Archive for the ‘Yahoo!’ Category

Yahoo’s Bartz getting reading to go on a 2010 spending spree

Carol Bartz Believe it or not, Yahoo has a market cap of about $22 billion, and the company intends to put some of that money to good use in the near future.  Carol Bartz stated at the Transformation 2010 conference that she intends to acquire more stuff this year.

In response to what could have been a "yes" or "no" question concerning acquisitions in 2010, Bartz answered "absolutely," pretty much guaranteeing that at least one purchase will take place.  Bartz then explained to Abbey Klaassen, "This year it’s about what technologies: Do we need to fill in the blanks, what analytics, what tools?"

Bartz also said, "Well just imagine whether it’s acquiring an audience – a group of female bloggers, or whether it’s acquiring some better analytics tools that help us guide campaigns with our partners, or whether it’s technology.  Last year we bought at company called Zoobut, which is better photo technology, so it let us do very modern photos in our mail.  It’s that sort of thing – audience, technology and tools."

The next few months should be interesting time for Yahoo, given that Microsoft will soon begin to exert a huge influence over the search side of its operations.  Whatever purchases Bartz is considering could provide a good clue about what area(s) Yahoo will focus on moving forward.

One last note: For the record, Yahoo’s stock is moving up in early morning trading, perhaps giving the company a bigger shopping budget.

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Chart of the day: Yahoos falling behind GOOGLERS

Despite making serious reductions in headcount last year, Yahoo’s revenue per employee is still well below Google’s.

Yahoo employees generated an average $124,000 each in revenue during Q4 ‘09, down from $132,823 in Q4 ‘08. Google, which also had its own small headcount reduction, saw revenue per employee hit $336,467 in the fourth quarter, which is way up from $281,916 during the year-ago quarter.

It sure is nice to have that Google search advertising cash machine at its disposal, even as the company entertains dozens of new projects.

 

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Xerox sues Google, Yahoo & YouTube

Image courtesy of www.techticker.co.uk

Xerox Corp. spent $840 million last year on research, development and engineering expenses, while R&D cost Eastman Kodak Co. $361 million.

Having made such sizable investments, the two technology-driven companies are showing particular aggressiveness in backing up their discoveries with lawsuits.

Xerox is going after three online giants, claiming in a federal lawsuit filed last week in Delaware that Google Inc., YouTube Inc. and Yahoo Inc. are infringing on its patents.

Kodak last month initiated legal actions against iPhone maker Apple Inc. and BlackBerry maker Research in Motion in federal court and before the U.S. International Trade Commission, arguing those companies’ devices are using technology to which Kodak has the rights.

A company’s intellectual property can represent big bucks. Kodak is waiting for the International Trade Commission to sign off on a $550 million settlement by Samsung Electronics Co. that would settle an imaging technology fight between the two companies.

Any company based in part on proprietary information is going to try to protect that information — particularly now, when business conditions remain tight, said Daniel Tessoni, assistant professor of accounting at Rochester Institute of Technology who specializes in business finance issues.

Egregious violations of protected technology typically get settled before they ever reach court, Tessoni said. The challenge for courts, he said, is to untangle conflicts when a competitor may have a product similar — but not identical — to patented technology and makes an argument that its product is distinctly different.

The Xerox legal brawl revolves around a pair of patents for methods used for generating searches related to a document and for methods of integrating information from various data sources.

According to Xerox, Google uses Xerox technology in its AdSense and AdWords software and its Google Maps and Google Video applications, while Yahoo uses it in its Yahoo Shopping, Yahoo Search Marketing and YQ Contextual Search offerings.

YouTube’s very existence, meanwhile, "embodies" one of the two patents, Xerox alleges in the suit.

In a statement, Yahoo said it "does not believe we infringe and plans to fight this case."

Echoed Google senior litigation counsel Catherine Lacavera: "These claims are entirely without merit, and we’ll defend against them vigorously."

YouTube did not respond to a message seeking comment.


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US & EU finally let Microsoft & Yahoo tie the knot

Microsoft and Yahoo get the go ahead for their search deal

Microsoft Corp’s assault on search engine leader Google Inc took a major step forward on Thursday as U.S. and European regulators cleared the software company’s search partnership with Yahoo Inc.

