May 22, 2013

Analysis: Yahoo CEO’s comeback plan hones in on technology, not media

f421adb571fab819fd789b9ab26c7375 Analysis: Yahoo CEOs comeback plan hones in on technology, not media

(Reuters) – , who earned a reputation for decisive action and intensity during her 13-year stint at Inc, has spent her first months as Yahoo Inc CEO quietly moving the Internet pioneer back to its roots in technology.

Long torn between whether it should focus on media content or on tools and technologies, Yahoo under Mayer is being positioned firmly in the , according to sources inside and outside the company.

Her hires, acquisition musings, and other early moves hint at an ambitious, technology-driven comeback plan designed to revitalize aging but well-trafficked properties such as Yahoo Mail, Yahoo Finance and .

Yahoo has been criticized for allowing these sites to stagnate – they look very much like they did five years ago, and do not have many to encourage users to spend more time on them.

Mayer, 37, wants to make Yahoo’s properties much more interactive, on PCs and on mobile devices, using social media tools to personalize the user experience and new technology to boost advertising sales. Her well-known focus on user design is expected to result in a simpler, less-cluttered email and home page, one source said.

Yahoo declined to comment for this article. Mayer, who gave birth to her first child weeks ago, will unveil details of her comeback plan when Yahoo reports quarterly results on Monday.

Mayer’s focus on technology in many ways reverses a course set by her predecessors, who had concentrated on media content deals, such as those that gave prime billing to ’s or CNBC, or to bring an original program starring actor Tom Hanks to its website.

The new strategy is not without risks: it positions Yahoo squarely against Inc and Google. It also risks alienating a large, media-focused contingent that is already weakened by the departure of , who had championed a media-centric approach when he was before Mayer’s arrival in July.

Mayer has been meeting with Internet gurus including AOL Inc CEO Tim Armstrong, another ex-Googler; lawyer Larry Sonsini; and Wall Street investment bankers, according to people familiar with the matter.

Bankers have pitched Mayer and her team on a slew of potential acquisitions, and they appeared to show interest in restaurant reservation site OpenTable Inc and advertising technology companies PubMatic, Turn and Millennial Media, one of the people said.

Caterva, a small start-up whose technology analyzes social media activity, has also been in low-level talks with Yahoo, said another source familiar with the situation.

OpenTable and PubMatic declined comment. Millennial Media and Caterva did not respond to requests for comment.

With more than $2 billion in cash and short-term securities, Yahoo has the money to acquire engineering talent or bolt-on services. Two types of deals are under consideration: companies that will increase user engagement, including on mobile, and those that will boost advertising returns, source said.

“What they’ve signaled so far is that the deals will be more niche in nature, smaller deals that maybe have a lot of promise,” said Ken Allen, a director at Blackstone Advisory Partners.

TALENT HUNT

Many industry insiders believe Mayer is Yahoo’s final hope for reversing a years-long decline from the pinnacle it once attained as the leading gateway to the Internet. Four of her predecessors have tried in vain to right the ship – Yahoo’s market value of $19 billion, is less than half its $44 billion value in 2005.

Mayer, who earned a masters degree in computer science from Stanford University specializing in artificial intelligence, has moved quickly on the personnel front, shelling out rich pay packages to attract ex-colleagues from Google and elsewhere.

She brought in ad technology systems guru Henrique de Castro as chief operating officer; a new finance chief in Ken Goldman, who also has tech chops, to replace Tim Morse; and Jacqueline Reese to assume the dual role of hiring and acquisitions, suggesting the start of a train of “acqui-hires” or buying small companies for their engineering talent.

“She’s spending almost all her time with the product folks. She’s spending it on technology. She’s talking about engineering hires,” a person close to Yahoo said about Mayer’s early days.

Yahoo’s advertising technology products, headed for the auction block before Mayer’s arrival, are back in favor. De Castro, her highest-profile hire, is known for a deep-understanding of the complex advertising landscape, where dozens of businesses and technology providers are interlinked.

Mayer has also shown an interest in the company’s ad tech platform, including Right Media, an automated exchange that allows marketers to blast ads across a network of websites.

The group has been a long-standing source of division among Yahoo’s management, including with Levinsohn, who was keen on divesting the unit, according to two sources close to the matter. But shortly after Mayer’s arrival, Yahoo told AdAge that it had no intention of selling Right Media.

Yahoo’s advertising salesforce, responsible for signing splashy home-page ad deals and premium marketing campaigns, has received scant attention from the new CEO, say people close to the company. Michael Barrett, Yahoo’s chief revenue officer hired by Levinsohn shortly before Mayer’s arrival, recently announced his resignation, according to a source familiar with the matter.

FOCUS ON MOBILE

Roughly 700 million users visit a Yahoo website every month – putting it in the top ranks globally. But the amount of activity people engage in on many sites is steadily declining, and its smartphone offerings are deemed lackluster.

“The largest change is to be deadly serious about mobile,” said a former Yahoo manager who remains in touch with people at the company.

Yahoo faces tough competition from Facebook and Google, two companies that have taken consumers’ time, engineering talent and market value from Yahoo. They are also trying to make the transition to mobile, but it has been difficult.

Some say the direction signaled by Mayer is not so different than strategies espoused by previous CEOs that Yahoo has consistently struggled to implement. A fragmented culture in which short-term finances usually trump product plans is to blame, according to those who know the company.

The recent departure of CFO Tim Morse could signal a change in approach, said several former Yahoo employees.

Morse was considered the force behind Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba Group and Yahoo’s $7.6 billion deal over the summer, which saw Yahoo sell about half of its 40 percent stake in Alibaba after years of wrangling over terms.

