ABC Commercial
Commercial arm of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
title: "ABC Commercial" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["australian-broadcasting-corporation-divisions", "australian-companies-established-in-2007"] description: "Commercial arm of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation" topic_path: "geography/australia" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABC_Commercial" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Commercial arm of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation ::
::data[format=table title="Infobox company"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| type | Division |
| industry | Media |
| predecessor | ABC Enterprises |
| foundation | |
| hq_location_city | Sydney |
| hq_location_country | Australia |
| parent | Australian Broadcasting Corporation |
| website | |
| :: |
| type = Division | industry = Media | predecessor = ABC Enterprises | foundation = | hq_location_city = Sydney | hq_location_country = Australia | parent = Australian Broadcasting Corporation | website =
ABC Commercial, formerly ABC Enterprises Limited, is the revenue-earning division of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, one of the two national public broadcasters. ABC Commercial has operated in various forms since its establishment in 1974, with its primary purpose to generate income for the ABC, which is then invested in content production.
The national network of retail ABC Shops closed down in 2015, with the digital and few remaining brick-and-mortar retail sites having been retired at the end of 2018. ABC Commercial continues to do business in content sales and distribution; music and events; publishing and licensing; and the ABC Studios and Media Production.
History of the organisation
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/94/ABCshopCharlestown.JPG" caption="Charlestown]], [[New South Wales]], 2006"] ::
The commercial arm of the ABC was established in 1974 under the name ABC Enterprises as a self-funding unit, marketing products relating to the ABC's activities. It was renamed in 2007 to ABC Commercial, with the former director of New Media and Digital Services, Lynley Marshall, appointed as director of the new division, which would investigate new avenues to earn revenue in digital technology.
The aim of the renamed division was "to create, market and retail high quality consumer products which reflect and extend the scope of the ABC’s activities".
ABC Commercial was registered as a business name under Australian Broadcasting Corporation on the Australian Business Register in April 2007, and continues to exist , along with ABC Shop, ABC Music Publishing, ABC Young Performers' Award and Happy Body at Work as other business names.
Until early 2019, ABC Commercial was part of the Finance division; it then became an independent business unit of the ABC.
Description
ABC Commercial's primary purpose is to generate income for the ABC through the sale of ABC and third-party content and intellectual property. It creates, licenses, and markets both physical and digital products globally through its business divisions as well as its own business affairs, rights clearance, royalties and finance support functions.
ABC Commercial is fully self-financed through its operations and does not receive public funding.
In the financial year 2018–2019, ABC Commercial turned a profit of , which was invested in content production. Of its gross revenue, 54.5% of its revenue came from sales of ABC content, 23.8% from music 9.4% from investment agencies, 6.2% from studio and media production and 5.7% from publishing.
Business units
the main business units of ABC Commercial are: Content Sales, Content Acquisitions, ABC Music, Events, ABC Studios and Media Production, ABC Books and Magazines, and ABC Library Sales.
These units are grouped by activities as: ABC Content Sales and Distribution; ABC Music and Events; ABC Publishing and Licensing; ABC Studios and Media Production; and ABC Retail.
ABC Retail
ABC Shops were managed under the ABC Retail department. ABC Shops operated over 40 retail shops and 80 centres, an international delivery service on the internet as well as developing and licensing ABC brands and programs, and providing production resource hire to the general public and industry alike.
The national network of ABC Shops closed down late 2015 and moved to an online only model, with the ABC Centre franchise network still operational within other retailers.
The continued decline of physical product sales as customers moved to digital consumption of content together with global competition in the retail sector led to the closure of the ABC Shop Online.
The last ABC Centre franchises closed at the end of February 2019; licensed ABC products are still available from approved ABC retailers.
ABC Studios and Media Production
ABC Studios and Media Production existed as a separate business entity between 2015 and 2018.
In Melbourne, the old Studio 31, known as the Ripponlea studio (although situated in Gordon Street in the adjoining suburb of Elsternwick in Melbourne) and nicknamed "The Dream Factory", closed in November 2017, after the new Studio 31 was relocated to the new refurbished ABC studios which had opened in August of that year in the Melbourne Arts Precinct in Southbank.
References
References
- "About ABC Shops". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- (7 February 2007). "The ABC of Digital Media Evolution". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- "About ABC Commercial". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- "Welcome". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- "Historical details for ABN 52 429 278 345".
- Australian Broadcasting Corporation. (2020). "Annual Report 2019".
- "Home page".
- "ABC Books & Magazines".
- "Library Sales".
- Meade, Amanda. (22 July 2015). "ABC shops to close with loss of 300 jobs, Mark Scott says".
- Hutchinson, Jonathon. (27 July 2015). "ABC shop closures make business sense: but where will its digital strategy lead?".
- (2 August 2018). "ABC Commercial announcement on retail activity".
- (23 July 2015). "ABC Shops: why they are closing".
- "Studios". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- Lord, Kathy. (29 November 2017). "ABC Ripponlea: Closure of 'The Dream Factory' Studio 31 an end of an era in Australian TV". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- Williams, Vanessa. (30 November 2017). "Paying homage to iconic ABC studios".
- Knox, David. (4 May 2017). "Gallery: ABC opens new-look Melbourne studios".
- "Melbourne Studios". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
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