Burn Rate

This article is about the book. For other uses, see Burn rate (disambiguation).
Burn Rate:
Author Michael Wolff
Country United States
Language English
Publisher Simon & Schuster
Publication date
1998
Media type Print (Hardcover and Paperback)
ISBN 0-684-85621-2
OCLC 41672640

Burn Rate: How I Survived the Gold Rush Years on the Internet,[1] by Michael Wolff is the account of Wolff's dotcom company, Wolff New Media, in 1997.

Content

The "burn rate" of the title refers to the cash drain of the startup company. Most of the plot revolves around Wolff's attempts to get funding from various sources: AOL, The Washington Post and Magellan. Wolff recounts a growing animosity with his financial backers: Robert Machinist, Alan Patricof and Jon Rubin.[2] In the end, Wolff decides to abandon the company, resigning his position, cashing his uncollected salary, and returning to his roots as a journalist, by writing a tell-all book.

In side-light chapters to the "burn rate" plot, Wolff discusses his interactions with Internet pioneers such as Louis Rossetto, his confusion about what the Internet is, where it is headed. In particular Wolff is concerned with how "media" on the Internet compares to traditional edited media, with interactive "chat" being more important than edited story-line content: "people don't read on the Internet".

Publication history

Burn Rate was excerpted in the June 1998 issue of Wired.[3] The book was released that fall, and has now had 4 editions and hardback and paperback versions.[1]

Reactions

In October 1998,[4] Wolff wrote that Isabel Maxwell and David Hayden of Magellan complained about their portrayals. He also notes "letters from lawyers" from Jon Rubin and Alan Patricof. From Robert Machinist, whom he labels as the "larger than life anti-hero" of the book, there was satisfaction at Burn Rate notoriety generating more business.

The Village Voice noted that Wolff had omitted to tell a part of the story of Wolff New Media's implosion: that while Wolff deferring his own salary to keep the company afloat, he encouraged his employees to do the same. When Wolff collected his owed salary and exhausted the companies cash reserves, the rest of the employees were unable to collect their deferred salary.[5]

Reviews

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References

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