USA TODAY US Edition

New firm springs from Yahoo

Mayer out as Verizon finishes $4.4B deal

- Jon Swartz @jswartz USA TODAY

The slow demise of Marissa Mayer as Yahoo CEO reached its inexorable end Tuesday.

Nearly five years after she took on the job of turning around the gasping Internet icon, Mayer exited the scene with the completion of Verizon’s acquisitio­n of Yahoo. A new business that combines Yahoo and Verizon property AOL, called Oath, will be run by AOL CEO Tim Armstrong.

Mayer resigned when the transactio­n closed. “Verizon wishes Mayer well in her future endeavors,” Oath said in a statement.

In a Tumblr post titled “Nostalgia, Gratitude & Optimism,” Mayer said, “Looking back on my time at Yahoo, we have confronted seemingly insurmount­able business challenges, along with many surprise twists and turns.” She said Yahoo had successful­ly navigated those hurdles “and mountains in ways that have not only made Yahoo a better company, but also made all of us far stronger.”

Mayer, 42, leaves with more than $200 million worth of Yahoo stock and options — and a golden parachute of $23 million — according to securities filings. Mayer, who all but vanished the past year after a highly-visible start at Yahoo, had no further comment.

Her resignatio­n was inevitable, analysts say, once Verizon agreed to buy Yahoo’s digital assets for $4.8 billion — since amended to $4.48 billion following the disclosure of two large customer-account hacks under her watch — and the remnants of Yahoo was renamed Altaba.

“Mayer took on a challenge that may not have been solvable,” says Jeff Kagan, an independen­t tech analyst. “She tried her best, but it wasn’t good enough.”

The legacy of Mayer, once hailed as a Google-trained savior when she was tapped as Yahoo CEO in July 2012, was decidedly mixed.

Under Mayer, company shares rocketed 254%, from $15 to $53.12, outpacing the techladen Nasdaq Composite’s 112% gain.

The stock performanc­e was all the more remarkable, tech analysts say, when considerin­g the circumstan­ces under which Mayer joined Yahoo. She was the Silicon Valley company’s seventh CEO, a list that included Scott Thompson, Ross Levinsohn and Terry Semel. And she was inheriting a ship taking on water: Google and Facebook had eviscerate­d Yahoo’s oncehealth­y share of online advertisin­g worldwide.

Yahoo’s net ad revenue is projected to decline to $3 billion this year from $3.32 billion in 2015, according to eMarketer.

“She had a fairly good run but got all the bad breaks,” says

At 42 years old, “she’s young; we haven’t seen or heard the last of Marissa.” Greg Sterling, contributi­ng editor, Search Engine Land

Bill Klepper, a management professor at Columbia Graduate School of Business. “How can you stop a Russian hacker? And she got hit twice.”

As Yahoo scrambled to compete in an era increasing­ly dominated by mobile apps and social media, it welcomed a charismati­c figure in Mayer, who had earned her bona fides as an early Google employee.

She hit the ground running with an aggressive strategy of ac- quisitions and executive hires and graced a magazine spread in

Vanity Fair as one of the world’s most recognizab­le female CEOs.

But Mayer’s Sisyphean task was undercut by a series of miscues, some of which she had a hand in. There were two massive data breaches that affected hundreds of millions of Yahoo accounts.

The wisdom of acquisitio­ns, such as the $1.1 billion purchase of social media site Tumblr, were questioned. And high-salaried employees such as Katie Couric, paid a reported $10 million a year, didn’t generate much buzz.

“She came in with a very, very daunting task,” says Greg Sterling, a contributi­ng editor at Search Engine Land, a site that covers the search industry. “She was asked to revive the ad business when Facebook came along with superior technology and Google made a push into display ads.”

Yahoo’s core business was squeezed by chief rivals Google and Facebook and by upstarts Instagram and Snapchat.

“Every successful company rides the growth wave until it crests and falls. The secret is to create the next growth wave before the first one collapses,” Kagan says.

No matter how one sliced the numbers, it didn’t add up for Mayer & Co.

Google and Facebook last year owned 33% and 14%, respective­ly, of the $190.6 billion digital advertisin­g market worldwide. Yahoo and Verizon’s AOL and Millennial Media units owned 1.6% and 0.7%, respective­ly, according to research firm eMarketer.

Then there were the internal politics at Yahoo, where former executives criticized Mayer’s management style as brusque and inflexible. And yet a strong personalit­y and vision was necessary for Yahoo to move on — and Mayer provided it, Sterling and others argue.

While some expect Mayer to lay low for a while, others foresee an eventual comeback as CEO. “She’s young; we haven’t seen or heard the last of Marissa,” Sterling says.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY MARTIN E. KLIMEK FOR USA TODAY ?? Marissa Mayer is shown in 2008, when she was vice president of search and user experience­s at Google. Four years later she was named the chief executive of Yahoo.
FILE PHOTO BY MARTIN E. KLIMEK FOR USA TODAY Marissa Mayer is shown in 2008, when she was vice president of search and user experience­s at Google. Four years later she was named the chief executive of Yahoo.

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