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Tuesday, August 8. 2006

GoDaddy pulls its IPO filing!  Why I decided to pull it.

At 2 PM today (Tuesday, August 8, 2006) I announced at a meeting broadcast to Go Daddy’s 1200+ employees that The Go Daddy Group was officially withdrawing its registration with the SEC to become a public company.

We just finished our best quarter – ever!
This decision comes after the best quarter in the company’s history. During the 2nd quarter The Go Daddy Group Inc. had GAAP revenue of $56,985,000, a net accounting loss of $733,000 and positive cash flow from operations of $14,240,000.

This compares to the 2nd Qtr 2005 when our GAAP revenue was $31,082,000, and we had a net accounting loss of $3,389,000, and positive cash flow from operations was $6,871,000.

As I write this blog article, our revenue numbers for July and August continue on this positive trend.

The SEC just accepted our S-1 as ready-to-go!
This past Thursday we were notified by the SEC that our S-1 filing was now accepted and they had no further comments. This means we were cleared to go public at the time of our choosing.

Throughout the filing process, we have found the SEC to be good to work with. Their turn-around was quick and their comments to the point.

We just announced incredible growth numbers!
Last Tuesday, on July 29, we announced together with Jay Westerdal of Name Intelligence (a leading industry analyst group that tracks domain names), that The Go Daddy Group’s domain name portfolio is not only number one in the domain industry with 14.6 million registrations, but is now more than double the size of its closest competitor.

To put Go Daddy’s growth into perspective, consider that we passed the prior industry leader – The Network Solutions Group – on April 26, 2005, and in just 15 months we “lapped them” – we now have more than twice the registrations they do!
So thanks to all of our wonderful customers, about 1 in every 3 domain name registrations are now made with GoDaddy.com.

Nobody innovates like Go Daddy!
Our degree of product innovation and release continues to be second to none. We continue to be the only registrar that owns substantially all of the technology that it provides to its customers. Some products we provide our customers that no other registrar offers are:
1. Business Registrations
2. Platinum Registrations
3. Podcasting through our Quick Podcast product

Why I decided to pull our IPO filing.
You might ask, why, if Go Daddy’s situation has never been better, did I decide to pull our IPO filing? There are three reasons for doing so:

1. Market conditions
2. The Quiet Period
3. We don’t have to go public

Market Conditions.
The state of the stock market for an IPO is as uncertain as it could be. In fact, the USA Today published an article that IPO stands for “Investor Pain Overload.” This is due, in large part, to the overall "bearishness" in the market.

Consider the situation from a global perspective and follow it all the way to Wall Street.
We have war and escalating hostilities throughout the Middle East, with no end in sight. Oil prices are skyrocketing. Tech stocks, in particular, are once again taking a beating on Wall Street, due in part to some investment banks cutting their ratings on the U.S. technology sector. Rising interest rates have played a key factor. Their steady rise over recent months has put adverse pressure on stocks overall.

In a bit of irony, last week when the SEC informed us our filing was accepted as being ready-to-go, market conditions were a terrible mess. In fact, inflation worries, say analysts, are bleeding into the tech sector. For all these reasons, I liken the timing of us getting the ‘green light’ to a person being told his car is in perfect condition just before it’s about to be driven into a wall.

I don’t expect market conditions to correct themselves for sometime.
I feel we owe it to ourselves to withdraw our filing until better and more stable times arrive

What if you were a cash cow and nobody noticed?
This seems like an excellent time to address an issue that has bugged me since the moment we filed our S-1.

After we did our filing, I was surprised that not one journalist took the time to look at our cash flow statement to report our actual results. Instead, each and every one of them hastily reported that Go Daddy filed to do an IPO and that we had never turned a profit. Not one of them took the time to look at our cash flow statements to see that we generated significant operating cash flow during each reporting period.

The accounting method we are required to use.
Because GoDaddy.com sells domain name registrations, we are required to use an accounting method that is ultra conservative.

We are required to show income on domain names – as if our customers pay for them monthly over the life of the registration.
Because we sell domain name registrations, we must recognize the income we earn on each domain name over the term of its registration. For example: if a customer registers a domain name with us for three years, we must show the income earned over the three year period. However, all of the salaries, advertising, systems and overhead costs associated with getting that domain name registration are recorded and expensed on the day the registration is sold. As a result we defer most of the income we make on every domain name until way into the future.

The fact is our customers pay for registrations in advance, registrations are non-refundable and after recording the registration our job is pretty well done.
It’s important to realize that when Go Daddy (or any registrar for that matter) sells a registration, we get paid in-full on day one, and we pay the registry in-full in advance for its share. The registration — once made — is not refundable. Also other than providing the after-sale service that any responsible merchant would provide, there is really nothing we need to do. We don’t take the domain name out and shine it up every now and then.

We do have to provide our customers with systems they can use to manage their domain names – such as systems for forwarding the domain, managing the associated domain name servers and updating contact information, as well as systems that ensure the domain name resolves with related products like email, search engines, after-market options, etc.

On an annual basis we are required to send an ICANN mailing – addressed to ICANN governed names which asks the registrant to verify their contact information. We field the occasional dispute and beyond that, all we are required to do is send a renewal notice before it’s ready to expire.

All of the above are handled by computer systems that are in place on day one and are paid for by the original registration. So while there is some argument for spreading the income associated with the non-refundable registration fee over the life of the registration, the end result is that because of the way we are required to defer revenue and recognize expense on day one, the accounting method we use is very conservative indeed. To give you some idea of the magnitude of the profits we are required to defer, consider that as of June 30, 2006 the amount of net deferred revenue (which is the net profit we make on each registration — i.e. what we sell them for less what we pay to the registries) on our balance sheet exceeds $95,404,000 million dollars. A very significant number indeed.

It’s pretty much impossible to show an accounting profit during growth periods.
Because of our ultra conservative method of accounting, during periods of sharp growth it is very difficult, in fact almost impossible, for us to show a profit. This is why Go Daddy to date has yet to show an accounting profit.

In time the situation will correct itself.
Slowly — because of the maturing of our domain name portfolio, and the eventual slowing of our growth rate, due to the law of large numbers, and the increasing revenue generated by sales of additional products that generate immediate GAAP earnings, we will report accounting earnings — under the accounting method that the AICPA insists we use.

Incidentally, the IRS thinks all this is nonsense. They make us use the cash method.

The Quiet Period.
If GoDaddy.com is anything, it is an outspoken company and I am an outspoken CEO.

For us, the Quiet Period that came along with the IPO filing has been suffocating. Basically from the time a filing is made until one month after the stock hits the market, the company going public cannot say or do anything that can be construed as something being done to “hype its stock.”

There’s no TV or radio in the Quiet Period.
The SEC has a number of rules that are very clear about what cannot be done during this time. One of these has to do with radio and TV communications. This forced me to discontinue hosting my weekly radio show, www.LifeOnline.com, during our Quiet Period.

Let’s talk about forward-looking statements.
Another important thing that must be avoided is making “forward-looking” statements.

During my last broadcast on my weekly radio show, my co-host Nima Jones and I somehow started talking about the old song “I ain’t gonna bump no more with no big fat woman!” When I closed the show Nima asked me what I was going to do after we went off-air, and I replied jokingly, “I just might go bump with a big fat woman tonight.”

After leaving the studio our General Counsel Attorney Jones told me that if I had said that after filing the S-1, because I was talking about something I was going to do, it would be considered a “FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENT!” I think that pretty much sums up the Quiet Period.

We don’t have to go public.
The Go Daddy Group, Inc. has one investor: Me. The tech companies we have witnessed complete the IPO process and actually go public during this difficult time have all depended on venture capitalists, both on their board and as their investors. The principals in these companies have made it no secret that given the choice, they would have much preferred not to go public. They proceeded with their offerings only because these venture capitalist investors made them to do it.

Why would venture capitalist investors do such a thing? It’s quite simple. They need to flip their investment to show a gain for whatever fund it is they are managing. If the underlying company takes it on the chin as a result, then so be it.

That’s not going to happen to Go Daddy.

To date, Go Daddy has been completely self-funded –we have been cash flow positive since October 2001, and – whether anyone has noticed or not — continue to generate healthy cash flow from operations. We’ll manage just fine without the IPO money — thank you.

Who knows what the future holds.
So there you have it. I’ve decided to pull the IPO. Things have never been better for Go Daddy. It’s the financial market and other conditions that concern us. One day we’ll be back.

I’ll talk about pulling the IPO on tomorrow’s radio show.
I will be talking about all this on my weekly radio show – that’s right, the Quiet Period is over baby – I’m back on the air! We will broadcast live tomorrow – Wednesday August 9, 2006. There are lots of ways to listen — including after-the-fact via download if you miss the live show. To find out how to listen go to www.lifeonline.com.

