Log In   |  Register Free Newsletter Subscription
Skip navigation
Zibb
Subscribe to Multichannel News
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

ShopNBC Hires Segel Progeny

Sons of QVC's Founder Will Consult for the Struggling Network

by Luis Clemens -- Multichannel News, 10/19/2008 8:00:00 PM

One of the most troubled home-shopping networks in the industry, ShopNBC, has just landed the consulting advice of Alan and Marvin Segel, sons of QVC founder Joe Segel.

QVC founder and chairman emeritus Joseph M. Segel is a legend in the shop-at-home industry. In 1989, he bought a Minnesota-based competitor, Cable Value Network, which was twice QVC's size. Almost 20 years later, his two sons, Alan and Marvin, have begun working for another Minnesota-based electronic retailer, ShopNBC, that also faces long odds.

Segel Associates has spent 15 years helping clients sell their products through the direct-response television industry. Marvin Segel describes ShopNBC as “much more nimble and much more responsive” than QVC.

“They are smart. They are experienced. … Their track record is second to none,” said Keith Stewart, the ShopNBC chief operating officer and a QVC veteran. Stewart is counting on the brothers to “bring packaged concepts to ShopNBC that will be meaningful and relevant to our customers.”

Among the packaged concepts is Real Chef, a firm that provides “meal solutions” and kitchenware. The company is run by Alan Segel, who said: “The economy is in the toilet and people are eating more at home and they are watching television. It is a challenging time but in this aspect, it is a growth area. … People want this.”

Alan's products had previously been sold on QVC. “QVC has done an extraordinary job but I think ShopNBC is coming into its own,” he said.

ShopNBC's recent management stumbles have driven down its stock price. In January 2004, the stock was trading at over $19. Last week, the price hovered around $1 a share.

Stewart only recently came on board as COO following Rene Aiu's very brief stint as CEO. He describes his time at ShopNBC as “the fastest month of my life.” He has reduced clearance sales and reorganized the programming department. Stewart said return rates are down, adding, “We are now selling on value rather than price and sense of urgency alone.”

Since Stewart's arrival, the board of directors (of which he is a member) has decided to hire Minneapolis-based Piper Jaffray & Co. to look for a buyer. Despite that move, he insists he is working to position the firm for long-term growth.

“There have been a lot of very vocal shareholders who have been pressing for the company to [sell], because over the recent past they've been faced with basically burning their cash position,” said Argus Research securities analyst Wendy Walker. “There is a strong sense among the shareholder base that given the company's operational missteps over the recent past, the best way to preserve what modest shareholder value there is remaining in the company would be to either sell the company as a whole or sell off the assets.”

Among the vocal shareholders is hedge-fund manager J. Carlo Cannell, who, in a Sept. 24 letter to ShopNBC CEO John Buck wrote, “It is amazing to us how much value has been destroyed under your stewardship.”

Amidst the last month's market turmoil, ShopNBC's stock has plummeted by more than half. It is trading well below its breakup value.

Activist investors such as Cannell are impatient and angry. In the same letter mentioned above, the hedge fund manager wrote, “That you would have to hire an agent at all to advise you on what should have been done long ago is shameful.”

But Marvin Segel insisted that “for every down there is an up,” a reflection of the relentless optimism endemic to those who work in direct-response television. (His first job out of high school was selling cars.)

And has the elder Mr. Segel offered any advice?

“We have not said a word to him,” said Marvin. The brothers did not want to present their father with a potential conflict of interest in his role as chairman emeritus of QVC.

Marvin Segel added: “He is all business. He would totally respect what we are doing. … The challenge, right now, to turn something around is very exciting.”

RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email
Talkback
Related Content
More >>>

Reed Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Most Recent Resources

Advertisement

Related Microsite Content

Related Links

More Content
  • Voices
  • Photos
  • Podcasts

Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

VIEW ALL VOICES RSS
HALL OF FAME WELCOME

2009 CABLE HALL OF FAME

Some snapshots from the 2009 Cable Hall of Fame induction, part of Cable Connection-Fall in Denver on Oct. 27.
HIGH ACHIEVER

2009 ACC FORUM

The Association of Cable Communicators headed west from Washington, D.C., to Denver as its 2009 Forum and Beacon Awards ceremony became part of Cable Connections-Fall festivities.
Curtain Rises

CTAM SUMMIT: DAY ONE

Snapshots from day one of CTAM Summit '09 in Denver. Photos by John Staley.

mm160-osms
Advertisement
Multichannel Subscription
NEWSLETTERS
Multichannel Newswire
HD Update
Cable Technology
VOD Newsletter
Hispanic TV Update
HD Programming
Multicultural Newsletter
B&C NewsCentral
Television Careers



Please read our Privacy Policy

About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   Subscription   |   Affiliate Links   |   RSS
© 2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites