My ZDNet blogging colleague Larry Dignan asks what Yahoo;s Strategy B will be, now that it reportedly is turning down Microsoft;s $44 acquisition billion bid given that it is as well lower.(Update: The leakers had been proper. Yahoo did reject Microsoft;s give, claiming it was also very low. And now Yahoo is supposedly speaking merger with AOL. AOL??? Like which is meant to scare Microsoft sufficient to up its supply?)Meanwhile I am questioning regarding the flip-side of this equation: What's Microsoft;s Plan B if it fails to snag Yahoo?For my part,
Microsoft Office 2007 Enterprise cl��, I feel being thwarted in its bid to purchase Yahoo could possibly wind up becoming the very best thing that can take place to Microsoft. Does Microsoft actually need to have 14,000 much more workers and a quantity of properties which are redundant with what it currently offers? CEO Steve Ballmer & Co. seem to believe so. But couldn;t Microsoft just acquire a bunch of point products,
Microsoft Office Enterprise 2007 clave, instead of a big,
Office 2007 Standard Activation, flailing Web 2.0 company? It would be lots easier to digest a bunch of smaller companies and independent,
Microsoft Office Standard 2007 cl��gen, standalone services than a big honking entity like Yahoo….I;m sure Microsoft was expecting Yahoo to try to up the asking price. But given that Yahoo seems to get few alternatives to accepting Microsoft;s offer you, I wonder how substantially higher the Softies will probably be willing to go…What do you think Microsoft should do,
Microsoft Office 2007 Professional cl��gen, now that the Yahoo ball is back in its own court? Should Microsoft raise its supply? Call Yahoo;s bluff? Let Google come charging in as the “hero” — as properly as the canary in the antitrust coal mine? Or start snapping up a bunch of point products that would give Microsoft the inventory it needs to attract far more online publishers who are interested in ABG (Anything But Google)?