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Scott Thompson Named New Yahoo CEO

Scott Thompson New Yahoo Ceo

MICHAEL LIEDTKE   01/ 4/12 07:55 PM ET   AP

SAN FRANCISCO — Yahoo's previous turnaround attempts have flopped under three different leaders with dramatically different backgrounds – former movie mogul Terry Semel, beloved Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang and profanity-spewing Silicon Valley veteran Carol Bartz.

Now, the struggling Internet company is making yet another unorthodox choice with Wednesday's announcement that it has lured Scott Thompson away from a lower-profile job running eBay's thriving PayPal service to step into the pressure-packed position as Yahoo's fourth CEO in less than five years.

The appointment raised questions among analysts, since Thompson, 54, has no experience in online content and advertising, Yahoo's chief sources of revenue. The timing of Thompson's hiring also came as a surprise, given that Yahoo's board has been considering a sale of all or part of the company since firing Bartz four months ago.

With Thompson's selection, Yahoo's board is signaling that it believes the company can still rebound, despite several years of losing ground to Google and Facebook in product innovation and online advertising.

Even so, a sale of Yahoo's most prized assets – its investments in Yahoo Japan and China's Alibaba Group – is likely. Softbank Corp., Yahoo Japan's largest shareholder, and Alibaba Group have proposed buying back most of Yahoo's holdings in the Asian companies in a deal valued at $17 billion, according to published reports.

Yahoo Chairman Roy Bostock dismissed recent speculation that Yahoo might team up with buyout firms to take the company private.

"It has not been on our radar screen," he said Wednesday. "I think it's a moot issue from my point of view."

Thompson's job will be to revive Yahoo's revenue growth and repair the company's fractured relationship with investors fed up with a litany of broken turnaround promises.

Yahoo's stock hasn't traded above $20 in more than three years. On Wednesday, it dropped 51 cents, or 3 percent, to close at $15.78. Those are difficult numbers for stockholders to stomach, given that Microsoft Corp. offered to buy Yahoo in its entirety for $33 per share, or $47.5 billion, in May 2008.

"There is no shareholder or investor who will be less patient than me," Thompson, a Boston native who still has his hometown accent 18 years after moving to California, said in an interview. "We have got to be able to grow this business. There is no question that is priority No. 1."

Thompson's predecessors embraced a similar agenda with mostly dismal results.

Analysts estimate Yahoo's revenue last year totaled about $5 billion, down from nearly $7 billion in 2007. During the same span, Google's revenue soared from $17 billion to an estimated $38 billion. Privately held Facebook doesn't disclose its finances.

Thanks largely to cost-cutting measures imposed by Bartz, Yahoo has become more profitable. Last year, it earned an estimated $1.1 billion, up from $660 million in 2007.

Still, investors are disappointed with the downturn in revenue at a time when advertisers are spending more money on the Internet.

Yahoo was attracted by Thompson's impressive track record at PayPal, where he was chief technology officer for three years before becoming the online payment service's top executive in 2008. PayPal's annual revenue more than doubled from $1.9 billion when Thompson took over the division to an estimated $4.4 billion last year.

In a conference call, Thompson said it is too early to offer details on how he intends to revive Yahoo's revenue growth. But he indicated that one of the keys to success will be Yahoo's ability to decipher the information that it gathers on the preferences of its 700 million users so it can help advertisers target their commercial pitches.

"Diving into the data, we are going to find ways to compete and innovate in ways the world hasn't seen yet," he said.

Thompson also will have to lift Yahoo's employee morale, which has deteriorated along with the company's fortunes.

His departure from PayPal threatens to hurt eBay Inc., where the payments service has emerged as the fastest-growing part of a company best known for running online auctions.

EBay CEO John Donahoe said in a companywide email Wednesday: "There is one thing I am certain of: PayPal has an enormous opportunity in front of it, and we will not slow down. We will not miss a beat."