But now Yahoo’s Asian partners, including Yahoo Japan Corp, are not on the front burner for Mayer, one source familiar with the situation said.

Whether Wall Street has the patience for yet another Yahoo revival plan remains to be seen.

“Every CEO needs time to have their full vision articulated and understood,” said Dan Rosensweig, a former Yahoo chief operating officer, who now serves as CEO of online textbook rental company Chegg.com. “To count Yahoo out would be an enormous mistake, because the users have not counted Yahoo out,” he said. “It’s not like MySpace, where all the users went away.”

(Reporting By Nadia Damouni in New York and Alexei Oreskovic in San Francisco; Editing by Edwin Chan, Jonathan Weber and Tiffany Wu)

Business: Facebook, Yahoo tie up, settle lawsuits

d30b479f9b5e180f6c3d7ad716b8c60a Business: Facebook, Yahoo tie up, settle lawsuits

(Reuters) – Inc and Yahoo Inc agreed to forge a broad Internet advertising and licensing partnership on Friday, laying to rest their dueling patent lawsuits.

The pact settles accusations of technology patent infringement that began under the stewardship of ex-Yahoo CEO , ousted after a scandal erupted over inaccuracies in his resume. Sources tell Reuters interim CEO is now the front runner for the .

Facebook’s and Yahoo’s strategic deal — which expands an existing multi-year tie-up that involved mainly allowing Facebook users to share Yahoo content — encompasses cross-licensing of patents and collaboration on advertising offerings during major media events such as the Olympics or annual Super Bowl.

“I`m pleased that we were able to resolve this in a positive manner and look forward to partnering closely with Ross and the leadership at Yahoo,” , Facebook’s Chief Operating Officer and newest board member, said in a statement.

Yahoo, the once iconic , has struggled to find its footing in a digital world dominated by the likes of Apple, , Facebook, and .

The company’s leadership has been in a state of upheaval since turning down Microsoft’s $44 billion takeover offer in 2008, plowing through four chief executives in as many years. The company would not say when a on a permanent CEO will be made.

Yahoo’s lawsuit had invited some criticism that it was trying to wring cash out of a company about to go public in ’s largest coming-out party.

It sued Facebook in March, claiming the No. 1 company infringed 10 patents including several that cover online advertising technology. In its lawsuit, the company said Facebook was considered “one of the worst performing sites for advertising” prior to adopting Yahoo’s ideas.

Facebook, which went public in May, filed a countersuit of its own a month later and called Yahoo short-sighted for its decision to prioritize “litigation over innovation.”

Facebook has been beefing up its patents arsenal. In April, it announced to deal to pay Microsoft Corp $550 million for hundreds of patents that originated with AOL.

(Reporting by Gerry Shih and Edwin Chan in San Francisco; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)

Best Buy CEO resigns during personal conduct probe

a487e008c721e7a581ea9a6fb51a50a5 Best Buy CEO resigns during personal conduct probe

(Reuters) – Co Chief Executive Brian Dunn suddenly resigned from the company during an of personal misconduct, the electronics retailer said on Tuesday.

The surprise departure comes as Best Buy, the world’s largest electronics retailer, has struggled because consumers are purchasing more electronics online and can easily compare competitors’ prices on their mobile devices while looking at a product in a Best Buy store.

“Certain issues were brought to the board’s attention regarding Mr. Dunn’s , unrelated to the company’s operations or financial controls, and an audit committee investigation was initiated. Prior to the completion of the investigation, Mr. Dunn chose to resign,” said Claire Koeneman, an external spokeswoman for Best Buy. She would not comment on what the issues were.

Dunn could not be reached for comment.

In a statement issued by Best Buy earlier on Tuesday, Dunn said, “I have enjoyed every one of my with this company, and I leave it today in position for a strong future.”

Best Buy said that G. Mike Mikan, a board member, would serve as and that a search for a new CEO was under way.

The timing of Dunn’s departure came as a surprise to Wall Street. Only two weeks ago, Dunn presided over the company’s announcement of a plan to close 50 of its 1,100 large stores and cut 400 jobs.

But critics have complained that under Dunn’s tenure, which lasted , Best Buy became a showroom for .com and other online retailers, with consumers going to Best Buy stores to check out electronics like high-definition televisions, then buying them elsewhere for less.

The company, a for the consumer electronics industry, reported declines in same-store sales in six of the last seven quarters, including during the 2010 holiday season when it bet on technology like 3D television that was not embraced by consumers.

Despite offering bigger discounts and free shipping in the 2011 holiday season, Best Buy suffered a 2.4 percent drop in same-store sales in the quarter ended March 3, including a 2.2 percent decline at U.S. stores open at least 14 months.

“I hate to be rude, but I think he (Dunn) was doing a terrible job. This is a company that had a sales guy in charge, and I just don’t think they are well positioned to deal with the onslaught from the Internet,” said Michael Pachter, an analyst at Wedbush Securities.

“They have a big disadvantage to the Internet retailers because they have a big cost structure. So they need a guy who can fix that rather than trying to sell more stuff.”

Koeneman said the company was looking internally and externally for a permanent CEO and that Mikan would be considered for that post.

Mikan has been a Best Buy director since April 2008. He formerly served as executive vice president and chief financial officer of UnitedHealth Group. At one point, he was considered a potential successor to UnitedHealth’s CEO but left the U.S. health insurer to lead a private equity fund

Best Buy’s stock rose as much as 4.8 percent to $23.74 after the news that Dunn would be replaced, but the shares ended down 6 percent at $21.32.

(Additional reporting by Mihir Dalal, Martinne Geller, Phil Wahba and Jessica Wohl; Writing by Brad Dorfman; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Tim Dobbyn and Steve Orlofsky)