I’ll Stay “Master of My Own Domain”… for now.

So The Go Daddy Group, Inc. goes back to being a private company. I don’t need to drive this company into a wall to make a quick buck. Controlling our own destiny is what has made this company GREAT from the start.

And who knows, I just may go bump with that “fat woman tonight.”



 

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God bless you Bob Parsons. I just read the IPO decision - just another example of why you deserve every single penny you have generated and more. I have been a web designer (freelance) for 6 years. I am an actor in NYC and have a college degree and experience in project management, marketing, and I have also worked for several corporate entities. You have absolutely mastered your business model and it shows from the top down. I just talked to one of your employees about your genius in handling your superbowl ads. He relayed to me how absolutely happy he was to have you as the boss. He stressed how well you treat everyone there and even told me about the plasma TV's you are giving away to some of your employees for superbowl Sunday. Taking care of your employees from training to making sure they are happy is not an easy task. I tell ABSOLUTELY EVERYONE I talk to that NO ONE compares to your prices or your service. You are an example for all businesses to follow. I hope to own my own business one day in the near future and have just secured my own LLC. (we bought the domain name from you guys - of course) If you ever have any need for an experienced project manager in New York City, I would be lucky to work for you. You are at the top of your game - and the other teams don't even deserve to be in the stadium.

Sincerely,
Jason C Small
#1 Jason C Small (www.jasonalancaine.com) on Jan 20 2007, 23:35 Reply
Bob, are you allowing or is there a way for people to invest in your company "pre IPO"? I too am an AZ resident and have watched Godaddy for many years always wondering if there was a way to get in on a company I felt was on it's way up.

Thank you,
#2 Gary Hopkins on Jan 4 2007, 20:49 Reply
THIS COMPANY IS NOWHERE NEAR READY FOR PUBLIC OFFERING. BOB PARSONS KNOWS THE OFFERING PRICE WOULD BE TOO LOW AND NOT ENOUGH TO FILL HIS POCKETS COMPFORTABLY. TRY THINKING LIKE BILL GATES BEFORE YOU TRY ACTING LIKE YOU HAVE THE SAME STATURE AS HIM.
#3 KARL F RUTKOWSKI on Dec 4 2006, 11:39 Reply
Keeping control is the name of the game, you may never know just how many ordinary enterpreuners you've INSPIRED to the next height. I personally am very grateful to be a customer and get to know some of the secrets behind the sizzle of Bob Parson's and group success.
#4 Phil Chilton (www.liveyourlifehome.com) on Nov 23 2006, 18:28 Reply
Keep Control of what you built - Many times you will lose control when you go public.
#5 Tom Bennett - AMSOIL DIRECT (www.lubedealer.com/bennett) on Oct 21 2006, 06:19 Reply
Nice publicity stunt!
#6 A. Low on Oct 17 2006, 04:06 Reply
Your staff sincerely thanks you for not subjecting them to the onerous Sarbanes-Oxley requirements, and they don't even know it.
#7 Doug on Oct 5 2006, 05:21 Reply
Bob,

I asked some CEO friends of mine about your decision, and they all have said this makes sense.

Great job! Don't worry about the riff-raff comments from the cheap seats.

Andy F
VP, Treasurer Mountain Computers of Reno, NV
#8 Andy F (http://www.MountainComputers.Org) on Oct 4 2006, 18:43 Reply
I for one, am extremely upset that the IPO was pulled. I was really looking forward to investing in Go Daddy stock. I was very excited. I even planned on purchasing more Go Daddy products since the company was going public- and I wanted to be a part of the reason for the Go Daddy stock rising.

Please reconsider Bob, take Go Daddy public soon when market conditions better!

Investing in Go Daddy stock and buying their services at the same time=extreme loyalty towards Go Daddy

Please Bob.
P.S. I like the new Danica Patrick picture on the big homepage- center banner

