• Is it possible to find out what steps Bloomberg (as in www.bloomberg.com) has taken in its marketing strategy to be as successful as it is today – e.g. has marketing contributed to it surpassing other players in its main market? I am writing a project on the topic “To what extent has marketing contributed to the success of Bloomberg L.P.?”, but am having trouble finding sufficient and relevant information. I would be preferable if the information would be particularly relevant to the UK, though this is not essential. Many thanks.


  • Hi again! I have here some more articles about Bloomberg and its marketing strategies. To save you time, I shall provide small snippets but I it would be helpful to your paper if you could read them in their entirety. “By shifting its focus upstream from purchasers to users, Bloomberg created a value c w e that was radically different from anything the industry had ever seen. The traders and analysts wielded their power within their firms to force IT managers to purchase Bloomberg terminals. Bloomberg did not simply win customers away from competitors – it grew the market. “We are in a business that need not be either-or,” explains founder Mike Bloomberg. ‘Our customers can afford to have two products. Many of them take other financial news services and us because we offer uncommon value.’” ”Creating a New Market Space” (Page 6) http://www.odu.edu/dl/navycollege/603.CreatingNewMarketSpace.pdf “Take Bloomberg L.P. While Reuters and Dow Jones's Telerate were competing on offering price information to traders and analysts, Bloomberg redefined the industry's boundaries. Good-bye calculators and No.2 pencils; Bloomberg terminals leapfrogged the competition by providing users with built-in analytics that guaranteed speed, simplicity and fewer errors in trading and investment decisions.” “As Michael Bloomberg, the founder and president, said: ‘We never look at our competitors' products. Why should we assume they know what they are doing?’” “A Corporate Future Built With New Blocks” http://www.insead.fr/mauborgne/Nyt2900398.htm “As a business model, it's terrific: Bloomberg rents the terminals for thousands of dollars a month. For a while it looked like Net-based financial information services, which can provide most of what Bloomberg does for a fraction of the price, might pose a serious threat. But that danger has receded with the dot-com tide.” “A New York Entrepreneur” http://www.thestandard.com/article/0,1902,27179,00.html “The 160,000 terminals in 100 countries bring in $2.4bn a year to the privately-held firm.” “Mr Bloomberg also has a multi-lingual television news service in the United States and Europe, a radio news service and an internet-based news service at Bloomberg.com accessed 175 million times monthly.” “Billionaire eyes Big Apple” http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/1372277.stm “The heart of the Bloomberg empire remains Bloomberg Financial Markets - a "real time" financial information service that provides market-moving information to securities traders and other moneywatchers. Fans of the Bloomberg terminals - including traders and business editors and reporters - find them an unparalleled research tool. They find them not only easy to use, but crammed with a wealth of information, ranging from historical data on all sorts of bonds, stock offerings, commodities and publicly traded companies to timely sports scores and weather forecasts. The machines can also easily and quickly offer users information in easy to read charts or bar graphs - a feature that business editors regularly use to illustrate stories.” “Bloomberg's Developing 'Baby' Experiences Some Growing Pains” http://www.tjfr.com/secure/archive1994/0594growing612.htm “Bloomberg has faced down threats before. Web sites offering free financial data were supposed to lead to the company's early demise. But no Net startup could match Bloomberg's mastery at information-gathering and number-crunching. And after the recent dot-bomb explosions, Bloomberg looks more credible than ever. Now, though, it has to contend with a rival that has a made a name for itself in Europe and is growing fast in the U.S. Bloomberg has captured 36% of the $7 billion global market for real-time data.” “The Bloomberg Machine” http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/01_17/b3729001.htm In this article, Reuters is being accused of even stealing information from the Bloomberg files. “Competition over financial data spills over into criminal investigation” http://www.onlineathens.com/1998/013198/0131.a3reuters.html “The company is actually breaking from tradition by adopting a strategy of partnering with third-party solution providers. The initiative appears to be an attempt to keep users on the Bloomberg—and off other systems. Through its partnerships, Bloomberg is now beginning to offer pre-integrated applications over the Bloomberg terminal in a sort of one-stop-shopping approach, says Gail Doolin, who is on Bloomberg’s buy-side business development team.” “Bloomberg Moves to Tighten Its Grip” http://www.algorithmics.com/aboutalgo/news/waters_bloombergalgo.pdf Other articles you could use for your project are found below. “Bloomberg Aims To Simplify Straight-Through Processing” http://www.informationweek.com/817/bloomberg.htm “As of September 2002 it had annual revenues of around US$2.8 billion and had leased an estimated 170,000 terminals. 93% of revenue was attributable to terminal leases. The number of Bloomberg terminals grew by 21% in 1998, 17% in 1999 and 9.5% in 2001; forecast growth for 2002 is about 6%.” ”The founder owns 72% of the group.” “AP, UP, UPI, Bloomberg and AAP” http://www.ketupa.net/newsservices.htm I hope these articles could be of help to your paper. In case you would need more information, please just ask for another clarification. Best Regards, Easterangel-ga


  • Back at the start of Bloomberg's development, someone tech savy chose an 'all points addressable' console for the display/controller. This technology allowed graphics in the financial information area years ahead of the competition. BB also was savvy enough to build the biggest and best data for fixed income area where the competition didn't really exist and captured that market first. Equities became a secondary focus and now with the additional tools it easily beats much of the equity data sources as well.


