Business 2.0: The Final Cover
by Michael Arrington on September 19, 2007

The final issue of Business 2.0 magazine, October 2007, will soon be in the mail to subscribers and on the newstands. It promises to be a collector’s item and will probably be the biggest selling copy of the magazine in its nine year history. The image to the right, we’re told from a source, is the cover for that final October issue. Click for a larger view.

It is a shame to see it go - Business 2.0 is one of only three magazines I subscribe to and read cover-to-cover every issue (the other two are Wired and The Economist). The story style and content was a big inspiration for starting TechCrunch, even though we are a poor imitation and rarely do it justice.

I first heard about Business 2.0 in 1998 when I saw a billboard on the 101 freeway near South San Francisco that advertised it, before the first issue came out. In 2001 it was sold to Time Warner, who’ve done little to grow the brand, and some say they were somewhat proactive in destroying it, always favoring the (in my opinion) sterile business magazine Fortune.

The magazine was one of the first major media publications to cover TechCrunch, exactly one year ago in an article written by Paul Sloan and Paul Kaihla. That article, by the way, was the source of the infamous images of me smoking a cigar and burning $100 bills (I’ve since learned that you don’t actually have to do what the photographer tells you to do).

Earlier this year Heather and I met with editor-in-chief Josh Quittner and we explored a merger between TechCrunch and Business 2.0. I believe we could have made the pieces fit in a way that would have worked well for both sides, but Time eventually squashed any deal by pulling them off the block and simply shutting it down (these discussions were confidential but recently leaked).

I’ve become friends with many of the people at Business 2.0 over the years, and respect the hell out of all of them. Many are moving on to Fortune, or to new gigs. I hope they all continue to write passionately about technology, and know that the work they’ve done will be greatly missed. And even though we never did a deal to merge with Business 2.0, I hope to work with some of the best and brightest from that publication in the future.

Comments

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So very sad to see Biz 2.O go. Crap, now what do I have to look forward to in the mailbox, certainly not Wired. At least there is always the Economist.

 

How creepy to see that you subscribe to precisely the three same magazines I do, and only those.

Also sad to see B2.0 go. You know you killed it, right? :-)

 

I first subscribed to Business 2.0 after getting the debut issue free in the mail from Imagine (as a long-time subscriber to Maximum PC — which was then boot). Eventually, I switched to FastCompany (I think around the time B2.0 was sold to Time, Inc.), which tended to cover more areas that interested me. But I do have fond memories of Business 2.0.

Maybe I’ll pick up this issue for old time’s sake.

 

Correction, I think boot was actually retired by 1998. Too long ago to remember. ;)

 
 

print has become a joke. most of these rags have become ten pages of filler garbage to ninety pages of ads.

 

Very well written Michael, I can sense your passion.

I still don’t fully understand why it’s being closed down - seems like a waste of a good brand.

For me, it was the only US magazine I subscribed to over here in Australia.

 

i subscribe to several magazines…

and by-far, Business2 was the magazine i read almost literally page for page; it’s a shame to see it go.

there’s always Entrepreneur magazine…it’s not solely webby startups - but at least it shares the common thread of startup co.s

 

Ahhh.. We always destroy what we fear ;)

 

Wired? It hasn’t been relevant for 10 years. It was a great magazine that has devolved into a poor man’s Omni. Business 2.0 was fine, but in reality, print is a niche these days - plane flights and the can, and Blackberry now rules the can.

 
 

If this magazine is so popular and considered to be good by its readers, I then wonder why its closing down. Maybe it should have been sold to somebody with a vision for it going forward.

 

Glad you wrote about this. I’m sad to see it go, too. It’s one of the three (non-skateboarding) magazines I subscribe to as well: Business 2.0, The Economist, and Mojo (best magazine on the planet IMHO, bar none). So yeah, guess I have to get an RSS reader for the bathroom? It’s gonna be lonely in there.

ian

 

Arrington, If I were you I’d get that picture blown up on a poster and hung right next to my Godfather poster. Sweet.

 

So sad. I only subscribe to Fortune and Business 2.0. Does that mean I only have to keep my fortune subscription to read biz2.0 articles too?