Best of Luck.
#9 s (http://www.buynowdomains.com) on Oct 3 2006, 17:50 Reply
I believe Mr Parsons did the right thing. You do not have to go Public if you got money. You go public in order to use OPM.
#10 George Tarsoulis (http://www.HomeNest.net) on Sep 28 2006, 12:03 Reply
After reading many of the posts here it seems that Wall Street is where companies go when they can't seem to make a profit on their own.
It seems to me it like taking candy (money) from a baby ( American middle class ).
People born in the 20's 30"s and the 40"s ended up with huge sums of money in the banks, and owned their home outright. And I said home, they weren't out buying everything in sight. They were happy with their lives, they weren't running scared.
They got this money by saving. Working hard and saving.
People born in the 50's 60's and 70's will die owing huge amounts of money.
Most will never know home ownership. I mean the house is paid for. You don't own the house until it's paid for!
They will have spent their lives running from the boggy man.
The children born today will not understand the meaning of "This is mine." they will only know "this is mine says the bank."
None will ever own their home, and most will believe that living hand to mouth is the way God intended it to be.
Wall Street and the Banks are mostly the reason for this plight.— Most middle class will never see this as a plight. Just good American living. Like the serfs in Russia when the Russian Generals came back from an enlightening trip to France and said your all free, go, run, live your lives. The Russian serfs replied "What! Are you @#$% crazy. We worked hard to get to where we are today." —
Bob, you threw yourself into the ring with the heavy weights and knocked them for a loop, your still swinging and pounding them hard.
I can see where you are taking GoDaddy and there's no one in front of you. The big boys in your game are old and tired, and never considered the power of good customer service and long term low prices.
Matter of fact they don't even know what customer service is, nor do they offer it. They still charge more then any one else on the net.
Go for the touch down.
And if you go public can you wait until I make some money utilizing your services, because once you go public that "customer service" and "low prices" shit will have to go.
Because then it will be the investors not your customers that matters.
And we love you Bob.
Now let me go wipe my nose off and get back to work. lol
#11 Gerald Parsons (http://www.711net.com) on Sep 24 2006, 23:38 Reply
Dear Kenneth:

Nima Jones here — I'm Bob's co-host on his radio show and while Bob is away, he requested that I keep track of his blog comments and respond as needed.

That being said Kenneth, you certainly have a keen eye — Bob meant $95 million, not 95 million million. Although I'm sure we would love to have "95 million million on our balance sheet!" — Then again, who wouldn't?

Appreciate your post,

Nima
#12 Nima on Sep 21 2006, 11:13 Reply
Why would you even consider going public when you do not have to? I would consider it a "Cruel and Unusual Punishment" making you a hostage of the Wall Street thugs.
#13 Dr Bob Hacker on Sep 21 2006, 06:29 Reply
Love Godaddy.com... but just had to double check the digits...

"net deferred revenue (which is the net profit we make on each registration — i.e. what we sell them for less what we pay to the registries) on our balance sheet exceeds $95,404,000 million dollars."

exceeds 95 million million? Thassalottamillions!

Cheers,
KO
#14 Kenneth Olsen (www.kennetholsen.com) on Sep 20 2006, 08:59 Reply
Dear jim,

I just might do both.

Appreciate your post,

Bob
#15 bob parsons on Sep 18 2006, 12:30 Reply
I agree with the Wall Street thought... my opinion they have taken what was a great idea and manipulated people who put their faith and trust in them to futher their own success. It has been good but greed has taken over. Kudos for not playing their game. I love your service and your program. The ASP. program would be nice but I can wait....thanks again and keep doing what you're doing.
#16 Bob (www.bobdeline.com) on Sep 17 2006, 19:48 Reply
So are you going to go bump with a big fat woman or be master of your own domain? Which is it?
#17 jim collins on Sep 17 2006, 15:31 Reply
You are a very clever person and I will be more than glad to host my future company websites at your company servers. Most people will sell their souls for just a few quick bucks but you know that is better to walk along than holding hand with the devil.
I wish you good fortune with your company´s future!!!
#18 Chikashi Mochizuki (www.ym-company.com) on Sep 16 2006, 21:42 Reply
Dear teebone,

There's no doubt about it — ICANN needs to step up and be more assertive in discharging its oversight responsibilities. We will be making our view known during the Senate hearings which will take place on Sept 20th.

Appreciate your post,

Bob
#19 bob parsons on Sep 15 2006, 17:04 Reply
Glad to hear you changed your mind.

I have seen high-technology stocks fall in value because the company failed to make as much profit as the market analysts had forecast. They made millions in profit; just not as much as magic-eight-ball gazer said they should!

Once you are public, you can find yourself forced to take actions which bring money in the short term but are detrimental in the long run.

One large company I worked for fired 10% of its work force to cut costs one quarter. The devastating effect on morale alone, not to mention actual productivity, was in no way worth meeting "market expectations".

Keep driving your company the way you want to. Keep making the right decisions for the long term, lobbying ICANN against crooked kiting schemes, and doing good work.

Some of us understand and appreciate.

