On the heels of the ten-year web search and advertising partnership announced yesterday between Microsoft and Yahoo, in which Yahoo search will be powered by Microsoft Bing, many startups are looking for the take-away from this epic and seemingly one sided deal. Small businesses, hoping to weather out the slowly-subsiding tides of the economy, and start-ups, eager to make a name and carve out a piece of market share, can look to what the deal says about the importance of search.
In a recent article in BusinessWeek, Silicon Valley Reporter founder Jason Calacanis looks at the Microsoft-Yahoo deal as a case study for startups. He emphasizes Microsoft’s move to invest heavily in revamping its search engine and to partner with the #2 in the search business is a telling sign that search is king.
Mergers and acquisitions are a fascinating field of both business and law—and this one doesn’t pretend to be an exception. In the course of many small business tenures there will be a temptation to fold, to merge, to cash out—whether it is best to do so requires a careful cost-benefit analysis by the business. However, the Microsoft-Yahoo deal offers one current and tangible example of what a business may be giving up by stepping away from one of its crown jewels.
Though the future is unwritten for what the deal will ultimately mean for Yahoo, Microsoft, and query superstar Google…at the end of the day, the answer seems to point to the search.
Related Resources:
- The Microsoft-Yahoo Deal: Lessons for Startups (BusinessWeek)
- Yahoo-Microsoft alliance faces many obstacles (Reuters)
- Microsoft, Yahoo agree on long-sought search deal (AP)
- Business Formation Q&A (provided by The Adams Law Offices LLC)
- Business Transactions (provided by The Law Offices of Lawrence Brown)
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