Kuwait Times

End of the road or new beginning for Yahoo?

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It appears at first glance to be an ignominiou­s fate for Yahoo, the internet pioneer which has long been one of the bestknown names in Silicon Valley. A deal announced Monday delivers the core assets of Yahoo to telecom giant Verizon for $4.8 billion, a fraction of its peak market value of $125 billion at the height of the dot-com boom. But while Yahoo as a corporate entity may be disappeari­ng, the brand it created is likely to live on and potentiall­y grow under its new corporate benefactor, analysts say.

“Let’s call it a new beginning for Yahoo,” said Forrester Research analyst Shar VanBoskirk. “I don’t anticipate Verizon doing away with the Yahoo brand, they will maintain the Yahoo name on a lot of its very good media properties.” While Yahoo has been successful in building a global audience of as many as one billion worldwide, “it hasn’t been able to change and adjust its brand as the market has changed,”VanBoskirk said.

“It could be good for them if they think differentl­y about what it means to be Yahoo. The brand will have a platform that may let them go farther than they have over the past five years.” The deal announced Monday was described as offering synergies for the two firms, as Verizon seeks to expand beyond a carrier and Yahoo needs help in stemming its decline against online rivals Google and Facebook. Yahoo will be run through the recently acquired Verizon unit AOL, another faded internet star. Bob O’Donnell of the consultanc­y Technalysi­s Research agreed that Verizon will want to keep the Yahoo brand which is recognized worldwide, at least for the near term. “My guess is that Verizon will take a hands-off approach and might even tie it together with some AOL properties,” O’Donnell said. Greg Sterling, a contributi­ng editor to the Search Engine Land blog, said he was generally upbeat about the deal, assuming Verizon gives Yahoo breathing room and investment­s. “Yahoo was struggling to meet investor expectatio­ns each quarter,” Sterling said. “Maybe this will allow them to take a longer-term view.”

Yahoo’s chief executive Marissa Mayer said that the two-decade-old California company “has changed the world, and will continue to do so through this combinatio­n with Verizon and AOL.” She told a conference call that Verizon “offers significan­t strategic alignments in Yahoo’s focus on informing, connecting and entertaini­ng our users.”

One of the keys for the deal is whether two companies with vastly different histories and cultures and come together and thrive. While Yahoo comes from the freewheeli­ng, innovative world of Silicon Valley, Verizon has staid roots as a regulated telecom operator on the eastern seaboard. “They are about as far on the spectrum as any two companies can be,” said Roger Kay of Endpoint Technologi­es Associates. Kay said Verizon “is an uninnovati­ve company, very different from the software-oriented world” from which Yahoo comes. Verizon needs to handle Yahoo with care if it wants the deal to work, analysts said. “Culture is a key issue, it may be the key issue,” Sterling said. “Verizon will be the corporate master and exercise control but they want to create opportunit­ies for innovation and not impose a culture that will send employees out the door.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Logos are seen on a laptop in North Andover, Mass. — AP
Logos are seen on a laptop in North Andover, Mass. — AP

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