Daniel Descheneaux
#20 Daniel Descheneaux (http://www.host-db.com/tvb) on Sep 15 2006, 13:27 Reply
GoDaddy already has a lobbyist in DC!

Lobbyist/Firm: GoDaddy.com
Clients: GoDaddy.com
Date of Registration: Dec. 1, 2005
Issues: ICANN, privacy issues.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/09/ AR2006090900829.html
#21 anonymous on Sep 15 2006, 07:40 Reply
Amy,

Did you bother to research the issue before you made your proclamation?

I did. How does it feel to have made a false accusation? You made an assumption and got angry and now, I wager, you will refuse to acknowledge your error or will justify your stance in some convoluted manner.

Good luck with that.
#22 Jonathan Moore (www.jonathanclydemoore.com) on Sep 15 2006, 06:36 Reply
Mr. Parsons,

Thank you for all your wonderful service, please keep it up the good work by being so helpful to your customers.

Best Regard
Mo. Imani
#23 Mo Imani on Sep 14 2006, 22:55 Reply
Dear Bob,

I'm very impressed by your wise decision considering the market situation! Such decision required lots of common senses and courage.

All the best for you and GoDaddy!

VK
#24 Van Kham CHIEM (http://www.vksolutions.com) on Sep 14 2006, 22:17 Reply
I've never met a disgruntled employee at Godaddy.com Phil.
#25 Kate (http://www.phx411.com) on Sep 14 2006, 18:32 Reply
Bob, You should not be too suprised that the analysts only see that you never turned a profit, most probably cannot read a finacial statement!
Alot of what you do and why you are successfull is you keep it simple and do a good job. Nothing too complicated about the boobs in you TV ads.
I bet you will be glad you pulled the IPO.
#26 dave thinel on Sep 14 2006, 13:07 Reply
Great decision for now but what does the future hold other than fat women?? Gonna sit back and watch the market or thinking about keeping it private permanetly? Private is always better than public especially when dealing with weight disadvantaged women that lurk in the darkness of night..after all a "bump" isnt always a "bump", sometimes its a cavernous man eating pothole !
#27 PokerDude (http://www.worldseriespoker.ws) on Sep 14 2006, 11:26 Reply
As long as no GoDaddy lobbyists ever show up in Washington, I think it's a legitimately free enterprize.
#28 Mark Cameron (?) on Sep 14 2006, 08:20 Reply
As the sole investor in my own company, I agree with Bob's decision. When you take your company public, you lose a good bit of control over it: essentially, you're selling it. Staving off an IPO as long as you can, especially these days with the Sarbanes-Oxley nonsense and other SEC regulations, makes a lot of sense if you can keep growing your company without the extra capital. Maybe one day. And in between, Bob can work to get some of those regulations either relaxed or re-interpreted for the hosting business.
#29 Cody Shive (http://the-arrington-group.com) on Sep 14 2006, 06:54 Reply
Good decision. Very interesting article.

Thanks
Hari Gadi.
www.omsai.com
#30 Hari Gadi (www.omsai.com) on Sep 13 2006, 23:27 Reply
Bob,

The auto-mo-bile is runnin' just poi-fik!

I'm going to register me some domain names, thwart those kiting sons of the devil, and do my small, infintisimal, scrawny little share.

Best to you,
— Ken

P.S. They're not going to eat you...great stuff!
#31 Ken (to be determined) on Sep 13 2006, 08:52 Reply
Dear Bob,

I just loaded the page to check my email. Congratulations on your GoDaddyGirls.com page! By the way, I won't be renewing my email address and domain names with you when the time comes. Any company that needs to resort to boobs and airbrushing to sell its products isn't one with which I want to be associated. Very professional. Your low-rent, exploitative tacitcs are not appreciated by this soon-to-be-former customer.
#32 Amy Desanti on Sep 13 2006, 06:07 Reply
Hey Bob,

Thanks for keeping it real. Nobody wants to have to bend to stockholders.

I'm an internet marketer and I register domain names with GoDaddy and use GoDaddy for hosting. I make my own products and sites.

How can I become a GoDaddy girl?
#33 Renee (http://www.notimefitness.com) on Sep 12 2006, 18:43 Reply
Pulling the IPO and bumping with the fat woman is a very smart thing! Go Bobby... Go Bobby!
#34 Kevin Venner on Sep 12 2006, 18:17 Reply
Having been a CEO myself, I have to comment that this decision was not easy. It took guts.

