Monday, May 20, 2013

Member Login Join Free Today

Latest News From The Internet Marketing Mentor | View News Archive | Back




  

 

Yahoo Boss Carol Bartz Is Fired By US Internet Company

Yahoo's chief executive Carol Bartz has been fired by the internet company after two-and-a-half years in the top job.
Posted: Wednesday 7th September 2011

Carol Bartz
Carol Bartz was brought on board to change the fortunes of the search and internet company

 

The company said in a statement that Ms Bartz was removed by the board of directors, effective immediately.

Tim Morse, Yahoo's chief financial officer, will take over from Ms Bartz.

Yahoo has been struggling to increase its market share as it faces increased competition from rivals such as Google and Facebook.

Yahoo shares jumped more than 6% in after-hours trading after news of the firing broke, indicating they would trade higher when Wall Street opened for business on Wednesday. Yahoo's stock price was up at $13.72, an increase of 81 cents.

Mr Morse will serve as interim chief executive and the board of directors will look for a new CEO, the company said.

No turnaround

Ms Bartz was hired to run Yahoo in early 2009, taking over from co-founder Jerry Yang.

She made significant changes to the management team and cut jobs to save on costs. She also shifted the focus of the traditionally search-oriented firm towards more personalised content.

"I am very sad to tell you that I've just been fired over the phone by Yahoo's chairman of the board”

Carol Bartz Former CEO, Yahoo

However, Larry Magid, a technology analyst at C-net, said the company has not seen enough of a turnaround under Ms Bartz's leadership.

"She hasn't done anything to change the company's fortunes, and they are still anxious to find a leader who can move them up," he said.

Critics also claim that Yahoo has failed to make significant strides in two of the most lucrative segments of the market - search and social networking.

"Facebook is way ahead, and now even Google is way ahead of Yahoo in social networking," Mr Magid added.

"In terms of the potential for long-term revenue it's just not there. They've got some great sites, great information resources, news, stocks, sports, but that's not what bringing in the money."

Phone firing

The news first broke on the Wall Street Journal's All Things D website, which quoted an email from Ms Bartz to Yahoo staff. The email has since been reported by other news agencies including Bloomberg and Reuters.

"I am very sad to tell you that I've just been fired over the phone by Yahoo's chairman of the board," Ms Bartz said in the email to staff.

"It has been my pleasure to work with all of you and I wish you only the best going forward."

As news of the sacking spread across the internet, Yahoo released its own press statement in which it confirmed it was undergoing a "leadership reorganisation" and that Ms Bartz would be leaving the company.

Roy Bostock, chairman of Yahoo's board, said in the statement: "On behalf of the entire board, I want to thank Carol for her service to Yahoo during a critical time of transition in the company's history, and against a very challenging macro-economic backdrop."

He added that he saw "enormous growth opportunities" for the firm.

Lack of direction?

Despite being one of the pioneers in the online search business, Yahoo has seen its market share dwindle in recent times.

Not only have the users turned to its rivals, advertisers have also been ditching the company.

Research firm eMarketer has projected that Facebook will overtake Yahoo in online display advertising in the US this year.

Analysts said a lack of focus and direction have hurt the company's image.

"They went down the road of search, they went down the road of media, becoming a content company, they went down the road of advertising," said Michael Yoshikami of YCMNet Advisors.

"I'm not sure where they go right now. One wonders if this means that they might be ripe for a takeover."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-14816077

 

 

 

Other News From The Internet Marketing Mentor

Microsoft Reveals Windows 8

Facebook takes on Twitter, Google+ and Blackberry

GlobalSign Resumes Issuing Security Certificates

The Myth Of Free Wi-Fi

Twitter Becomes Latest Tool For Hedge Fund Managers

Google Docs Outage: Offline Editing Needed, Now

Microsoft online services hit by major failure

Supercomputer Predicts Revolution

.XXX Web Domain Registration Begins

GlobalSign Stops Secure Certificates After Hack Claim

Third Of Adults 'Use Smartphone' Says Ofcom Report

Pupils Prefer emails To Books

Dell And Baidu Tie Up For Smartphones In China

Google+ Launch: Search Giant Closes 10 Products

Why Amazon's tablet will challenge Apple in a way that Google cannot

Apple forces new Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7" off German shelves

Google's Eric Schmidt Rates Apple's Jobs As 'Best' CEO

Beyonce MTV Pregnancy Revelation Breaks Twitter Record

Theresa May Discusses Twitter, Facebook Bans

Robonaut R2 Tweets From Outer Space