I enjoy reading it, but all other member of my family think it is for IT ppl only, maybe that’s why …

 
 

Hi all,
I live in Paris. How to buy Business 2.0 here in France ?
Can not book it neither online & off line
Thanks for your help
Olivier

 

I’m still high from the excitement of this week. I have just arrived home from the TechCrunch 40 conference and my head is spinning as I try to recount the wonderful experience I just endured. Incredible Keynotes, kickass start-ups and pretty good food were just a part of the magic of these past 48 hours….

It actually sickens me right now to hear the news that my favorite print periodical is being destroyed. It is the death of something that I have loved. I don’t want to liken it to a person or pet, but in a sense the gut feeling is similar.

You can never go backwards and must always march ahead. What was once a great thing will most likely never be again. The continued lesson to be learned in Silicon Valley is that of perseverance. I am certain that new things, perhaps even greater than B20 ever was will spawn from its disintegration.

The turning of this leaf is only fitting for this week to me as it is the start of the Jewish New Year. It is time for me to wipe the slate clean and start a fresh year. I only hope that this year something will successfully fill the large void that is being unreasonably created by Time Warner.

On another note, I would like to extend my thanks to Michael and to Jason for putting on an excellent conference. It was nice meeting both of you and this experience has sparked a fire in me that will one day be known to the world.

 

Maybe it will come back as Business 3.0?

 

Hey thanks Zach, I’m glad you enjoyed it. I am drafting a wrapup post that will go up tomorrow or Friday. What an experience that was.

 

the economist is a weekly =-)

michael, you truly are a rock star if you can get through the economist every week cover to cover. easily the most dense news magazine out there.

 

First it was Red Herring, and now Business 2.0. Tears :(

Biz 2.0 will always be one of my favoite mags ever! It will surely be missed.

Michael, I think You and Om should get together with other investors and buy the mag and bring it back!

 

The tidbit about you burning 100 dollar bills made me laugh. I love the honesty.

 

Almost like #2… I too read every issue of The Economist and Wired cover-to-cover, and have often read Business 2.0.
Olivier: check out eBay.com as soon as the last issue hits the U.S. newsstands, I am sure many sellers will be happy to provide you with a copy!

 

Wow, that really sucks. I just started subscribing a few issues ago and it’s one of my favorite mags. Sucks.

 

Great magazine, i was a subscriber from Greece, it was an amazing magazine. This is one of the 3 magazines I am subscriber (including Wired and MIT Review). But another issue with Real Estate?

 

Michael,

Sometimes in business and life things happen for a reason. Perhaps you will be able to look back in 1 or 2 years and say that you are happy that a merger between Tech Crunch and Business 2.0 did not happen.

We are still early in the game in terms of Blogging media…there very well could be something new in terms of online publishing that will even eclipse the earnings / readership etc that Techcrunch/Crunchbase have now.

Would it not be nice at that point to be able to go in headfirst with plenty of cash and with the ability to gain large market share in the new medium?

Besides, the writers and staff at Business 2.0 seemed top notch so perhaps you can bring a couple on board with TechCruch in the future:)

 

that is so bad. Business 2.0 is the only magazine I don’t miss. Too bad.

 

Michael, were those real $100 bills? Can you get locked up for that? Anyway, looking forward to seeing you in London at FOWA. From all the comments I’m surprised business 2.0 is joining the … deadpool…

 

May I have my money back from B2.0 for the remaining issues I won’t get?
;-)

@ Olivier: most of the US magazines, even if it’s you can’t find the info on their websites, provide overseas subscriptions, just call their callcenter. This is what I did for B2.0 (the subscription costed just 45 USD for Italy)

 

This is about the only magazine out there I would pay for, so sad. Good luck to all the staff. And Ema I guess now it’s too late to tell people how to subscribe overseas. Really one of the best magazine out there. Too bad.

 

Bummer. Great magazine. Much better format than Wired in my opinion.

 

Techcrunch could always grow its brand by going into print…you have all these contacts with VC firms, surely they’d back your venture if you don’t have the cash yourself.

And you already know how to write, and with an editor someone will always spellcheck your work.

And those same VC firms would be the first people to buy ads in the magazine.

