Yahoo to lay off hundreds

January 22, 2008, 02:55 PM —  IDG News Service — 

Yahoo will announce plans to lay off hundreds of its 14,000 employees as the
faltering Internet giant continues trying to snap out of its financial funk
and fine tune its business strategies, several media outlets are reporting.

Yahoo will let go hundreds of staffers as part of its ongoing efforts to improve
its profitability and compete against Google, Facebook, MySpace and others,
according to articles in The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal that
cited anonymous sources.

However, the Journal said that Yahoo will hire new employees in other areas
and that it plans to finish the year with about the same amount of employees
it had at the end of 2007.

If Yahoo does in fact keep its headcount at last year's level, then the layoffs
will probably be seen as a rebalancing of staff and less as a sign of financial
distress at the company.

A Yahoo spokeswoman contacted by IDG News Service declined to comment about
layoff plans but said in an e-mailed statement that, as part of its multiyear
transformation plan, the company plans to "invest in some areas, reduce
emphasis in others, and eliminate some areas of the business," based on
its priorities.

"Yahoo continues to attract and hire talent against the company's key
initiatives to create long-term stockholder value," she said on Tuesday.

Yahoo is still deciding the extent of the layoffs and the areas that will be
affected, and it will likely announce concrete plans to reduce staff next Tuesday
when it issues its fourth-quarter earnings report, the Times and the Journal
reported.

Whatever ends up happening with the reported staff cuts, it's undeniable that
Yahoo is still very much in reorganization and recovery mode.

Once viewed as a dominant provider of online advertising and consumer Internet
services, Yahoo has in recent years looked out of sync with the latest technical
innovations and business opportunities. For starters, it let Google run away
with the market for Internet search and advertising, and failed to develop a
leading social-networking site, letting MySpace and Facebook capitalize on that
opportunity. Yahoo also largely missed the online video revolution, which Google
latched on to with its YouTube acquisition.

Along the way, its sales and profits have been disappointing for the past two
years, leading to several management shakeups in late 2006 and 2007.

By far, the most dramatic happened in June, when co-founder Jerry Yang took
over as CEO and chairman from Terry Semel. At the time, Susan Decker, former
chief financial officer and head of Yahoo's advertiser and publisher group,
became president.

A week after Semel's demotion to non-executive chairman, Yahoo combined its
search and display advertising sales teams in the U.S. It was an attempt to
extend the company's long-standing, core display advertising client relationships
to the pay-per-click business, which generates about 40 percent of the industry's
online advertising and is dominated by Google.

In August, Yahoo again shook up its top management ranks when it announced
that its top sales executive would leave and that a new global sales organization
had been created.

In December 2006, Semel had rolled out a major reorganization, creating three
main business units to focus on Yahoo's key customer segments: consumers, advertisers
and publishers. At the time, Semel also announced that Dan Rosensweig, then
chief operating officer, would leave the company.

That reorganization was preceded by a widely publicized internal memo that
was leaked to the media in November and came to be known as the Peanut Butter
Manifesto. In the scathing memo, Brad Garlinghouse, Yahoo's senior vice president
of communications and communities, called for a major reorganization, saying
the company lacked "a focused, cohesive vision" that had made it "reactive"
and eager to be "everything to everyone."

Since the uproar over the Peanut Butter Manifesto and the ensuing shakeups,
Yahoo has seen quite a few changes in its upper management ranks. In addition
to Semel's demotion and Rosensweig's departure, also gone are Wenda Harris Millard,
who was chief sales officer, and Chief Technology Officer Farzad Nazem. In June,
The New York Times reported that, in addition to these executives, at least
17 others at vice president level or higher had left Yahoo since the December
2006 reorganization.

IDG News Service

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