BusinessWeek’s Sale To Bloomberg: A History In Links
The BusinessWeek sales process has had plenty of turns over the last three months. Highlights of our coverage, in reverse chronological order:
—Bloomberg Wins BusinessWeek; Pearlstine Will Be Chairman
—Rewind: BusinessWeek.com And Bloomberg.com Combined: Not Exactly Burning The Charts
—Thomson Reuters Working As Partner With Zelnick Consortium On BusinessWeek Bid
—And Then There Were Two: OpenGate & Zuckerman Also Drop Out of BusinessWeek Bidding
—Crovitz & ZelnickMedia Working On BusinessWeek Bid?
—Report: Bloomberg’s Bid For BusinessWeek Is In
—Big Surprise: Wasserstein and Warburg Not Bidding For BW; Terry: How About the 91 Others?
—BusinessWeek Promising To Fire 20 Percent Staff In Sale Document; Employees in Dark For Now
—Bloomberg Joins Bidders For BusinessWeek: Reports
—Terry McGraw: 93 Have ‘Shown Interest’ In BusinessWeek—Less Than Half Remain Interested
—Zelnick Interested in BusinessWeek; Wasserstein’s As Employees Fave?
—BusinessWeek’s Vaporware Bidders’ List Gets Shorter
—What To Do With BusinessWeek, The Mother-In-Law Edition
—BusinessWeek’s Future: Potential Buyers and Uses; TVGuide Sale A Guide
—McGraw-Hill Puts BusinessWeek On Block; Altman’s Evercore Is Banker
For our complete coverage see our archives for BusinessWeek and Bloomberg
Posted In: Media & Publishing, Magazines, Money, M&A & Venture Capital, Mergers & Acquisitions, bloomberg, businessweek, mcgraw-hill