Or, Bob's playing with less than a full cisco deck. I doubt this and go back to my original premise, "it took guts".
#35 Duane Loftus (http://www.lmtfinancial.com) on Sep 12 2006, 17:43 Reply
Love the blog, and noticed that most of the negative posts mention the zero growth potential in the domain space. This is simply not true, and if the company continues to improve it's product offering, it won't matter anyway. However, I must say, as a .NET developer, I am very dissapointed in the decision to only offer Linux products. Sure they are cheap and keep your prices low, but what about customers that are willing to pay a little more for a hosting environment that supports ASP.NET??

Anyway keep it up m8.

Troy
#36 Troy (www.AstraLending.com) on Sep 11 2006, 14:48 Reply
Bob, kudos to you for your successes. But shame on you for pulling the IPO. Why? There is one factor besides the GAAP or other accounting methods you've mentioned: credibility. I have no doubt your income figures are correct, but at what expense? When you are so deeply discounting domains, are you really taking care of your resellers? If I were a reseller for you, I'd wonder if my customer/potential customer name exploration queries were logged and used for your portfolio. I'd wonder if a customer I took the time and expense to acquire at a paltry $8.95/name might not jump-ship to your less expensive offer. I fear that GoDaddy may actually be too big for it's britches and forget the one resource no company can do without "Trust". If you had gone public, the disclosure and ability to be 'part-of' that process may have been worth much more than the cash in GoDaddy's future. I've been doing domains for a LONG time, this is the reason I have my portfolio in several places and use someone else for my Reseller business. I'm not accusing you of doing something 'wrong', just suggesting there might be a better way to do it 'right'. Can you tell me why I should not be skeptical? Remember the .EU Land Rush? We know the story that other registrars cheated and you ARE right in bitching about that, however... is Bob Parsons his reseller's partner or competition? I might have only bought $50,000 worth of GoDaddy stock, but I might have brought $500,000 worth of domain business as an 'owner'. Wishing you the best! - Walt
#37 Walter K. on Sep 11 2006, 13:28 Reply
You know, Bob, I think it's wonderful that you are a privately held company. It is discouraging to me that so many great customer service oriented companies become former shadows of themselves once they are publicly owned, and the CEO's and pencil sharpeners start dancing for the share holders and not the customer/client base.
In a bad time, fabulous customer service is cut, and employees are fired, all to keep the shareholders happy. Never go public is my hope for you!
#38 Irene Paine on Sep 11 2006, 02:22 Reply
Thank God your not going public! Your number one because you made it your way. Wall Street is what has destroyed this Country.
People making money with out having to do nothing;
With the share holders that worked for the money that paid for their share taking it up the but.
Although that's America, it's not what made America great.
On Wall Street it the big investor that matters, the big share holders.
At GoDaddy its the CUSTOMER that counts.
Your the last of the big factory Boss Men.
Your the Captain and you own the ship.
You are GoDaddy baby YA!
Don't give that up, You and people like you are what made America great.
You know Communist China owns our asses now, who did that?
Don't give that best dam company in America up for the bucks, you got bucks.

Thanks Bob Parsons, you have made my job easier.
#39 Gerald Parsons (http://www.711net.com) on Sep 10 2006, 17:23 Reply
I think its great..the pull out that is ..Why go public when you dont have to...Way to go Bob! That what I'am talking about..."SELF CONTAINED UNIT" Now thats the american WAY! I LOVE IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

