Colin Digiaro

Colin Digiaro was one of the co-founders of Myspace and currently serves as COO of Jam City (company) alongside former MySpace founders Chris DeWolfe and Aber Whitcomb. At MySpace, he was the Senior Vice President of International Corporate Development, a post he left in 2008 to found Slingshot Labs, an Internet incubator owned by News Corporation.[1]

Digiaro holds a B.S. in Policy from the University of Southern California; he lives in Los Angeles.[2]

Career

Digiaro has been involved in the expansion efforts of a number of startups. Most notably, Digiaro co-founded MySpace where he oversaw advertising sales, operations, and strategy. Digiaro led the effort to position MySpace as an advertising platform, introducing nearly every major Fortune 100 brand advertiser to social media, generating annualized ad revenues of over $490 million during Myspace's in 2009.[3][4] During Myspace's lifetime, Digiaro was also the one that worked on obtaining the website's "first mobile deal with Helio".[5]

History

Before the formation of Myspace, Digiaro worked at an internet-based company called ResponseBase, which sold electronic books and other direct marketing materials through email. Digiaro was first invited to the company by an old friend, Chris DeWolfe, whom he had worked with in earlier years at the First Bank of Beverly Hills. ResponseBase became a steadily larger company over time and an offer was made by eUniverse to buy the company. During the course of involvement with eUniverse, Responsebase members created what was to become Myspace. However, due to a number of incidents, by 2003, eUniverse ended up owing ResponseBase a significant amount of "earnout money". This was paid off by giving ResponseBase employees one-third of the shares in Myspace, with Digiaro being one of the six ResponseBase employees to earn a portion of the shares.[6]

gollark: If society were sensible, we could probably fix climate change without horrible sacrifices now.
gollark: The same act also includes some provision where MPs are exempt from some of it, because equality.
gollark: Why do they need that? No idea. Can anyone get rid of that power? Probably not.
gollark: UK surveillance law gives some random government food regulation agency power to look at internet history data or something like that.
gollark: Fortunately, that doesn't matter because they don't mean anything and can just be ignored arbitrarily by judges.

References

  1. Michael Arrington (August 21, 2009). "Another News Corp. Digital Exec Departure: Colin Digiaro Resigns From Slingshot Labs". TechCrunch. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  2. Vator. "Company.com". Vator Inc. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  3. Pete Cashmore (July 11, 2006). "MySpace, America's Number One". Mashable. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  4. Glenn Peoples (January 11, 2011). "MySpace Lays Off Nearly Half Its Staff". Billboard. Retrieved March 13, 2012.
  5. Monica Alleven (January 4, 2012). "Game Fetches Help for Humane Society". Wireless Week. Archived from the original on March 25, 2012. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  6. Angwin, Julia (2009). Stealing MySpace: The Battle to Control the Most Popular Website in America. Random House Digital, Inc. pp. 27, 45, 84, 160, 230. Retrieved March 25, 2012. Colin Digiaro.


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