Friday, November 27, 2009

Official Transcript from Steve Ballmer and Rupert Murdoch's meeting

On Wednesday, the Internet was buzzing with the news that Steve Ballmer of Microsoft, and Rupert Murdoch or News Corp, were discussing an agreement that would allow Microsoft exclusive access to News Corp content. Here is the transcript from the Ballmer / Murdoch conversation that led to this announcement.

Ballmer:   "Rupert, we both have a problem and I think we can help each other. Google is leaching your revenues away by indexing your content for free. If you let it go on much longer, your Media Empire will be as profitable as a bunch of high-school newspapers. Google is a thorn in our side as well. I am okay with giving them search advertising, but they are using those revenues to compete with Office, Outlook, Windows Mobile, IE and everything else we do. So here's my idea - let's cut the legs out from under Google. I will buy the exclusive rights to index your News Corp content, and then show it as online search results. It reduces the value of Google's results, you make money, and we benefit. Frankly, were making no money on search advertising now and can only improve by having better content."

Murdoch: "I like the idea. We will charge search engine providers to index our content. No pay - no content. Hey, I spend a fortune on all those Wall Street Journal people and Google simply goes ahead and indexes the content, and then charges for ads on the search results pages. This way, I make money and you reduce Google's value and associated revenues. If Microsoft gets my Wall Street Journal content and maybe a couple of other Financial site's content, why would anybody with interest in financial information, every use Google? Brilliant."

Ballmer: "So Rupert, here is where we get a bit of revenge as well. Google and the other search engines will be forced to pay for premium content, and then either pass the costs on to their advertisers, or they will need to take a hit in their margins. If this idea reduces the market value of all search providers, too bad. Either way, I don't care. Advertising in over 90% of their revenues and under 10% of ours. Let's see them try come into our business sectors without their big advertising revenue stream."

Okay - so the transcript is not the official one from the Ballmer and Murdoch meetings, but you have got to admit, it does make business sense for both of them. It will be interesting to see how the discussions continue, and how Google counters.

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