News Corp. executives (and shareholders) need to be worried.  Really worried.  While they are busy trying to Defend their newspaper approach, including the planned move to charge everyone a subscription fee to access the Wall Street Journal on-line, there is a competitor ready to eliminate them.  Of course, if you've read the WSJ for years you may think this sounds ridiculous.  This competitor is vying to do the same to the Financial Times, a newspaper much more popular in Europe than the USA, which already charges for on-line access.  But this competitor is serious, and just might pull it off.

According to BusinessInsider.com, "Bloomberg Redesigns Web Site as it Tries to Kill Journal."  Hiring an executive from Yahoo, Bloomberg News is "pulling the gloves off" and preparing to take on old-line competitors as it steers a course to being #1.  And the odds are looking good for its success.

The market for business news has been shifting for years.  Once this market was dominated by two delivery mechanisms.  One was very expensive, costing thousands or hundreds of dollars per month, driving information to terminals sitting at desks of traders and brokers.  The other was a daily reporting of business news through the traditional business newspapers mentioned above.  Both businesses were very profitable.

But today, almost everyone can get almost everything the expensive terminals had simply by scanning the web.  And if you can get news real-time, why wait until tomorrow?  News Corp. bought Dow Jones and has been trying to Defend the terminal business, in the face of intense Bloomberg competition for traders desks and much lower cost competition for everyone else.  In an effort to shore up the P&L at Wall Street Journal the company has announced it will reverse all industry trends and start charging for WSJ content on-line.  They still haven't figured out how to effectively take advantage of Marketwatch.com as a viable delivery mechanism for WSJ content.  An admission they don't know how to develop a robust advertising model on the web and mobile devices that will support the publication.

Don't forget, News Corp. was early to the on-line world with its acquisition of MySpace.com.  But instead of letting the people who run MySpace.com do what they needed to do to become Facebook – or possibly to become the next Marketwatch.com – News Corp. leaders interceded.  They helped "manage" MySpace and applied News Corp. Success Formula parameters to it.  MySpace was not allowed to operate as a White Space project.  Now MySpace is a narrow site mostly for musicians and artists – missing the big opportunities in social media, business/financial news or even traditional news dissemination.  Had it been given permission to do whatever it needed to succeed, permission to create a new Success Formula, who knows what MySpace might have become?

Today's marketplace will not produce acceptable returns for the old Success Formula.  But the value of good business news is growing, as all investors want to know what traders know as fast as they know it.  And that is where Bloomberg.com is headed.  It is squarely directed at building a new business that is advertiser supported which will deliver the right news to the right place fast enough to capture those who want business news.

Bloomberg is now running 2 separate businesses.  They continue to allow the terminal business to work hard as possible at defending its turf.  Simultaneously they have established a White Space project that is designed to eventually obsolete the old business.  In the process they will cannibalize the terminal business.  But they also will very likely drive less agile competitors Dow Jones and Financial Times out of business.  In the process they could capture significant ad dollars while learning how to dominate the mobile device market as well as the traditional web.

When markets shift, nobody can win by trying to Defend the old.  Customers move on, and they abandon old solutions.  Returns decline.  The winner has to use Disruptions to overcome old Lock-ins to do whatever is necessary to profitably grow!  (like having a web site that looked like an old terminal screen with amber text on a black background) and establish White Space with permission to do what is necessary to succeed! Even recognizing this may create cannibalization – but in the process learning how to earn high rates of return while crushing competitors.

Kudos to the management at Bloomberg.  They are going for the jugular in the business news marketplace, and doing so by moving where the market is headed – while other competitors are trying to Defend & Extend old ways of doing business.  It may not take Bloomberg long to create serious damage to the old institutions in business and financial news.