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Microsoft-Yahoo! - First Reactions Reverberate Around the Blogosphere
Everyone Out There It Seems Has a View on Biggest Takeover Bid of the Year (So Far)
Feb. 2, 2008 04:15 AM
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"One of the most important (if not the most important) news for 2008, and we are just in February," remarked Nelson Cienfuegos of the In Digital Marketing blog. He and nearly 60,000 others bloggers have been vigorously chewing over the ins and outs of Microsoft's $44.6BN mega-bid to acquire Yahoo! Inc. Cienfuegos continued: "First it was Microsoft investing in Facebook, now Microsoft is making a bid to acquire Yahoo for $44.6 Billion in order to create a powerful merger that will help both companies compete against Google. Yahoo! continues to struggle against Google in the race for online-advertising revenue and Internet-search market share.Peter van Dijck immediately offered the blogopshere what he called A freestyle translation of the Microsoft offer to buy Yahoo. The first paragraph of Microsoft's official bid letter, for example. he reduced t a single sentence (here in bold): The rest of the amusing 'translation' is here. Nick Stamoulis of Search Engine Journal took a more serious look at the news: Google’s rise to prominence is due partly to Google AdWords, which has filled the search giant’s coffers with untold billions of dollars, a huge boon to the company’s total portfolio. Some of the acquisitions and improvements that Google has made could not have been possible without it. Is Microsoft banking on the same success? To be sure, if Microsoft did acquire Yahoo! it would have access to the second most popular search engine and the second most popular PPC advertising service. Combining Yahoo! Publisher Network with Microsoft’s own brand, which has recently struck a deal with the Wall Street Journal to display its advertising, could lead to Microsoft being the leader in online advertising. If that happens then the company could improve its search offerings. Sometimes the title of a blog post is comment enough. By way of demonstration: "This proposed deal smacks of desperation, not multiplication of growth opportunities. But the price premium probably makes it inevitable. The only way to make this work is for Microsoft to spread itself more thickly as a media, advertising, technology, services, platform, tool -- everything to everybody. The risk is to be less and less of anything to anybody.The blogosphere was also the natural place to turn to for the first written accounts of this morning's conference call to discuss the news. Allen Stern for example nailed all three of the following key Redmond executive quotes: Steve Ballmer: "This is a decision that I've thought long and hard about."This will be one of the most closely followed mergers of all time. MICROSOFT .NET LATEST STORIES
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