are now a part of internet history
Charlie Bit my Finger Meme

The internet's goofiest little masterpieces are getting the archive treatment. The British Film Institute has preserved around 430 online videos as part of a collection meant to protect culturally significant internet moments. These include roughly three decades of British online culture, covering everything from early livestream experiments to viral memes that somehow became part of everyday language.

How memes are now a part of modern history

Read more
Instagram finally lets you rearrange your profile grid any way you want
You can now drag and drop posts anywhere on your Instagram profile grid
instagram-reorder-grid

Instagram users have been asking for this feature for years, and it’s finally here. Instagram is finally rolling out the option to reorder the grid, letting you move posts around your profile however you like.

Previously, everything on your grid appeared in chronological order, and you could pin up to three posts at the top. Instagram announced this change on X. The feature is available on the mobile Instagram app only, covering both smartphones and tablets.

Read more
Netflix says there is no future for theatrical releases in its streaming universe
Netflix-voice-search

Netflix may be willing to send Greta Gerwig’s upcoming Narnia movie into theaters, but if anyone in Hollywood was hoping that decision signaled a broader change of heart, the company just slammed that door shut.

In a candid interview with The New York Times, Netflix film chairman Dan Lin made it clear that the streamer’s relationship with movie theaters remains largely unchanged. While Gerwig’s Narnia is expected to receive a full theatrical release before arriving on Netflix, Lin described the project as an exception rather than the start of a new strategy. More notably, he suggested Netflix has little interest in accommodating filmmakers who continue to prioritize traditional theatrical runs.

Read more