  • Great reply, thanks. (P.S. Sorry for the delayed reply, been away.)


  • Hi and thanks for your reply. Could you please expand on the marketing aspect of Bloomberg’s success? It would help if you could link to articles that specifically discuss marketing and Bloomberg; my project is in the range of 8,000 – 12,000 words so I need more information. Regards, Misiowiec-ga


  • Thanks for asking a clarification before making a rating. I will try to find more information. Thank you for your patience.


  • Hi! Thanks for your very interesting question. In order to fully understand the marketing strategy used by Bloomberg to achieve such tremendous growth we must first look into its corporate history. The present mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg was then a partner in Salomon Brothers in 1973. At this time he had an idea of investing money on information systems of Salomon Bros. since he perceived that computers will play a critical role in trading and market analysis. But even before he could get his idea going, Salomon Brothers was merged with Philbro Corporation. Bloomberg was fired but received $10 million in return. With this money he started his company called Innovative Market Systems. The product was an information terminal for financial institutions. In order to be highly marketable it would have to be a tool that would be used by the big guns of Wall Street but it will be affordable for smaller firms as well. The principle behind this could be traced from the theory of franchise value. In the article, “Economics of Franchise Value", it mentions Bloomberg as having made this practice. According to the article, the theory of franchise value comprises of three components: revenue, cost and barriers to entry. So in a marketing standpoint, Bloomberg did not compete through price alone but on the basis of the value it gives to its customers. “A valuable franchise must have a sizable revenue base. This could come from selling something in low volume at a high price. Bloomberg terminals are an example. Bloomberg leases proprietary computer terminals with information that is important to financial market participants, particularly bond traders. These users have large budgets and a strong need for the service, so that even though it is not a mass market, Bloomberg can charge high prices and earn tremendous revenue.” “The Economics of Franchise Value” http://arnoldkling.com/~arnoldsk/aimst2/aimst210.html In the About.com website, it has this commentary on franchise value. “You may wonder why the owners of companies with high franchise value are generally better off financially. The reason is simple: if a product has strong consumer demand, the company that manufactures that product can raise prices to offset increased labor, production, inflation, and other costs. The company that does not have franchise value is forced to compete on a price basis, constantly having to undersell its competitors. In an industry with high fixed costs, this is a recipe for disaster [look at the major airlines!] Companies lacking franchise value are commonly referred to as "commodity type" businesses.” "Profiting from Franchise Value" http://beginnersinvest.about.com/library/weekly/aa111102a.htm Bloomberg had Merrill Lynch as its own exclusive customer, deterring the company from engaging business with other Wall Street firms. At first this was ok since the regular business from Merrill Lynch provided stability and cash flow for the company. But as years went by it became a burden for further growth. When it was freed from the exclusivity clause in 1998 it engaged in an aggressive selling campaign. “By 1988, the Merrill Lynch exclusivity clause had become a serious obstacle to the new company's sales effort. It took Bloomberg a year to reach agreement with Merrill Lynch's president to start selling to other large investment banks and negotiate a deal to buy back a $200mn chunk of the company. Free to target the whole of Wall Street, the firm needed a great many more sales staff, a scarce commodity. The company began recruiting, widening the net to include eager young college graduates. These were trained up at the newly created analytic desk, a customer training and support function based at Princeton, so that the New York office could concentrate on sales. The strategy paid off and in just a year the number of installed terminals was 10,000; double the 1988 figure. Over the next five years growth was even more dramatic. By 1995 they'd installed 50,000 terminals and had over 2,000 employees worldwide, of whom 450 were in sales.” But the best marketing strategy developed by the company was providing the Bloomberg experience through the use of different media like print, TV, radio and the World Wide Web. Make no mistake about it however that terminals still make up the greater part of the business and contribute 98% to its total revenues and these other services are mainly promotional vehicle for the capabilities of the terminal services. “Today the name Bloomberg is synonymous with breaking news as much as financial information and terminals. In the early 1990s Bloomberg and his team decided TV business news was the natural complement to the real-time information already available on the terminal.” “But employees working on the company Website and newsroom realize they're only there for one reason – selling Bloomberg terminals. In spite of diversification Bloomberg remains, in many ways, a one-trick pony. Their first product, the financial information terminal, is the heart and soul of the company. A percentage of all employees' pay is tied to the net number of terminals installed from year to year, a scheme that the company calls its “certificate system.” Terminal sales still generate about 98% of Bloomberg's revenue.” You could read the whole Bloomberg history and commentary through the following link: “Bloomberg classic start-up; sales is what makes money” http://www.expressexec.wiley.com/ee/ee02.01.07/sect0.html The next links meanwhile provide evidence to the last statement made about using the mass media as a marketing tool to sell Bloomberg terminals. “Bloomberg to do interactive TV” http://news.com.com/2100-1033-207161.html?legacy=cnet “Bloomberg to Expand Its Web Presence” http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,1051,00.html Search terms used: Bloomberg terminals marketing history “franchise value” I hope these links would help you in your research. Before rating this answer, please ask for a clarification if you have a question or if you would need further information. Thanks for visiting us. Regards, Easterangel-ga Google Answers Researcher







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