J. Michael Arrington (born March 13, 1970 in Huntington Beach, California) is a serial entrepreneur and the founder of TechCrunch, a blog covering startups and technology news.
Arrington attended Claremont McKenna College (BA Economics, 1992) and Stanford Law School (JD, 1995), and practiced as a corporate and securities lawyer at two law firms: O’Melveny & Myers and Wilson Sonsini Goodrich... → Learn More
The panel was moderated by CODE Advisors founder Michael Marquez, who was also a former corp dev executive at both Yahoo and CBS. He put together a panel of buyers that will represent most or all of the M&A activity in the online space over the next year or so, with the possible exception of AOL.
My favorite part is at 27:30 where each panelist says the top acquisitions that the person to their right should make. Watch everyone’s body language – lots of nervousness up there on stage. But the entire hour is worth watching if you’re even thinking about selling your company right now.
10:54 – Mike Brown gives some insights into high level strategy of Facebook
11:51 – Fritz Lanman talks about why Microsoft hasn’t been as active as its peers (although that will be changing)
13:33 – Fritz hits on the highlights of a typical M&A process
20:45 – “Speed Round”, all panelists comment on the areas they believe are most overhyped or underhyped
22:23 – “Speed Round”, all panelists comment on the best under the radar company
27:30 – “Role Playing” – Mike asks the panelist to speculate on the top acquisition choices for others on the panel
32:56 – Taylor answers how a company can best interact with Yahoo!
35:30 – Amin gives advice on how to best survive the Corporate Development process
39:50 – Fritz (and all other panelist) comment on the Corporate Development “bidding” process
52:07 – Panelists talk about M&A learning lessons from “failed” M&A
57:38 – Closing words of advice from each panelist