Yahoo/Bing collaboration – what it means for newspapers
Updated: Bing to power Yahoo search; Yahoo reps to sell into it
(UPDATED 11:00 CST, July 29, 2009)
The cat well out of the bag, Yahoo and Microsoft this morning detailed a 10-year agreement to cooperate on search and search revenues, pending regulatory approval.
Microsoft’s improved, renamed search engine Bing will become the exclusive algorithmic search and paid-search platform across Yahoo. Yahoo will become the worldwide exclusive sales force for both companies paid-search advertisers. (Self-serve for both companies will be handled by Microsoft’s ad-entry platform.) For the first five years, Microsoft will pay Yahoo acquisition costs of 88 percent of its search-ad revenue.
Each company will retain its own display-ad sales force and revenues.
Pending an OK from the Justice Department, the two companies hope to initiate the changes in early 2010. Worldwide, the rollout could take as long as two years — a fact that didn’t impress investors. Yahoo’s stock dropped 10 percent in early morning trades.
Nevertheless, the agreement is expected to provide Yahoo up to $500 million in new revenues and save about $200 million in operating expenses. It also comes with revenue guarantees from Microsoft for the first 18 months operation.
AdAge broke the story Tuesday night. The deal with Yahoo would give Bing a 30 percent market share, AdAge estimated, compared with Google’s 65 percent share.
The deal allows Yahoo to concentrate on media, marketing and sales.
It also give us a glimpse at Yahoo’s emerging strategy: Offload activities it’s not particularly good at and partner with companies who are. Case in point: It shut down its own social-networking service, Yahoo 360 earlier this month. Yahoo’s newly redesigned home page includes Facebook, MySpace and EBay in its main navigation.
Where does this place HotJobs and consortium newspapers in Yahoo’s new strategy? That still remains to be seen as internally, Yahoo executives are evidently only beginning to sort it all out. About 600 newspapers are on Yahoo’s HotJobs recruitment platform and enjoy Yahoo’s vast network. Hundreds of papers use Yahoo’s behavioral-targeting ad platform and many are reporting success with it. While the company didn’t address its newspaper partners directly, the press release said the Microsoft deal did not cover other aspects of the two companies’ businesses, where they would continue to compete.
We reported last week on rumblings that Yahoo was looking for a buyer for HotJobs, as well as possibly a buyer for its small-business service unit. This much is fairly certain: A HotJobs buyer would expect to get Yahoo’s massive traffic in the deal. That’s a scenario Yahoo would be likely to support, if the Bing deal is any indication.
If Bing garners a 30 percent share of search, that’s bound to give newspapers a lift in search rankings — something they’re already getting from Google — and it’s likely to improve papers behavioral-targeting efforts greatly.
But in the inevitable shifting of resources, the question becomes, will Yahoo’s newspaper partnerships become undersupported orphans? The answer — our take, at least — is that if operational support requires low overhead from Yahoo, brings dollars to its bottom line, Yahoo will continue.
Then there are the content opportunities for both newspapers and Yahoo — discussions that have only scratched the surface, we’re told. Discussions rooted in the proof that the companies can make money together could eventually bear fruit.
Microsoft announces Office 2010, Windows 7 and earnings
Revenue at Microsoft, according to yesterday’s earnings call, is down 17 percent year over year, though costs have been cut $900 million from 2008. New products for 2009 included SQL Server 2008, Office Communication Server R2, Exchange Online, SharePoint Online, and Bing.
Office 2010 will be released in the fall of 2010. Windows 7 will be generally available October 22.
The overall PC market for Microsoft dropped 5-7 percent year over year, with non-netbook products taking the biggest hit – a 16-18 percent drop. Windows Client revenue was down 22 percent and sales of premium SKUs declined more than 25 percent.
“We continue to have healthy growth in our client enterprise annuity business, which was up single digits in the fourth quarter,” said Bill Koefed, Microsoft’s general manager of investor relations. Windows server units and annuity revenue increased single digits, although overall server and tools revenue declined 6 percent year over year. Online advertising revenue was down 14 percent, though page views showed continued growth. Search revenue for the quarter was flat year over year.
