Skip To Page Navigation
Skip To Main Content
Skip To Footer Navigation
Skip to Accessibility Information
Home
News
Forums & Blogs
Video
Research
Showcase
Whitepapers
Events
Jobs
Blogs
Forums
Photos
Search Brand Republic
Articles
Jobs
Edition:
UK |
Asia
Our Websites
Campaign
Marketing
Marketing Direct
Media Week
Promotions & Incentives
Revolution
News Feed
BR Mobile
Email Bulletins
Register
Login
Jobs
Interactive Designer
£28-£30
Associate Director - Digital
£55000-£65000
Junior Account Director
Up to £40k + benefits
Account Manager (Freelance or Perm)
Up to £28k + benefits
Business Systems Analyst
Up to £50k + Excellent Bens
Directory
Product/Service
Company
ADVERTISEMENT
Gordon's Republic
Gordon Macmillan
Could Google buy The New York Times?
Comments:1
Add your comment
It seems like wild speculation, but could it happen? Could Google buy The New York Times?
It sounds strange, but think back to those heady days of the first dotcom boom in 2000 when one-time internet behemoth AOL bought old-media giant Time Warner.
That deal went with the dotcom crash as power shifted. The focus of internet power has since moved and it sits with different kind of companies, with Google sitting proudly at the top.
The question is raised today by investment site
Real Clear Markets.
It points out the fact that in the last five years, The New York Times has declined in value by an astonishing 70% and rightly points out that as a newspaper it is likely to get worse.
The New York Times is not the only paper that has this problem, they all do to a lesser or greater degree, but with a recession, big or large, on the way advertising will be hit hard, as it always is, and as a knock-on result newsprint will suffer.
According to the post on Real Clear, at some point in the near future the market capitalisation of The New York Times will fall below $2bn and, at that point, the company will be in play.
Google always says that it is not about content, but does anyone really believe it any more?
The piece argues that should Google has most to gain from buying The New York Times and if it offered a Rupert Murdoch Wall Street Journal-like, no-auction bid of $4bn it would seal the deal with the paper's family owners (the Sulzbergers) having no option but to accept because other shareholders would snap it as they will never get another opportunity as good as that one.
If such a deal is not taken (and while not certain), it appears the future for The New York Times Company could be one of a steadily declining stock price.
The future for the New York Times is about to get even more competitive than it already is, as the aforementioned Murdoch takes control of the Wall Street Journal, the great rival of the Times, and Murdoch has that rival in his gun-metal sights.
Its argued that the Sulzbergers would never sell because they see Tthe New York Times as an institution. There is nothing that quite comes close in the UK, (The Guardian maybe, but it is not a family business in the way that the NY Times, the Washington Post and the WSJ were) and nothing that quite emanates the feeling of journalistic integrity (you could never imagine it going tabloid/Berliner) and seriousness.
And in that vein the family would utter "an over my dead body" before parting company with it, but as Murdoch has proved time and time again he has the pockets that other people simply do not have and they are deep and certainly much deeper than those belonging to The New York Times Company, which would need to do something very radical lest they bleed to death like rivals have in the past.
The argument goes that if the Times can not afford the fight then it can no longer, on its own, maintain that journalistic flame of excellence, which brings us to Google. It could snap up one of the world's top media brands for relative small change. Why would it want it?
Well that's easy. It is a fantastic brand with fantastic content. It does have that flame and it would sit nicely with Google, which has its own (derided) brand of ethics that it thinks sets it apart from the rest of the pack.
Published
Jan 23 2008, 11:14 AM
by
Gordon Macmillan
Filed under:
Google
,
Rupert Murdoch
,
The New York Times
,
Wall Street Journal
save it on
Del.icio.us
Digg
Stumble
share on
Facebook
reddit
Comments
by
George Parker
January 25, 2008 1:18 AM
Gordon... You have to understand... Google can buy anything it likes, and probably will. As for the "Wizened of Oz's" purchase of the WSJ, I cant wait for the naked birds on page three. Cheers/George
To comment on this post you have to be
logged in
Top of Page
Search Community
About this blog
Gordon's Republic
Brand Republic's daily blog on digital, media and plenty in between.
About the author
Gordon Macmillan
Blogging for:
Gordon's Republic
Member since:
03 Jun 2008
Last login:
24 Nov 2009
Total Posts:
1,618
Recent Posts
Biz Stone says Twitter will not sell, but an IPO is an option
1
Winning Formulas To Maximise The Potential Of Twitter #BR140
1
Murdoch serious about split from Google as talks held with Microsoft
4
Battle of Big Thinking
1
Murdoch: online news to be smaller and less important
1
Archives
November 2009
(24)
October 2009
(9)
September 2009
(13)
August 2009
(24)
July 2009
(29)
June 2009
(20)
May 2009
(14)
April 2009
(14)
March 2009
(19)
February 2009
(12)
January 2009
(19)
December 2008
(9)
November 2008
(13)
October 2008
(19)
September 2008
(25)
August 2008
(24)
July 2008
(15)
June 2008
(21)
May 2008
(14)
April 2008
(13)
March 2008
(13)
February 2008
(19)
January 2008
(17)
December 2007
(5)
November 2007
(12)
October 2007
(13)
September 2007
(13)
August 2007
(10)
July 2007
(8)
June 2007
(14)
May 2007
(14)
April 2007
(13)
March 2007
(19)
February 2007
(18)
January 2007
(26)
December 2006
(6)
November 2006
(14)
October 2006
(7)
September 2006
(24)
August 2006
(14)
June 2006
(31)
May 2006
(1)
April 2006
(1)
March 2006
(4)
February 2006
(12)
Tags
Advertising
Amazon
America
American Media
AOL
Apple
Arena
Associated Newspapers
Barack Obama
baseball
Battlestar Galactica
BBC
bebo
Big Brother
BlackBerry
Blogging
Boston Globe
Brand Republic
BSkyB
Cadbury Schweppes
celebrity
Channel 4
Conde Nast
Conservatives
content scraping
Daily Express
dell
Detroit Free Press
Digital
Douglas Coupland
down turn
Emap
Evening Standard
Facebook
FHM
Financial Times
football
Gawker
Google
Gordon Brown
Grazia
Hearst
Huffingtonpost
Hyperlocal
ITV
Kevin Smith
Kindle
Labour
LinkedIn
London Lite
Los Angeles Times
Marketing
Maxim
McDonald's
MediaNews Group
Microsoft
music
Myspace
New Yok Yankees
New York Times
News Corporation
newspapers
Nuts
Olympics
paid content
pay walls
PR
reality TV
Rupert Murdoch
San Francisco Chronicle
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Shortlist
Simon Pegg
Sir Martin Sorrell
social media
sport
Star Wars
The Christian Science Monitor
The Guardian
The Independent
the new yok times
The New York Times
The Sun
The Times
thelondonpaper
Time Inc
Time Warner
Trinity Mirror
Twitter
US media
US Presidential elections
User generated content
Vanity Fair
Wall Street Journal
Web 2.0
WPP
WPP Group
Yahoo!
YouTube
Zoo
Syndication
RSS
Atom
Comments RSS