Investors weren't as confident. EBay stock fell $1.18, or nearly 4 percent, to close at $30.16.

Thompson received a compensation package valued at $10.4 million, including a $645,000 salary, from eBay in 2010, according to regulatory documents. Yahoo did not disclose how much it offered to lure him away.

Those figures are likely to emerge in a regulatory filing in the next few days.

Yahoo awarded Bartz a compensation package valued at $47.2 million during her first year on the job in 2009. The pay, which included a $1 million salary, consisted most of stock incentives that didn't become as valuable as Yahoo projected because the company's stock remained in a funk during Bartz's tenure.

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SAN FRANCISCO — Yahoo's previous turnaround attempts have flopped under three different leaders with dramatically different backgrounds – former movie mogul Terry Semel, beloved Yahoo co-f...
SAN FRANCISCO — Yahoo's previous turnaround attempts have flopped under three different leaders with dramatically different backgrounds – former movie mogul Terry Semel, beloved Yahoo co-f...
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01:27 AM on 01/05/2012
Normal sequence of events in this situation are:

He'll come in saying he's going to change the company top to bottom.
In a few months he'll figure out that Yahoo! is a heavily siloed company where hundreds of managers protect their groups and won't let go.
After about 18 months of declining stock price and a pissed-off board, he'll step down and walk away with about $60 million in cash and stock.
Ya gotta love the Valley.
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French Toast
MAPLE SYRUP
12:52 PM on 01/05/2012
Thank you for a thoroughly intelligent post that is the most likely chain of future events.
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bobjimflys
help me to help you help me to help you
12:24 AM on 01/05/2012
This has to be viewed as a comedy in the making... :-)
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jp83
You're gramur and speling are impenetrable
12:55 AM on 01/05/2012
I agree. Nice pic by the way. Also, and maybe this is simply my ignorance, but what great innovation has spawned from Yahoo recently? We all know why Google and Facebook are so dominant, but how does Yahoo even remain in "the game?"
wwhatever747
Whatever Karma Bites, Let it be, U asked for it.
09:14 PM on 01/04/2012
Get Lost, Scott Thompson, we don't need you at PayPal anymore and bad forecast with being CEO of Yahoo then. Make sure turn in your bonus $$$ back in Yahoo not laying off any. Now days CEOs and exceutives are getting less or none respect.
07:33 PM on 01/04/2012
Scott Thompson is smarter than he looks after all; still he would know the real situation at PreyPal and he undoubtedly recognises that the clunky PreyPal is on the cusp of commencing its journey down the gurgler, and he is jumping off the tired old SS “eBay” before it too goes submarine—that is, always assuming he was not pushed overboard as is often the case on the SS “eBafia”.

“According to eBay Inc. CEO John Donahoe, PayPal will become bigger than eBay as early as 2 years from now and is behind everything eBay does and every acquisition it makes.”

Surprise, notwithstanding his obvious delusional mental state, eBay’s chief headless turkey has got that right: undoubtedly PreyPal will be bigger than eBay soon but it won’t be because PreyPal has gotten any more successful, just the opposite—Visa’s V.me will see to that; it will be because eBay has imploded.

Who then will take charge of PreyPal? Only a fool would take charge of PreyPal now. The real question is when is Donahoe going to also abandon ship, or be thrown overboard by the owners of the ship when they finally wake up to the fact that all along they have had “Captain Queeg” at the tiller?

A fool is indeed taking over at PreyPal ...

“Ebay Boss John Donahoe To Serve PayPal’s Interim President”

http://techcrunch.com/2012/01/04/paypal-announces-ebay-boss-john-donahoe-to-serve-interim-president/

eBay / PayPal / Donahoe: Dead Men Walking.
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Amminadab
None of this is real
05:02 PM on 01/04/2012
Why would the president of PayPal move to Yahoo?

