Friday, June 27, 2008

Why Yahoo is F**ked






When the second largest search engine in the United States passed up a multi, multi, multi billon dollar offer made by the largest computer software maker in the world, they all but laid seeds for their own destruction. It didn’t help that they signed a deal with their main competitor only days later.



Yahoo can’t seem to stay out of the news these days and most of the stories seem to be bad. Even when Yahoo thinks it’s good. Activist investor Carl Icahn has been rasing hell about the management at Yahoo and is doing everything he can to remove Jerry Yang, a co-founder and now CEO of Yahoo. And if Icahn, or anyone else, wants to save this sinking ship, it looks like Yang has to go.



After passing up the deal with Microsoft and signing a deal with Google, huge numbers of top executives left Yahoo because they were unhappy with the leadership of Susan Decker the President and Jerry Yang, CEO. Bill Gates issued a statement saying that a major factor in Microsoft’s desire to buy Yahoo was because of the executives and their creativity. (Microsoft has been putting ads out in Silicon Valley for executive positions now hoping to get some ex-Yahoo employees.) Now with many of them already gone or thinking about leaving, Yahoo’s value is quickly decreasing. This posses a problem for Icahn who wants to sell Yahoo to Microsoft if he is elected to the board. Microsoft may not even want it by then and if they do, you can bet the offer will be significantly smaller.



Then to top it all off, Yahoo signed a deal with Google to start showing Google ads with Yahoo searches. This means both companies are going to make more money, but now Google, which accounts for about 64% of all web searches in the U.S., has it’s foot in the door to eventually take over Yahoo which has another 23% of all web searches. That may seem extreme, but not out of the question. Yahoo is a big company and has spread itself to thin and got a little to carried away with acting like a big time dot com instead of building their company properly, like Google did. Yahoo’s board of directors include (or included as of recently) people who had nothing to do with running a web business. This is a MAJOR problem. Not all business is created equally and knowing how to run an airline, doesn’t mean you know how to run a website. Because of this, Yahoo’s services were numerous, but not very good.



So what should Yahoo have done? Take the first offer from Microsoft. Combine the powers of MSN search (#3 behind Google and Yahoo), build the strength of all of Yahoo’s services, revamp their board and THEN take Google head on. Instead they have headed just the opposite direction. So what to do now?



If I was to save Yahoo, here is my plan. Fire Yang and Decker for one. It’s just time to go. You can’t lead a company with people that don’t have the respect of their employees. Then spin off parts of Yahoo such as the website hosting service into a new and separate company. It is a great thing to have, but at this point may to much to handle for a company trying to beat the Godzilla of search engines. Then, now here’s the kicker, break the contract with Google. It may cost money now and seem like a bad idea, but it shows that Yahoo can and wants to stand alone. It also pushes back any ideas Google might have of taking over more of Yahoo. Then focus on strengthen Yahoo’s paid search service. It’s good now and has some features that Google’s Adwords doesn’t have, such as tracking exactly how much money people spend on your site on each conversion. Along with that, I would ad a free keyword search service like they used to have. Google’s keyword search is great and if Yahoo had one like that it would help bring in more small business customers. Now there are many more things to be done that can save this company, but I don’t have time go into all of them. But I think you get the idea.



Personally I work with a site hosted by Yahoo and work with their paid search service so I have to keep a close eye on this stuff. But again, this is the internet we’re talking about you never know what will happen next.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Is This What's Next?

It's been awhile since my last post and honestly, I’m not sure if anyone is even reading it, but that’s fine. For anyone who is reading, thanks!

Anyway, in my last post (and really the whole point of this entire blog) I talked about how blogs are used today vs. their original purpose and asked the question, how long will blogs last?

After working for a over a month for a company based at home (Rochester, NY) and doing web marketing and design, I have come across many different articles and blogs about everything from sports, to marketing tips, to random people’s vacations. What I am finding more often though, are blogs being used by reporters. Traditional reporting would have someone research a topic, submit a report and hope that it was worthy of making the news that day. If not, it would be lost in the clutter and never seen by anyone. Today though, reporters can post their reports in a blog and it costs nothing to put it online. This allows more people to write more articles and gives everyone and every thing the opportunity to become the next big hit.

But with more and more people being able to post things online through YouTube, Blogger, iReport and countless others, and the release of the new iPhone (which I fully intend to purchase) and other smart phones and mobile devices, I wondering about Mobile Blogging. Not just taking your laptop with you on a business trip, but really getting your phone out and blogging about something as it happens. More phones are coming out with full keyboards, making it easier to type long messages and with cameras in everything now, people can take a picture or even video and post it in a blog in literally seconds. This could be done anywhere, from floods in Iowa, to a concert in NYC, to the Olympic Games in China.

Is Mobile Blogging next? If so, how will businesses respond? Most people who blog for business do so from 9-5 at their office, not in the middle of the street or half way round the world. This could limit business and possibly put a little uniqueness back into blogging itself. And who are these potential Mobile Bloggers? Are they the same group of people who started the original blogs?

Again, I do not have the answers to any of these questions, but I intend to find out. Please leave a comment if you feel inclined to do so and I’ll be back soon with more thoughts.