Business Standard

‘One of my key learnings from Yahoo is timing is everything’ DAVID GELLES

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Marissa Mayer was celebrated as a savior when she left Google to become chief executive of Yahoo in 2012.

A brilliant computer scientist, Mayer was the 20th employee at Google, and influenced many of the company’s signature features — including Gmail and Google Maps.

But could she save Yahoo? The company was reeling from boardroom tumult and a series of executive changeover­s when she arrived, and Google and Facebook were winning the war for online eyeballs and ad dollars.

Her tenure was ferociousl­y controvers­ial. Investors did well during Mayer’s five years at the helm, seeing the value of their shares more than triple. But Mayer’s every decision was second-guessed by Silicon Valley, and she was unable to make Yahoo relevant again. Last year, Yahoo was sold to Verizon, and Mayer left the company.

This interview — Mayer’s first since leaving Yahoo — was condensed and edited for clarity, and conducted in her personal office in Palo Alto, Calif.

What are you up to now?

I rented the old Google office. So this is actually the office where I started my career in 1999. This is also where PayPal started, so there’s a lot of good juju here.

Coming back here, it reminds me of what Google felt like in those early moments. I remember running up those steps, because if you didn’t get here fast enough on Saturday morning, someone in the world was going to get worse search results, and it might change their life for the worse. We have this little lab that we’re working on called Lumi Labs. In Finnish, lumi means snow, and I just love snow. I had a snowflaket­hemed wedding. We have some ideas in the consumer space. So I’ve been meeting with different founders and just seeing what’s happening in the industry.

So you haven’t joined a company or founded a company yet? What kind of managers were Larry Page and Sergey Brin during the early days, and how did you think about developing your own management skills?

Larry and Sergey just yelled at us until we became what they needed us to become, and get done what they needed to be done. And so I said, look, I’m going to just rinse and repeat that, hopefully with less yelling. We ultimately brought in management coaches and all kinds of mentoring.

I think you can have high expectatio­ns as a leader, and as long as they’re consistent and clearly communicat­ed, a lot of people find that really inspiring. I always knew what Larry and Sergey wanted. I knew what good looked like to them, and so I never got discourage­d by them saying, “Wait, I don’t think this is ready” or “I think this is overly ready.”

Why did you leave Google?

I was 37, and I had been working at Google for 13 years. I had been on search for 10 of those years and just had very recently made the change over to focus on Maps as a search technology. And I was like, “You know, I’m just not sure that I want to be like the 50year-old search girl.”

I’d always had huge respect for Yahoo as a company. When we were here in this office, we dreamed of maybe getting the Yahoo contract, maybe one day powering Yahoo search. In 1999, Yahoo was the internet. And I knew that while there were a lot of things going wrong for the board and leadership at Yahoo, there were a lot of really good people there working on the products.

What was the best-case scenario for Yahoo when you took over?

Returning it to the pre-eminence in its users’ daily lives, where it used to be people were on Yahoo for half an hour to many hours a day. Could we get back to that type of usage?

I’m proud of what we achieved at Yahoo. That said, we had a quickly decaying legacy business. All we really managed to do was offset the declines.

Yahoo had to deal with some nasty shareholde­r activist campaigns, and several readers asked about your thoughts on activism. Were there upsides, or was it more of a distractio­n?

One of the more tragic cases of Yahoo is the Alibaba stake. Both Carl Icahn’s campaign and some of the people who were part of Dan Loeb’s campaign really wanted a commitment to see that stake sold. And Yahoo sold half of that stake in a $35 billion market cap for Alibaba, eroding tens of billions of dollars of upside. So certainly that was not positive. Sometimes that shortsight­edness of wanting to get a return quickly can cause you to miss a much bigger gain.

Are there things you wish you would have done differentl­y?

I’m really proud of how well we did. I think over all the team and the company were dealt a very tough hand. We got great results for shareholde­rs, we got great results for advertiser­s and our users and our employees. And so I feel really good about that, but obviously the absolute home run would have been a stand-alone company and then a complete comeback.

What would it have taken to fix Yahoo?

I was playing with Magna-Tiles with my son one Sunday, and we had built this giant kind of castle complex, and it collapsed. And my son was crestfalle­n. I stopped, and I said: “There’s nothing to be upset about. We built it and it worked once, and we’ll just rebuild it.” When I said that to him, I realised that’s how I felt about Yahoo. You’re rebuilding something and you know that it worked once, so it should be able to work again.

That said, I would say one of my key learnings from Yahoo is that timing is everything. There was a time when Yahoo’s offerings could consume hours a day, and trying to regain that moment in time was really hard. We could make the products really good, but regaining that contextual relevance that was afforded to Yahoo in 1999 and the early 2000s was difficult.

“I’D ALWAYS HAD HUGE RESPECT FOR YAHOO AS A COMPANY. WHEN WE WERE HERE IN THIS OFFICE (GOOGLE), WE DREAMED OF MAYBE GETTING THE YAHOO CONTRACT, MAYBE ONE DAY POWERING YAHOO SEARCH” “I’M PROUD OF WHAT WE ACHIEVED AT YAHOO. THAT SAID, WE HAD A QUICKLY DECAYING LEGACY BUSINESS. ALL WE REALLY MANAGED TO DO WAS OFFSET THE DECLINES”

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