 

I love biz 2.0. I got my first mag in October 2003 and I’ve been reading since. I actually just finished off this month’s issue on the bus this morning.

Sad

 

Wow I’m shocked that this mag is gone. Out of all the ones I get, this is one I always enjoyed the most and read first. In today’s ever fast-changing world, Business 2.0 was always relevant. Too bad…

 

Michael, I am with you, this magazine was also one of the few I really enjoyed all those years… It is a shame to see it go !

 

I’ve been a subscriber for a few years. Lately, it seems the content quality has gone down drastically. They oversimplify things to give people false hope that they can make money overnight. They often report on trends well after they are already well-publicised in TechCrunch and other popular sites/blogs. I still do enjoy reading the magazine while I’m taking a nice dump, but I think my new iPhone will be more entertaining on the crapper.

 

I tried FastCompany but found they are relatively uninformed technology wise. One article was labeled “Cafeteria 2.0.” Really! your attaching the 2.0 to food now. Terribly disappointing. Forbes and Businesweek are about 4 months behind any real technology development story, I guess its for all the corp. heads who don’t know any better and are all about image. Mags I’m down to for tech…

Wired - Pretty Good (too much geek tho)
MIT Technology Review - Excellent

Second the economist, but its overwhelming to keep up with.

 

It sucks to see them go, but them bastards just charged my cc again for another year just last week. I am waiting to get a refund.

 

I’m putting this on my top 10 list of things that sucked about 2007.

 

I’m gunna miss them as well.. the only major publication that profiled my business (not that I was looking, they asked!). Might have jinxed ‘em!

 

Fast Company FTW!!!

 

Agree with Andrew.
Why not create a print version of TechCrunch? Business 2.0 (which I’ll definitely miss a lot) had articles from other tech blogs (TC’s competitors ;) ) and trying out a print version of TC on which (laid out) folks from Bus 2.0 would work would be not the worst idea after all. I would definitely subscribe to it…
Go TechCrunch magazine, go!!!

 

Given the passion subscribers feel about the mag, I am betting some smart people will come together to fill the void. It won’t be called “Business 2.0″ because that belongs to Time but I am going on the record with a prediction that “TechCrunch” magazine will be launched in the next 6-9 months.

I’m going to further bet that it doesn’t get produced via the traditional expensive process. Rather, it gets produced using technology demonstrated at TC40 this year - http://www.techcrunch40.com/20.....resenter=7

Arrington, am I way off?

By the way, I call that PYMWYMI (pim-wim-ee) Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is. Anyone want to take that bet?

Regards,
George

 

Man that picture is cool and uncool at teh same time. wow… You really have money to burn…

 

I read 3 magazines regularly…

Business 2.0

MIT Technology Review

The Economist (sometimes you just need an out of U.S. perspective)

I also like ESPN the magazine but its easier to just watch sports center so I stopped getting it.

It is a shame to see Business 2.0 go…but at the end of the day if I had a large marketing budget (and I did at my last company), the dollars spent online produced far better to anything in print. The 10-15K to get a spot in Bus 2.0 was far more productive in search or on targeted sites like TC. I think a model of paid editorial (clearly labeled as such) may be the only way to go for the print guys. Coverage in the magazine was huge, advertising wasn’t worth it. Is there a way to mix and maintain integrity…unclear. In any case, a great pub. Need to find something else to fill the void

 

recently i found a cool web site with web2.0 technology , which may give huys some idea about web2.0’s application in our daily life. You may not feel so wired.
http://youmonitor.us/
I think it’s a really cool US web site ; - )

 

Love B2.0…it provided for many leg falling as sleep sessions.

Great content, that was aimed and written for the appropriate audience.

I still have Wired, Inc., and Harvard Bus Review. The Economist…I don’t know if I’m ready for that, YET.

 

Guys,

It seems we all love Biz 2.0. I am thinking of hacking up something real quick for Biz 2.0 subscribers. Something along the line of …”We want Business 2.0 back”….what do you think?

Please share your thoughts

Sarah

 

I’m gonna miss Business 2.0 as well. Some great journalists over there for sure. Michal Levi-Ram did an excellent job covering the wireless industry.

 

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