“…During the quarter we launched Bing, our new search engine which has had positive early momentum,” said Koefed. “ Unique users of Bing.com grew 15 percent.” We’ve seen particular strength in the areas of shopping and travel as visitors to Bing shopping almost tripled and Bing Travel traffic was up 90 percent month over month since launch.” [AIM Group note – while using Bing today we were greeted with a one-question survey popup: “How likely are you to continue using Bing?” Survey results: 23.5 percent of respondents said they definitely would continue to use Bing; 23.5 percent said they definitely would not. All others were unsure.]
Microsoft business revenue was down 10 percent this quarter, primarily because of a drop of more than 35 percent in license-only sales, though double-digit growth continues in SharePoint, Office Communications Server, and CRM products. CRM achieved the 1 million seed milestone this quarter. Revenue decreased 25 percent in the entertainment and devices division. Approximately 11 million consoles were sold, including the popular Xbox 360, representing a gain from 2008 of 28 percent. While operating expenses were reduced 11 percent, the savings were negatively impacted by $40 million in severance packages and $105 million in technical expenses for Windows 7. Legal fees were $193 million.
“The fourth quarter marks the end of one of the most difficult but in some ways encouraging fiscal years in the company’s history,” Microsoft CFO Christopher P. Liddell told the audience. “However… We actually executed much better than in preceding years across almost all aspects of our business, we had great product shipments, strong sales execution, and a new level of internal discipline shown by the speed and efficiency with which we cut costs.
“So in my mind, we are a stronger company than we were a year ago — however, the economy continues to be challenging and we need to lift our game to another level in fiscal 2010.”
This report was made possible by the transcript recording services of Seeking Alpha. For the full call transcript go to http://tinyurl.com/nkwbvg
Don’t mess with the Monster: Yahoo, Microsoft ordered to divulge anonymous poster(s)
Times Online: Microsoft interested in Yahoo again?
The U.K.’s Times Online is reporting that Microsoft’s interest in Yahoo is back on the table, but this time only for Yahoo’s search business.
The Times says that Microsoft wants to acquire Yahoo’s search for $20 billion and would shake up the Yahoo management team. Microsoft will not be making a new takeover offer, however, according to the report.
Jonathan Miller, ex-chairman and chief executive of AOL, and Ross Levinsohn, a former president of Fox Interactive Media, are rumored to be lined up to lead the new management team. Senior directors at Microsoft and Yahoo are understood to have agreed the broad terms of a deal. However, Levinsohn told VentureBeat there is “no truth” to the story.
Under the terms of the proposed transaction, Microsoft would provide a $5 billion facility to the Miller and Levinsohn management team. The duo would raise an additional $5 billion from external investors. This cash would be used to buy convertible preference shares and warrants which would give it a holding in excess of 30 percent of Yahoo.
The external investors would also have the right to appoint three of Yahoo’s 11 board directors. The talks with Yahoo involve Microsoft obtaining a 10-year operating agreement to manage the search business. It would also receive a two-year call option to buy the search business for $20 billion. That would leave Yahoo to run its own e-mail, messaging, and content services.
The deal apparently would boost Yahoo’s income by as much as $2 billion per year. TechCrunch questions the logic of this statement, pointing out that the Yahoo-rejected Microsoft acquisition deal was supposed to generated $1 billion. So how, in a down market, does it jump suddenly to $2 billion, Tech Crunch asks.
It’s all heady stuff and is being widely reported in the tech press, but both TechCrunch and VentureBeat question whether it’s at all true. For Yahoo’s sake, it better be.
Here’s the full Times Online story: http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/technology/article5258258.ece
Yahoo’s Yang to step down
Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang is stepping down. Yang’s recent tenure has been tumultuous to say the least. He was at the helm during the company’s rejection of Microsoft’s $47.5 billion takeover offer as well as the failed advertising deal with Google.
Wall Street seems to be pleased. Yahoo stock was up more than 4 percent in after-hours trading yesterday.
Yang was a co-founder of the company and re-took the CEO role when Terry Semel, Yahoo’s chief exec since 2001, stepped down in June 2007.
Yang will now return to his earlier role as “Chief Yahoo” and remain on the company’s board. Yang had a predictably upbeat take on the change: “Having set Yahoo on a new, more open path, the time is right for me to transition the CEO. role and our global talent to a new leader,” he said in a statement.
Yang will stay on until Yahoo finds a replacement.
Yahoo’s press release is here.