And to all of the comments..to each his own! Everyone has a point of view... lets respect one another in out views and choices. You dont have to love it or like it ..just respect it.
#40 shelley on Sep 9 2006, 11:02 Reply
Background: From 1997 to 2005 I formed, built and closed an independent, financial services compliance auditing firm. I held a general securities sales license and a general securities sales supervisory license and conducted over 1200 on-site audits and Branch Manager compliance interviews. I am not currently registered with any Broker/Dealer (B/D), so I can comment on Bob Parsons decision to pull the IPO for GoDaddy. SEC rules and regulations are very clear with very little room for.....an outspoken CEO. They are so clear that I would not make this comment if I were currently registered with a B/D.
1) Accounting methods - irrelevant to an IPO, obviously not irrelevant to Bob. The SEC does not care or comment on the validity of an IPO or the company, just that the paperwork to offer an IPO has been properly submitted. The most important item Bob mentioned in this category is how the "financial news parrots" aka, reporters? First responded to the news of an IPO filling by GoDaddy. This type of news once meant instant millions/billions of paper wealth for insiders like Bob, a 10% fee charged by the underwriting group that buys the IPO shares and then offers them to the public, positive news for the company and cash needed to expand marketing or purchase market share. The reporters were parroting what they have already reported, the markets are soft and IPO's by tech companies since Google have not done well. So they report another growth tech company that looses money wants the public to buy the IPO and solve the loosing money problem for the company. This type of reporting is self-fulfilling, because as soon as they have printed it, it is fact. As Bob points out, facts that have no context and are not relevant to growth companies IPO. The market is so weak in fact that the underwriting group could not guarantee the placement of all the IPO shares, which a company as strong as GD does not have to risk. There is no upside for GD to go public and not sell all the shares while taking a beating in the parrot press.
2) The quit period, very serious just ask the Google founders. Bob would never make it through this period unless he left the planet for a few months. I like that about him.
3) GD does not have to go public. This is also irrelevant to an IPO, because all companies, their founders and insiders want to go public and become wealthy, while at the same time transferring the risk of all their eggs in one basket to thousands of individual investors. Bob and GD will go public the second an underwriting group commits to purchase all of the IPO and offer the shares to the public. If an underwriting group made this offer to Bob tomorrow morning the IPO would be back on and Bob would be headed to Mars until it was over. Greed is the driving factor and Bob is not greedy enough to risk bad press and less money for GD at a time when cash flow is not a problem.
Good Luck
#41 Randy L Miller (None yet, but I can't hold back any longer) on Sep 8 2006, 22:18 Reply
This is why you run the company Bob :)
#42 Money Making Forum (http://www.netcashcows.com) on Sep 8 2006, 16:36 Reply
Hey Bob:
Great decision - although would have definitely bought the stock! I have only been a client of your for a few months but have bought several domain names and now switched my hosting to Go Daddy. The level of your customer service ROCKS! They are polite, well trained and more accommodating than any other company I have dealt with. I am in the hispitality industry and know great customer service when I see it - keep it up, makes customer retention a breeze!
I am just launching a hospitality software company and am hoping to get plenty of hits through my association with you guys.
Keep up the great work - thanks!
Juliet
#43 Juliet (www.intradynamicsystems.com) on Sep 8 2006, 10:19 Reply
SIR

MANY HAVE SIDED WITH GREED

I AGREE WITH YOU

IT IS ABOUT TIME INDUSTRY STANDS FOR WHAT IS CORRECT

DSMITH
#44 DANIEL (http://modeltecmagazine.com) on Sep 7 2006, 21:27 Reply
Bob,

Great decision, great article, great company, great Seinfield reference at the end, too. ;-)

I worked for Plumtree (formerly NASDAQ:PLUM) for almost five years — they pulled their IPO once and than later went ahead with it in June of 2002 under market conditions similar to those of today (if not worse). On opening day, their stock went up, but closed flat at the exact opening price of $8.50. Over the next three years and change their stock steadily declined despite steady annual revenues of ~$80M, positive cash flow and even profit. (As you pointed out, putting money in the bank and actually recognizing revenue are indeed two very different things, especially in your case.)

In October of 2005, Plumtree was acquired by BEA Systems (NASDAQ:BEAS) for around $200 million in cash, which amount to $5.50/share if I remember correctly. A fair price perhaps, but certainly not a good deal for the initial investors.

Personally I made out okay (having received my shares at a strike price of $0.09) and I used the money I made as seed capital to start my own company, which has grown to seven people and almost $1M in annual revenue. My strategy from the get-go has been the same as yours — stay private, focus on cash flow and booking revenue, not on profit or recognized revenue and build a high-tech company that values innovation and progress, but that lives by more traditional values like good customer service, honesty and integrity.

At GoDaddy you've done an amazing job realizing and living those same values. I can tell every time I call (or get called by) the customer appreciation department.

Keep up the good work!

Best regards,

A satisfied GoDaddy customer and fellow CEO (albiet on a much smaller scale)
#45 Chris Bucchere (http://bdg-plumtree.blogspot.com) on Sep 7 2006, 08:08 Reply
Someone has been slacking on articles....

-Rainbow Butterfly
#46 anonymous on Sep 7 2006, 07:08 Reply
I loved the 16 rules. As I read this post, I wondered, what type of profit sharing plan is in place for Go Daddy employees. I hope there is a simple profit set aside that is distributed to every employee on some basis.