There is a real story there, somewhere.
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TJ Logan
Fifth Generation Real Republican
05:41 PM on 01/04/2012
Agreed. Pay Pal in trouble? Yahoo willing to pay a huge humongous sign on bonus, thus further weakening its cash reserves? Earthquake pending in Silicon Valley? Collapse of the US economy?

Who knows, but this is an odd move.
wwhatever747
Whatever Karma Bites, Let it be, U asked for it.
09:19 PM on 01/04/2012
Maybe it's part of ebay's CEO John Donahoe's plan to take over Yahoo?
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jp83
You're gramur and speling are impenetrable
01:01 AM on 01/05/2012
I highly doubt it would happen, but wouldn't it be sort of funny if somehow Thompson turned Yahoo into a true contender for internet colossus Google? Like I said earlier, an eight year old would have a better chance of winning the Indy 500 though...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr MOTO
VMFA 112 MAG 41 4th MAW
05:00 PM on 01/04/2012
I have had my yahoo account since 1999 and loved then. They were ahead of their time with audio and video communication, as well as other 'real-time' information. The problem was that most internet connects were still dial-up. That is why Google started with the 32 letter landing page, for quick loading over dial-up. Over the next few years, Google focused only on data collection and taxonomy of the information and the information about the information. Yahoo was pinned down to try to make a go of it's 'community' centric business plan. Now that information has more value than a dollar, Google was able to buy their way ahead of Yahoo with Skype and that good stuff.

Combined Googles HTML editor and their information collection abilities, soon they will not have to hire a single programmer ... they'll simply steal someone elses.
04:16 PM on 01/04/2012
I'll say this for Yahoo...when a crazy woman hacked most of my online accounts recently and changed all of my passwords, Yahoo was the easiest one to regain control of. Almost three months later and I STILL can't regain control of my gmail accounts!
wwhatever747
Whatever Karma Bites, Let it be, U asked for it.
09:18 PM on 01/04/2012
Time to switch to AOL.COM
11:01 PM on 01/04/2012
Haha...I've been with AOL forever. It's one of the few accounts she DIDN'T hack.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thomas Alan
03:57 PM on 01/04/2012
Yahoo started there advertisement business, a google adsense clone, and then didn't let any website owners into the program. I was on the waiting list for years and never got in. Eventually they closed it down. Fail !
03:41 PM on 01/04/2012
Yahoo lost the game for two reasons: their search engine wasn't good, and they neglected to improve it; and their PPC system was lousy, and they neglected to even care.
03:40 PM on 01/04/2012
I still can't figure out what Yahoo is good at or for.
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jp83
You're gramur and speling are impenetrable
01:04 AM on 01/05/2012
I just posted a comment asking the same question. I should "Wiki" them, but I don't know how they're even still existing. Maybe not for long, we'll soon see.
03:15 PM on 01/04/2012
Yahoo need to release their own "iPhone/iPad rival", put everything "in the Cloud", or what else is today's winning model?

They can also choose "the Netscape way" and become a modem dial-up provider.
02:02 PM on 01/04/2012
Yahoo needs to develop a new business model not a new executive to lay people off and call it profits.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jelun
03:11 PM on 01/04/2012
Yahoo needs to figure out how to let their users communicate with them.
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sillylittleme
humble cosmos shaker
01:51 PM on 01/04/2012
Is it me or is there a finite number of executives in this country and they keep moving them about like pieces on a chess board?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
parabq
02:08 PM on 01/04/2012
It is amazing !!! Even after they have been fired 3-4 times !!!!!!
02:19 PM on 01/04/2012
Moving from President to CEO is a level up for Thompson (was reporting into CEO at eBay). And, parabq, he has never been fired.
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Amminadab
None of this is real
05:04 PM on 01/04/2012
Is it really moving up for the president of PayPal to become CEO of Yahoo?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nic the wonder puppy
When life throws lemons, throw them back
01:29 PM on 01/04/2012
YAHOO!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
allwarisbad
01:13 PM on 01/04/2012
Another banker controlled CEO ... american capitalism ...hahaha