Showing posts with label yahoo mail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yahoo mail. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Yahoo's Bartz Says Facebook Is Larger Competitor Than Google

Yahoo! Inc. Chief Executive Officer Carol Bartz said social networking leader Facebook Inc. has emerged as a bigger rival than Google Inc., owner of the biggest Web-search engine.

“Our greatest competitor probably is Facebook, more so than Google,” Bartz said at a presentation in New York yesterday. “They’re a hot site, but there’s room for more than one of anything.”

Bartz said her company once weighed buying privately held Facebook for about $1 billion and that her acquisition strategy is to focus on companies that bring users, content, engineers and advertising technology. Yahoo is adding features to keep from losing Web surfers to sites such as Facebook and Twitter Inc. that make it easier to interact with friends.

The second-year CEO has cut costs, pared extraneous products and focused Yahoo on news, sports and other content. She also struck a partnership that lets Microsoft Corp. handle the mechanics of Web search, while Yahoo oversees advertising sales. She’s been less successful reviving growth and keeping pace with newer, faster-growing Web companies.

As Facebook’s user base has surged past 500 million, its value has risen to more than $40 billion, according to private- share trading site SharesPost Inc. Yahoo, based in Sunnyvale, California, has a market capitalization of $22.1 billion.

Asked for her thoughts on whether Yahoo should go private, Bartz said she has no plans to do so. She also said Yahoo will remain useful to users because of its ability to personalize and organize content from the Web’s 240 million sites.

“For the most part, people pretty much want this curated for them,” she said.

Yahoo rose 61 cents, or 3.7 percent, to $16.94 yesterday on the Nasdaq Stock Market. The shares are little changed this year before today.

To contact the reporter on this story: Brian Womack in San Francisco at bwomack1@bloomberg.net; Douglas MacMillan in San Francisco at dmacmillan3@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-12-08/yahoo-ceo-has-no-plans-to-go-private-sees-buying-content-users.html

Monday, December 6, 2010

How Google can thrive in the age of Facebook

By some measures. we're hitting an Internet age that leaves Google behind. But here's a prescription to keep search relevant in the face of Facebook's social empire.

By Kevin Kelleher, contributor

Google and Facebook logosBeing king of the web is a short-lived gig. Only several years ago the web was navigated by search and Google was the clear king of innovation. Now, as the web takes on an increasingly social structure we seem to be heading into the Age of Facebook.

By some measures, it will be an age where Google isn't welcome. The company has long been seen as a one-trick pony, gifted at search and little else. It's stumbled again and again in social media with Orkut, Buzz and Wave – efforts that were at best mixed successes. Increasingly, executives and engineers in Silicon Valley openly declare that Google can't beat Facebook at its own game. Underscoring the pessimism, several key employees have bolted Google for Facebook in recent months.

Meanwhile, Facebook is expected to earn $3.2 billion in revenue next year, mostly from online ads – which is more than Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) makes on display ads alone. Time is running out for Google to find a way to keep its revenue and profit growing. Doing that will mean thriving in social media. While there's not a single strategy that Google can use to reach that goal, there are several approaches that can help. And early signs are that Google is busy taking those steps.

1. Don't copy Facebook.
Copying Google's search engine didn't work for Yahoo (NASDAQ:YHOO), Ask.com or Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) – it only made clearer that they were laggards. Besides, Orkut was Google's attempt to copy Friendster and MySpace, and while Orkut was popular in India and Brazil, it never gained traction elsewhere.

Instead, Google would be smarter to study how people are behaving as the web evolves and then anticipating how the social web will operate in the future. Google hasn't offered too many details on what kind of social features it's building, but CEO Eric Schmidt has said it won't be a full-on social networking site but a social component built into existing Google products.

This approach has its risks as well. Google has a large installed base of users with, for example, Gmail. Google Buzz, a second-generation social network, failed in good part because of how Google handled the importing of Gmail contacts into Buzz connections.

Since Buzz, Google went back to its drawing board. Since then, one of the worst-kept secrets in Silicon Valley has been what a project called Google Me, an ambitious effort not to launch a new service like Buzz, but to incorporate a social element into all the services associated with a Google account – documents, calendars, photos on Picasa, videos on YouTube. Throw in the Google Music store it's long been planning as well as the ebooks for sale on the newly announced Google Editions and there starts to emerge a critical mass of services that a social layer could be built upon.

2. Focus on Facebook's weaknesses.
A few months ago, a 224-page Powerpoint presenation by a member of Google's user-experience team made the rounds. It thoughtfully made the case that our online identities aren't one-dimensional, that we all interact differently at work, with family, with friends, etc., and that social networks don't reflect that complexity. The presentation was seen as a vulnerability of Facebook that Google could attack.

Facebook responded quickly with Groups, which lets users share different content with various groups of friends. But Google had made its point: Facebook can't do everything, and there is room on the web for different approaches to social media. It made clear that Google would try to focus its strengths on Facebook's weaknesses.

It also explains why Schmidt takes every opportunity he can to swear that Google takes privacy seriously. He's not just regretting the privacy brouhaha that greeted the launch of Buzz, he's taking aim at the loudest and most consistent complaint about Facebook – its cavalier attitude toward privacy.

Facebook has pushed our comfort levels on privacy for a long time. Zuckerberg has argued that in time we'll all grow to accept that there is no privacy anymore on the web. But the reality is, as I've argued before, Facebook can't make its social ads pay without collecting and sharing as much personal data as it does.