This would anchor for me the "truth" that everyone who contributes to Go Daddy's success sees it reflected in their incentive compensation and the percentage of incentive to base is meaningful

Best of "applied luck" going forward
#47 Gwenael Hagan (www.haganventures.com) on Sep 6 2006, 15:31 Reply
I must say that i never write responds to stuff like this, but Bob your boldness in life is very refleshing! I believe that the best worth you can have is your freedom to choose. Money can only buy so much, freedom is being able to say and do what you want and live the America Dream. Keep kicking !
#48 George Caswell (www.buygeorge.tv) on Sep 5 2006, 19:27 Reply
Why in the world would GoDaddy.com want to go public anyway? You have a wonderful company that beats everyone else in the business. Why would you want to go public and mess all that up. I remember you from your Parsons Technology days in Cedar Rapids/Hiawatha days and was disappointed when you sold out. When I learned you had gone into the domain registration business, I immediately turned all my domains over to your company. Now I have a virtual server and have enjoyed working with it. PLEASE DON'T GO PUBLIC!!!!! However, if you do, I want some stock.
#49 Tom Mack (http://white-stone.net) on Sep 5 2006, 18:44 Reply
Good Choice!

I could not agree more. I am also a CEO and find my company in a very similar situation. If your company is growing quickly, does not need money, and the owners do not want to sell a portion of their shares, then why go public.

#50 Michael Tulman (www.menupalace.com) on Sep 5 2006, 12:45 Reply
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Trackbacks

When NOT to go public
Excerpt: It seems that nearly every business owner out there has dreams of taking their company public. This is especially true in the technology industry where you can be losing money but generate a windfall of cash by offering shares to
Weblog: Jeremy Brandt
Tracked: Aug 31, 09:46

GoDaddy pulls IPO filing
Excerpt: I love outspoken CEOs and Bob Parsons of GoDaddy (domain names, duh!) is one of my favorites. He speaks out on a subject that’s close to my heart - the notion that every successful company MUST do an IPO. Now, he’s not saying GoDaddy will n...
Weblog: Vidize.com
Tracked: Aug 29, 08:24

Search 2.0 IPO’s
Excerpt: Recently, GoDaddy CEO Bob Parsons made a revealing post on his blog on why he chose to pull GoDaddy’s public offering (IPO) off the stock market.  GoDaddy is a leading domain name service provider and is one of the better known Internet companie...
Weblog: Search 2.0
Tracked: Aug 26, 09:09

In Wake of GoDaddy IPO Cancellation, Bob Parsons Finds a New Guru
Excerpt: In the wake of prominant website hosting and domain company GoDaddy giving up the ghost on their widely publicized IPO, the company's outspoken founder Bob Parsons used his popular Hot Points blog and the end of the SEC mandated quiet period to gi...
Weblog: Domain Name Registration Blog
Tracked: Aug 17, 08:11

GoDaddy (and its "spokes"-woman) can't sustain IPO momentum
Excerpt: There may not be a scantily clad model dancing in front of a congressional panel, but the explanation of why the CEO of GoDaddy.com pulled his company's IPO filing is worth a look if you want to better understand why the market for technology IPOs is so challenging. Here are Bob Parsons' three main reasons: 1. Market conditions - They're tough. 2. The Quiet Period - It's difficult for Parsons to stay quiet for a day, let alone a couple month. 3. We don’t have to go public - Parsons owns the whole company. GoDaddy is probably best known...
Weblog: VC Ratings
Tracked: Aug 09, 01:18

Go Daddy retire sa demande d'introduction en bourse !
Excerpt: Explanations for French spoken people
Weblog: Adscriptor - Ads and Marketing Translator
Tracked: Aug 09, 11:50

GoDaddy Pulls IPO
Excerpt: GoDaddy CEO Bob Parsons explains why the company backed out of the IPO process.
Weblog: Anonymous
Tracked: Aug 09, 10:21

Go Daddy Yanks IPO
Excerpt: This just in… Go Daddy has canceled its IPO citing “unfavorable market conditions”. Unfavorable is right. My ticker list has been covered in red ink for weeks. It’s a bad time for a money-losing technology company to go public, ...
Weblog: texturbation
Tracked: Aug 08, 07:05

Hold the Silence
Excerpt: Phew, that was rough. [The views expressed on this website/weblog are mine alone and do not necessarily reflect the views of Go Daddy Software, Inc.] ...
Weblog: bblog
Tracked: Aug 08, 06:32

 
 
1. Get and stay out of your comfort zone.
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