Mark Cuban made 300 employees millionaires after selling a company for $5.7 billion
Long before becoming one of America’s most recognisable billionaires, Mark Cuban built his fortune through the explosive rise of internet streaming company Broadcast.com. In 1999, the company was acquired by Yahoo in a deal worth $5.7 billion in stock. According to Cuban, the sale changed the lives of hundreds of workers overnight, with roughly 300 out of the company’s 330 employees becoming millionaires from the acquisition. Years later, Cuban said the moment reflected a business principle he has followed throughout his career: rewarding employees who helped build the company’s success.
Broadcast.com began as AudioNet, an early internet audio streaming platform that Cuban invested in during the mid-1990s. At the time, streaming online content was still a new concept, and many people were sceptical about whether internet broadcasting could become a real business.
Despite the doubts, Broadcast.com grew rapidly during the dot-com boom. In 1999, Yahoo acquired the company in one of the biggest tech deals of that era. Cuban later revealed that around 300 employees became millionaires after the sale because many held stock or received payouts tied to the acquisition.
The billionaire entrepreneur has since described the employee payouts as one of the proudest parts of the deal.
The acquisition is still remembered as one of the defining deals of the dot-com era, when internet companies were attracting enormous investor interest despite many businesses still being unproven.
Cuban has said that distributing money to employees after a sale became a habit early in his entrepreneurial journey. After selling his first company, MicroSolutions, to CompuServe for $6 million in 1990, he reportedly took 20% of the proceeds and shared bonuses with workers who had been with the company for more than a year.
He later said he followed a similar approach when selling stakes connected to AXS TV and even after reducing his ownership in the Dallas Mavericks.
According to Cuban, employees who help create a company’s success deserve to benefit financially when the business is sold.
Although the Yahoo acquisition made Cuban extremely wealthy, he quickly sold much of the Yahoo stock he received in the deal. At the time, technology shares were soaring during the dot-com boom, but Cuban believed the market had become overheated.
That decision proved crucial. Within months, the dot-com bubble burst, causing major technology stocks, including Yahoo, to collapse in value. Cuban later said the experience taught him an important lesson about greed and risk-taking in business.
Cuban has often used the experience as an example of why entrepreneurs should protect their wealth during market bubbles rather than assuming rapid growth will continue forever.
The move protected much of his fortune and cemented his reputation as a businessman willing to act cautiously even during periods of extreme market excitement.
Following the success of Broadcast.com, Cuban expanded into investments, entertainment and sports ownership. In 2000, he bought a majority stake in the Dallas Mavericks for $285 million. Under his ownership, the franchise became one of the NBA’s most valuable teams and won its first championship in 2011.
In 2023, Cuban sold a majority stake in the Mavericks to the Adelson and Dumont families in a deal that reportedly valued the team at around $3.5 billion. He retained a minority ownership stake and continued overseeing basketball operations.
Today, Cuban remains one of the world’s best-known entrepreneurs, with Forbes estimating his net worth at billions of dollars. The Broadcast.com sale continues to stand out because it transformed hundreds of employees into millionaires alongside Mark Cuban, turning the company’s success into a shared financial breakthrough.
Mark Cuban’s deal that made employees millionaires
Broadcast.com began as AudioNet, an early internet audio streaming platform that Cuban invested in during the mid-1990s. At the time, streaming online content was still a new concept, and many people were sceptical about whether internet broadcasting could become a real business.
Despite the doubts, Broadcast.com grew rapidly during the dot-com boom. In 1999, Yahoo acquired the company in one of the biggest tech deals of that era. Cuban later revealed that around 300 employees became millionaires after the sale because many held stock or received payouts tied to the acquisition.
The billionaire entrepreneur has since described the employee payouts as one of the proudest parts of the deal.
The acquisition is still remembered as one of the defining deals of the dot-com era, when internet companies were attracting enormous investor interest despite many businesses still being unproven.
Cuban has said that distributing money to employees after a sale became a habit early in his entrepreneurial journey. After selling his first company, MicroSolutions, to CompuServe for $6 million in 1990, he reportedly took 20% of the proceeds and shared bonuses with workers who had been with the company for more than a year.
According to Cuban, employees who help create a company’s success deserve to benefit financially when the business is sold.
The financial lesson Cuban learned after the Yahoo deal
Although the Yahoo acquisition made Cuban extremely wealthy, he quickly sold much of the Yahoo stock he received in the deal. At the time, technology shares were soaring during the dot-com boom, but Cuban believed the market had become overheated.
That decision proved crucial. Within months, the dot-com bubble burst, causing major technology stocks, including Yahoo, to collapse in value. Cuban later said the experience taught him an important lesson about greed and risk-taking in business.
Cuban has often used the experience as an example of why entrepreneurs should protect their wealth during market bubbles rather than assuming rapid growth will continue forever.
The move protected much of his fortune and cemented his reputation as a businessman willing to act cautiously even during periods of extreme market excitement.
From entrepreneur to billionaire sports owner
Following the success of Broadcast.com, Cuban expanded into investments, entertainment and sports ownership. In 2000, he bought a majority stake in the Dallas Mavericks for $285 million. Under his ownership, the franchise became one of the NBA’s most valuable teams and won its first championship in 2011.
In 2023, Cuban sold a majority stake in the Mavericks to the Adelson and Dumont families in a deal that reportedly valued the team at around $3.5 billion. He retained a minority ownership stake and continued overseeing basketball operations.
Today, Cuban remains one of the world’s best-known entrepreneurs, with Forbes estimating his net worth at billions of dollars. The Broadcast.com sale continues to stand out because it transformed hundreds of employees into millionaires alongside Mark Cuban, turning the company’s success into a shared financial breakthrough.
Comments (5)
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Elaine BreskeMost Interacted
6 days ago
The care for his employees...blessing money with them....he could be greedy and kept it all for himself....Giving back to his empl...Read More
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