Matthews finds Primary worth a second try
Angela Mueller
Once
just wasn't enough for Brian Matthews or his Internet
team.
Matthews
merged PrimaryClick.com and Hostirian -- companies headed
by two of his former executives -- with his recreated
Internet service provider, Primary Networks.
"Never
in my wildest dreams did I think I would get back into
providing Internet access," Matthews said, "especially
not this quickly."
But
get back in he did. In May, he repurchased the corporate
Internet assets of Mpower Communications, which just a
year ago paid $145 million for Primary Networks. He declined
to disclose terms of the repurchase deal.
Now
Primary Networks, PrimaryClick and Hostirian are wholly
owned subsidiaries of the newly created River City Internet
Group.
PrimaryClick,
founded last July, is an Internet advertising firm headed
by Chief Executive Trey Goede. Hostirian, founded in January,
is a Web hosting firm run by Richard Hercules. Both men
were vice presidents of sales at the old Primary Networks.
Matthews
will be chief executive of Primary Networks and of River
City Internet Group. Goede and Hercules will retain their
chief executive jobs at their respective subsidiaries,
and both will serve on the River City board.
"It's
fantastic," Goede said. "We're back doing what
we love to do, and we're ready to go at it again."
Employee
shareholders
The merger was a stock-for-stock transaction, with all
non-founding shareholders in Primary Networks, PrimaryClick
and Hostirian receiving shares in River City. Matthews
said most of these shareholders are employees of the three
companies.
The
original founders of Primary Networks -- Brian and Carol
Matthews, John Brison and Charlie Wiegert -- are the largest
shareholders in River City Internet Group, followed by
Goede, Hercules and Steve Szachta, vice president of Hostirian.
The
Matthews' collection of companies can be a confusing alphabet
soup to outsiders, but for the Matthews and other owners
it has spelled success.
River
City is owned by CDM Properties, CDM Fantasy Sports and
CDM Ventures. Matthews founded CDM Fantasy Sports, a computer
game company, in 1991. CDM Ventures is the company's investment
arm and CDM Properties is the property management arm.
Matthews
said annualized revenue for the three River City Internet
Group companies is $6 million -- $4 million for Primary
Networks and $1 million each for Hostirian and PrimaryClick.
The holding company will have about 40 employees, 12 at
Hostirian, seven at PrimaryClick and the rest at Primary
Networks. No employees were laid off in the merger.
"We'll
actually be adding a couple of employees (at Hostirian)
as a result of the merger," Hercules said. "We
picked up a significant number of new customers as a result
of our alliance with Primary Networks."
Urge
to merge
Matthews listed "multiple reasons" for merging
the three companies: "One, we get a lot of efficiencies
from a personnel standpoint as well the ability to do
some network sharing." Also, the three subsidiaries
can cross-sell Internet products to clients.
This
merging of online service providers is not uncommon in
the Internet industry, said Eddie Bannerman-Menson, a
local independent e-commerce consultant, and it's a strategy
that is usually attractive to potential clients.
"Most
companies now want a one-stop shop offering many services,"
Bannerman-Menson said. "That way they don't have
to manage multiple vendors. We're going to continue to
see a lot of consolidation like this in the industry."
Matthews
was a major investor in the founding of both PrimaryClick
and Hostirian. "We had a quarter of a million dollars
invested in each of them," Matthews said. "When
I sold Primary Networks to Mpower last year, I knew there
were two areas that we hadn't handled well at Primary
-- Internet marketing and Web hosting -- so those were
areas I wanted to invest in."
Both
PrimaryClick's and Hostirian's offices are in the West
Port building housing the CDM companies, and Mpower previously
was on the first floor of the building, in space once
occupied -- and now reoccupied -- by Primary Networks.
All
Hostirian employees are former Primary Networks employees,
and a majority of the recreated Primary Networks employees
used to work there. Only one PrimaryClick employee had
worked at Primary Network; the others were "brought
in through the CDM side of the house," Goede said.
Primary
Networks was founded in 1994 as a spin-off of CDM Fantasy
Sports. The company was sold to Rochester, N.Y.-based
Mpower Communications a year ago. In May, Primary executives
bought back Mpower's corporate Internet access accounts,
including more than 5,000 accounts in St. Louis and Kansas
City. Access US, a St. Louis-based Internet service provider,
is acquiring Mpower's consumer accounts.
amueller@bizjournals.com
