Online Data Base: International Media Corporations (Beta)
Media corporations have bigger budgets than some nation states. As agents and moderators of globalization they have economic and opinion-shaping power. They deal with the contemporary challenge of combining business segments belonging to the 'Old Economy' with those of the "New Economy" by restructuring measures, cooperation or mergers with advertising agencies or social media platforms. It is technological progress and growing competition that force media corporations to expand their businesses on a national as well as an international level. To successfully compete, some media companies establish partnerships with financial investors, which in some cases have garnered considerable influence.
Who controls big media corporations? What kind of strategies do they apply? What is the role of private equity investors? Based on the 2005 book "Who controls the Media" by Lutz Hachmeister and Günter Rage, the Institute of Media and Communication Policy established the media data base mediadb.eu in order to provide comprehensive and up-to-date structural data concerning international media corporations.
The annual ranking of the 50 world's biggest media corporation includes companies that have a strategic focus on the creation and distribution of content for print, television, film and online properties and generate significant parts of their revenues with advertising and licensing. Because some cable companies control the distribution of programming and produce content themselves, they are included in the ranking as well. Listed are parent companies (such as News Corp.) even if a subsidiary (e.g. BsykB) generates revenues that are higher than other parent companies. The size of a media corporation is based on the media revenues generated in the past financial year. All amounts of revenue are converted to Euros, applying the annual average exchange rates.
Top 50 - International Media Corporations 2013*
*As of April 2013, the following media companies have not yet published their annual reports for the financial year 2012: Sony Entertainment, Cox Enterprises, Nippon Hoso Kyokai, BBC, Fuji Media Holdings, The Naspers Group, France Televisions, Tokyo Broadcasting Systems, RAI, Nippon Television Holdings. Their positions in the ranking are based on the revenues of the financial year 2011. The revenues of Advance Publications, The Hearst Corporation and Bloomberg are estimates.
Ranking - Top 50 (2012)
- Comcast/NBCUniversal, LLC
- Google Inc.
- The Walt Disney Company
- News Corp. Ltd.
- Time Warner Inc.
- Viacom Inc./CBS Corp.
- Sony Entertainment
- Bertelsmann SE & Co. KGaA
- Vivendi S.A.
- Cox Enterprises Inc.
- Dish Network Corporation
- Thomson Reuters Corporation
- Rogers Comm.
- Liberty Media Corp./Liberty Interactive
- Reed Elsevier PLC
- Pearson plc
- Lagardère Media
- Nippon Hoso Kyokai
- ARD
- Fuji Media Holdings, Inc.
- Bloomberg L.P.
- BBC
- Charter Comm. Inc.
- Advance Publications
- Cablevision Systems Corp.
- Globo Communicação e Participações S.A.
- Clear Channel Comm.
- The Nielsen Company
- Gannett Co. Inc.
- Grupo Televisa
- Shaw Communications
- Yahoo! Inc.
- The Naspers Group
- Mediaset SpA
- Jupiter Telecommunications
- Wolters Kluwer nv
- Discovery Communications
- The McGraw-Hill Comp. Inc.
- Tokyo Broadcasting System Holdings, Inc.
- Bonnier AB
- Axel Springer AG
- Nippon Television Holdings
- ITV plc
- The Washington Post Company
- Quebecor Inc.
- France Télévisions S.A.
- RAI Radiotelevisione Italiana Holding S.p.A.
- ProSiebenSat.1
- The Hearst Corporation
- Netflix


