[Guest post by Ken Doctor, Content Bridges] Yahoo’s been piling up its own set of endorsements from newspapers over the last year. It has convinced newspaper chains of two things: 1) they needed a big brother with a big network of readers and the latest in search/ad technology; 2) that big brother is Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO). With the newly ascendant Dean Singleton leading the charge, a core group of eight entered the Sunnyvale castle. Since then Yahoo has talked, literally, to every one of the rest and now 22 American newspaper chains (with more than 500 of the 1500+ American dailies) are within the gates.
So when Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) stormed those gates, formally and officially, Friday, among those parsing the hot breath of Redmond is the news industry.
Microsoft is a familiar, though often distant character, in the newspaper/Web saga. Publishers have made many a pilgrimage north, and Microsoft has offered uneven diplomacy of its own. Overall, the takeaway — from those Sidewalk/Netscape origins — has been one of suspicion. It’s been hard to walk away from Microsoft meetings without the sense your pocket has just been picked, or its hand is still in it as you depart town. Microsoft earned its early reputation as a “partner” who would pick your strategy clean, taking your experience into its IP, and then decide to go another way. It may have lived down some of that reputation more recently, but the sense persists.
So the news of the Microsoft $44 billion bid for Yahoo sent some shock waves through news industry corporate suites. Here they are, in the first year of marriage, and someone may have switched the groom. The signs that the groom may have been distressed were clear, my “Be Careful Who You Consort With” post of late January was among those that pointed that out. But still when the possible switch is announced, everyone finally takes the new seriously.
Here’s my beginning list of nine questions: More after the jump…
Do you hear the echoes of the Sidewalk era? Sidewalk was Microsoft’s push to get into local media in the mid-’90s. Its vision was right-on: becoming the dominant local online events site. Microsoft sent an early scare through the news industry, picking off some top talent, but it was too early in the game. Microsoft folded too soon, selling the remnants of the business to City Search. And don’t think Steve Ballmer hasn’t kept the foray in mind. Quoted in the New York Times (NYSE: NYT) last January:
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