The 10-year deal, struck last July, is the biggest effort yet by Microsoft to establish an online business to rival Google, an area where Microsoft has lost $5 billion over the last four years.

"Microsoft really has room to throw money at this," said Kim Caughey, senior analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group. "I think it can work. If they can make inroads in specific target areas, they could have something positive to report."

Microsoft has already made some progress with its search engine, Bing, picking up 3.3 points of market share since its launch last June. But Bing is not likely to "push Google off a very big pedestal any time soon," said Caughey.

The battle for online search ads is only one front on a sprawling war for revenue between Microsoft and Google, which also encompasses operating systems and mobile phones. But neither has yet managed to compete on equal terms in each other’s core market.

"In terms of our modeling, we really don’t see any impact from Microsoft-Yahoo on our Google numbers," said Clayton Moran, an analyst at The Benchmark Co.

"It doesn’t change much in terms of the competitive dynamics of the industry right away," he warned. "From a Google perspective, looking out over the next couple of years, it’s a non-event."

The deal, cleared unconditionally by the U.S. Department of Justice and the European Commission on Thursday, is not expected to impact Microsoft’s bottom line, but could lay the foundation of a profitable online business.

"Really now, the goal is about share gain. If we grow share, we will grow our way into profitability, and we have confidence we can do that," said Microsoft’s Yusuf Mehdi, who is charged with making Bing and the MSN portal a financial success, in an interview with Reuters earlier this month.

Microsoft shares rose 1.2 percent and Yahoo’s rose 0.7 percent on Nasdaq, in a broadly higher tech market.

Google, which did not oppose the partnership, did not comment specifically on the regulatory approval but said that there has always been "robust" competition in the search ad business. Its shares rose 1.1 percent.


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Microsoft Ties-Up Search Deal With Yahoo

bing Microsoft and Yahoo on 4 December said they have finalised a deal that would enable Microsoft Bing to power Yahoo search.
“Microsoft and Yahoo believe that this deal will create a sustainable and more compelling alternative in search that can provide consumers, advertisers and publishers [with] real choice, better value and more innovation,” the companies said in a brief statement.
The search engine rivals announced their intent to join forces against market leader Google on 29 July with a 10-year pact to let Microsoft’s Bing search and advertising platform propel Yahoo’s search results.
Yahoo will retain its search interface and receive 88 percent of traffic acquisition costs for the first five years of the deal, and 93 percent in the second leg. The deal is oriented toward desktop search advertising and does not extend to Yahoo’s core display and mobile ad businesses, which are strong.

Microsoft and Yahoo were supposed to consummate this “Microhoo” deal by 27 October, but the companies delayed signing it to finalise details.

The deal is a valiant effort to challenge Google, which has a 65 percent U.S. search market share and 70 percent worldwide market share that easily outstrip those of Yahoo, Microsoft, Ask and other players in the market—combined.

Together, Microsoft and Yahoo would command 28 percent of the market. Bing has made solid gains since launching in June, growing from 8.4 to 9.9 percent since its launch, according to ComScore.
Yahoo meanwhile has slipped to 18 percent, prompting financial analysts such as Broadpoint AmTech’s Ben Schachter to question the company’s long-term viability in search.

“Yahoo has ceded share in each of the last nine months, clearly a trend, and a worrisome one at that,” Schachter wrote in a 17 November research note. “With both Google and Microsoft taking share from Yahoo, it is difficult to pinpoint the reason for the recent share loss acceleration, but Yahoo must find a way to stabilize its share loss or all the effort spent negotiating terms of the search deal will be the least of its worries.”

Supported by Microsoft, the question may be moot. However, the Department of Justice is scrutinizing the Microhoo deal, even though groups such as the Association of National Advertisers have asked the DOJ to approve it because the ANA believes it is good for the online advertising market.
“Yahoo and Microsoft welcome the broad support the deal has received from key players in the advertising industry and remain hopeful that the closing of the transaction can occur in early 2010,” the companies concluded in their statement.

The Microhoo consummation comes just days before Google is to host a search event at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif., and days after Bing made a bang with significant enhancements to Bing Maps, chiefly replacing the older AJAX mapping technology with the Microsoft Silverlight plug-in.
The completed deal also comes after Bing stopped working for 30 minutes on 3 December, causing a minor furor in the blogosphere.

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