Los Angeles Times

Disney realigns units to speed growth

Move comes amid digital shift and includes combining streaming and global media businesses.

- By Daniel Miller and Jaclyn Cosgrove

Walt Disney Co. announced Wednesday a sweeping restructur­ing aimed at accelerati­ng its global expansion during a period of upheaval for Hollywood.

The Burbank-based entertainm­ent giant said it would combine its internatio­nal media business and its content streaming operation into one unit and create another division to house its consumer products business along with Walt Disney Parks & Resorts.

The move — Disney’s biggest restructur­ing in recent years — is the latest effort by a legacy entertainm­ent and media company to adapt to rapid changes in consumer behavior driven by digital technology.

Disney had been expected to make structural changes as it prepares to launch two streaming services and buy film and TV assets owned by 21st Century Fox — a $52.4-billion deal that requires federal regulatory approval.

Disney’s new direct-toconsumer and internatio­nal unit will include the upcoming ESPN+ streaming service, which will launch this year, and a Disney-branded film and TV streaming offering scheduled to debut in 2019.

The unit also will include video-on-demand service Hulu, in which Disney would own a controllin­g stake if the Fox deal is approved. Kevin Mayer, who has been Disney’s chief strategy officer since 2015, was named chairman of the new global business.

“It is a much different company today from when we were growing up,” said Jason Moser, a Motley Fool analyst. “As Disney is introducin­g these new direct-toconsumer offerings, they have to look at it a little bit differentl­y. They are more in

control of the delivery of [content]. This is really them taking more control over that experience with the consumer.”

The combining of Disney’s parks and resorts business with its consumer products group will help streamline operations for units that already had their share of overlap.

Bob Chapek, who has headed Disney Parks and Resorts since 2015, was named chairman of the new unit. He will assume additional responsibi­lity for all of Disney’s consumer products operations globally, including licensing and Disney stores. Consolidat­ing consumer products and theme parks makes sense because both operations are centered on the company’s treasure trove of characters and franchises, Moser said.

“The parks are where they continue to build out that experience with the consumer, but as they do that, they can produce more and more consumer-related products based on all that [intellectu­al property],” he said.

Disney Chairman and Chief Executive Robert Iger said in a statement that the changes would position the company “for the future, creating a more effective, global framework to serve consumers worldwide, increase growth and maximize shareholde­r value.”

In December, with the announceme­nt of the prospectiv­e Fox deal, Iger, 67, extended his contract by three years; he is now expected to retire in 2021 when his new pact ends.

The restructur­ing plan, which is effective immediatel­y, elevates key lieutenant­s Mayer and Chapek, who now are poised to work more closely with Iger for the remainder of his tenure.

Their promotions come amid much speculatio­n about who will be chosen as Iger’s successor.

Chapek was head of Disney Consumer Products before being tapped to lead the parks group. The 58-yearold executive also previously was president of distributi­on for Walt Disney Studios.

During Mayer’s time at Disney, he has overseen the company’s key strategic acquisitio­ns of Pixar, Marvel, Lucasfilm and, most recently, the pending Fox deal. Before becoming senior executive vice president and chief strategy officer, Mayer, 55, was executive vice president for corporate strategy and business developmen­t.

Scott Krisiloff, chief investment officer at Avondale Asset Management, said Mayer has been presented with a high-profile opportunit­y. “You have to be savvy on a new playing field, which is direct-to-consumer digital distributi­on, and Disney has not yet proven it has mastered that,” said Krisiloff, whose company is not an investor in Disney. “[Mayer] has the opportunit­y to prove himself and the ability to build something for Disney in this playing field.”

The last time Disney restructur­ed its business units was in 2015, when it merged its interactiv­e and consumer products units, a move that was designed to better align once-distant businesses that new technology had brought closer together.

 ?? Image Group LA / Disney ?? DISNEY’S restructur­ing move will include combining the parks and resorts business with the firm’s consumer products group. Above, all things Disney are announced during the D23 Expo in Anaheim last July.
Image Group LA / Disney DISNEY’S restructur­ing move will include combining the parks and resorts business with the firm’s consumer products group. Above, all things Disney are announced during the D23 Expo in Anaheim last July.

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