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Old 05-21-2008, 03:40 PM   #1 (permalink)
 
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Unless you're looking carefully, you'll likely miss the fact that the new Asylum Web site for young men is a creation of Time Warner Inc.'s AOL. Same for WalletPop on personal finance, Spinner on indie music and StyleList on fashion.
The AOL brand is taking a back seat as the company long associated with dial-up Internet access for the masses quietly launches dozens of sites targeted at specialized audiences.
AOL figures that to grow its audiences -- and draw additional advertising the company crucially needs to offset plunging revenue from its shrinking base of Internet access subscribers -- it must break from a one-size-fits-all model and let its specialty sites set their own designs and editorial tone, shedding the AOL brand when necessary.
Bill Wilson, AOL's executive vice president for vertical programming, said the company has been retaining the AOL name for some sites -- AOL Body is one, after research showed women 25 and up respond well to the brand.
And the brand isn't completely invisible even if AOL isn't part of the site's name. There's usually a small AOL logo somewhere, along with links to other AOL sites. The right mix, Wilson said, is the product of research on what makes the most sense for consumers.
Take Asylum, which has grown into a leading site for young men since its December launch. The name was chosen partly to convey humor and irreverence.
"If we put it out as AOL Men, we got the feedback it wouldn't connect," said Mike Rich, a senior vice president who oversees Asylum and other specialty sites. "People just didn't connect this type of content with the AOL brand."
Wilson said AOL's unbranding can help potential visitors know that the site isn't part of its subscription service, which AOL started breaking down in late 2004 in favor of free, ad-supported sites.
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