Quantcast
Last updated on June 1, 2012 at 13:28 EDT

Yahoo Plans New Site for Investors in Technology

December 11, 2007
Repost This

By Azadeh Ensha

Yahoo, which already owns one of the most successful financial Web sites, is putting the final touches on a new online program for technology investors set to begin next month.

To be called TechTicker, the Web program will report exclusively on technology stocks, offering daily streaming-video segments and blog posts, as well as some live coverage of breaking news, said Brian Nelson, a spokesman for Yahoo.

The initiative is another example of Yahoo moving aggressively into content, something that sets it apart from Google, its main competitor. As high-speed Internet access becomes more prevalent, Web producers predict that video will play a greater role in consumers’ online habits.

Yahoo has not finished lining up the program’s online staff, but among those under consideration are Henry Blodget, the editor in chief of Silicon Alley Insider ; Sarah Lacy, a BusinessWeek columnist; and Paul Kedrosky, a CNBC analyst. None of these people could be reached for comment.

TechTicker is Yahoo’s second foray into streaming-video finance. In 2000, the company introduced FinanceVision, an online version of a round-the-clock cable business channel. The effort was shut down two years later.

With its latest venture, which will feature periodic video segments and all-day blogs, Yahoo will face tough competition from television news programs: in addition to the cable news business networks CNBC and Bloomberg Television, it will be up against the new Fox Business Network.

Mike McGuire, a media analyst with Gartner, said he thought TechTicker would have trouble distinguishing itself.

"If they can get an audience aggregated around the site, it can provide an off-ramp to other Yahoo properties," McGuire said. "But we have a ton of stuff that’s available on TV and any number of blogs and Web sites that provide close to real-time accounts, so this will be a real challenge for Yahoo."

Nelson said, "Yahoo Finance already maintains the Internet’s largest finance audience. When we think of developing new products, we’re focused on serving that audience."