Jon Friedman's Media Web Blog got it right today in it's article "How Fox Business and Bloomberg Can Gain Ground."  Business news coverage was in the spotlight when Jon Stewart's The Daily Show on Comedy Central started attacking CNBC for being too business/executive friendly (see the running debate clips in the "on the Tape" section of the Daily Show homepage.)  Whether Stewart was right or not, it didn't help CNBC to have some of it's spotlight personnel being trashed daily by a popular comentator, especially using their own tapes. 

One would expect that financial news viewership is down, just because the recession has lessened interest in investing.  But that doesn't mean CNBC is losing position.  For that to happen, it's competitors – which are much smaller in share of market – have to do something to take advantage of the Stewart attacks.  If everyone keeps doing what they always did, CNBC probably won't suffer much damage when the investing marketplace recovers.

So Mr. Friedman recommends that Fox Business News and Bloomberg news need to be the "anti-CNBC."  I'm not sure what he means by that.  But the idea is right.  CNBC has been the market leader for several years, and it's Success Formula is Locked-in.  It's viewer surveys have been with people who already watched CNBC, so its coverage has remained almost the same.  And as more and more corporations and investment firms put CNBC on those flat-screen TVs in their lobbies, CNBC kept touting the market pitch that seemed to win them over as viewers and advertisers.  As CNBC became apologists for these big advertisers, they reinforced their Lock-in to the Success Formula, and even as they Defended corporate titans and executive pay they extended their Success Formula onto the web with information that largely copied the television.

Suddenly, CNBC has been Challenged by a market shift.  Like most market shifts, it didn't surface where CNBC expected, or how CNBC would have expected.  CNBC was blindsided by the appeal of Stewart's attacks to mainstream television viewers, and many reporters who don't cover "the business beat."  Like any good Locked-in organization, the CNBC reaction was to Defend itself, and do even more of what it always did claiming to be better and faster than the competition at reporting from Wall Street and the executive suites. 

But right now CNBC is vulnerable.  If Fox Business News and Bloomberg have been obsessing about the competition, now is the time to take advantage of its weakness.  But to do that means attacking the Lock-in on which CNBC is built – it's very pro-Wall Street, pro-big company, pro-deregulation, pro-executive (and often pro-Republican party) positioning on practically every issue.  Being a similar CNBC won't help the competition – even when CNBC is under attack.  Because the attack is from a market shift, and the competition will win by moving to where the market moved.

So, what outlet reports on business news that isn't pro-Wall Street, pro-big company, pro-deregulation, pro-executive, pro-Republican?  See what I mean – you can't really think of one.  But are there people who invest in a 401K account, or a Roth IRA, or any IRA, or in their employer, or in their own home, who might be interested in a more "main street" and less "Wall Street" sort of positioning?  Or a more balanced coverage of the pros and cons of America's biggest companies?  Or those big company (and bank) executives?  Or the issues related to debt, getting it and repaying it?  Is there a market for business news that's been ignored, but Stewart has tapped into? Maybe call it the Suzie Orman approach to business news rather than the Larry Kudlow or "Fast Money" approach.

When companies obsess about competitors, they understand the competitors' Success Formulas and Lock-ins.  And they prepare competitive actions that attack those Lock-ins.  Entering a gladiator battle where everyone competes the same way just creates a lot of blood for spectators to watch, with no gain for the competitors.  Phoenix Principle competitors don't attack where the competition is strong, but rather where the competitor is weak.  Attack their Lock-in, so they can't react because they are stuck doing what they always did (and believe in it.).  Right now is a good time for someone to attack CNBC and start stealing away viewers.  To position themselves as a different kind of financial network that more people want to watch – especially when business news becomes less toxic and more interesting.