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Yet in the US$32 billion industry for financial data, Bloomberg is the dominant player, with a third of the market. Its position has become even more entrenched over the past ten years, as those around it have lost market share.
Marc Rubinstein • Disrupting Bloomberg
Symphony’s challenge currently is squeezing revenue out of its customers. It overtook Bloomberg’s 332,000 user count in 2018. But it charges US$24,000 for up to 100 seats, rather than the US$24,000 Bloomberg charges for one. Also, its network tends to be more internal than Bloomberg’s, with as many banks on it but fewer of their clients. Last year... See more
Marc Rubinstein • Disrupting Bloomberg
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Founder & CEO Paul Klein IV, breaks down the entire round, how they've raised $67.5M in just 15 months since founding the company, their GTM vs product... See more
Molly O’Sheax.comForward on Apple Podcasts
podcasts.apple.comBloomberg fits the Christensen incumbent model not just because it exceeds the needs of some customers but also because it ignores the needs of others.
Marc Rubinstein • Disrupting Bloomberg
In data and analytics, Bloomberg is being challenged by a raft of start-ups. Some of them target smaller investors like me who baulk at paying Bloomberg’s US$24,000 subscription fee. Others target bigger customers who want to go deeper into more specialised data than Bloomberg supports. I use two alternatives—Koyfin and Sentieo.
Marc Rubinstein • Disrupting Bloomberg
But Bloomberg’s a tough device to dislodge. It retains prime real estate on its users’ desks and it’s a social network and it’s a luxury good. In combination, these features have lent it immunity to Christensen’s disruption theory. Slack may be an easier challenge.