3. Invest in a customer base.
So what does Google do if it builds a social component throughout its myriad products and nobody uses it? That was the problem with Wave, a well-designed tool for real-time collaboration that Google quietly killed this summer.
In fact, it's the Catch-22 that fells many social sites: Nobody wants to sign up unless their friends sign up, and their friends don't sign up because their own friends haven't signed up...

To start a fire under its social offerings, Google may become aggressive in buying startups with a strong social bent. It approached Yelp with little success, and is often mentioned as a suitor for Twitter. This week, Google is reportedly talking with Groupon, a deal-of-the-day site with a loyal customer base.

Viewed from one angle these deals don't make sense because many users of a site bought by Google are already Google users. But from another angle, that's the beauty of it. If Google owned Twitter, say, then users might start interacting with each other in Picasa, or documents. Google has the cash to keep buying other startups – a music site with social connections like Spotify or Mog, for example – until it can nurture a viable user base for its social layer.

It's too early to count Google out of the social web. Its failures in the field to date are ominous only if Google hasn't learned from them. It needs to do a lot of things right to succeed, but if it does, then we may not be calling this the Age of Facebook for very long.


http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2010/12/06/how-google-can-thrive-in-the-age-of-facebook/

Groupon Aims to Emulate Facebook, Not Yahoo, After Walking Away From Deal

Groupon Inc., which rejected a Google Inc. takeover last week, is betting it can keep increasing its valuation after walking away from a deep-pocketed suitor, something Facebook Inc. pulled off and Yahoo! Inc. failed to do.

Groupon, the Chicago-based provider of online coupons, spurned an offer of as much as $6 billion that included performance incentives, a person familiar with the matter said last week. The startup will decide next year whether to go the route of an initial public offering instead, the person said.

Internet executives have had mixed results in refusing billion-dollar takeover offers. Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang was head of the Web-portal company when Microsoft Corp. tried to buy it for $47.5 billion in 2008. After rejecting the deal, Yahoo saw its valuation cut in half and Yang was replaced as CEO. At Facebook, founder Mark Zuckerberg turned down a $1 billion offer from Yahoo in 2006. Less than five years later, the social- networking service is valued at more than 40 times that.

“It is very common for all executives -- entrepreneurs or executives of public companies, to drink their own Kool-Aid and believe their own hype,” said Lou Kerner, a social-media analyst at Wedbush Securities Inc. in New York. “When everything is going up and to the right, it’s hard to have appreciation for the risks that are apparent in any business.”

Strategic Differences

Groupon Chief Executive Officer Andrew Mason, who started the company in 2008, had concerns about the strategic direction it would take under new management and what could happen to his employees if he sold to Google, according to a person familiar with the matter, who declined to be identified because the discussions were private.

Groupon has attracted 35 million users in more than 300 global markets by offering discounts of as much as 90 percent on everything from massages to ski tickets. The company makes money by keeping part of the revenue raised by the coupons. Groupon’s sales may top $500 million this year, two people familiar with the matter have said.

When Facebook declined Yahoo’s offer, Zuckerberg’s site had fewer than 12 million users. It now boasts more than 500 million. The Palo Alto, California-based company is worth more than $43 billion, according to SharesPost Inc., which tracks privately held businesses.

Yahoo, by contrast, has gone in the other direction. Even under a turnaround effort by Carol Bartz, the Sunnyvale, California-based company has struggled to revive growth and keep users from defecting to Google and social-networking sites. Its market value is now $21.3 billion.

Apple and Sun

Apple Inc., the world’s most valuable technology company, had its own near-miss takeover. The company held merger talks with Sun Microsystems Inc. in the 1990s, before CEO Steve Jobs returned to Apple and revamped its product line.

Twitter Inc., the microblogging site that lets users send messages of 140 characters, was in talks to be acquired by Google in 2009, the technology blog TechCrunch reported at the time. Twitter had recently raised funding valuing it at $250 million. The company is now considering a new investment round that would put its worth at more than $3 billion, according to three people familiar with the matter.

Other technology startups have opted not to sell in the past year, turning instead to outside investors. Small-business review site Yelp Inc. declined a $500 million offer from Google and took an investment of $100 million from private-equity firm Elevation Partners LP.

Foursquare Offer

Foursquare Labs Inc. turned down a $100 million bid from Yahoo, according to the All Things Digital blog. Instead, it raised $20 million in June from investors led by Andreessen Horowitz LLC.

In contrast, MySpace and Bebo, two of Facebook’s rivals in the social-networking market, both sold out to larger companies -- earning big paydays before their value declined.

News Corp. bought MySpace as part of its $580 million acquisition of Intermix in 2005. It later had to write down the value of the investment amid an exodus of users to Facebook. AOL Inc. bought Bebo for $850 million in 2008, and then sold it for less than $10 million this year.

“Life is all about timing and it’s hard to pick the perfect point to sell,” Kerner said. “Sometimes it’s better to sell too early than too late.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Ari Levy in San Francisco at alevy5@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-12-06/groupon-aims-to-emulate-facebook-not-yahoo-after-walking-away-from-deal.html

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Groupon Could Mark Record Buy For Google

Google Inc.'s (GOOG) reported interest in closely held Groupon Inc. could lead to the most expensive acquisition yet for the Internet giant, which has been in the midst of a buying spree.

While most of Google's recent acquisitions have been relatively small, online coupon provider Groupon could spur Google to pay as much or more than the $3.1 billion it paid for online display-advertising firm DoubleClick in 2007, in what was the biggest purchase ever for the Mountain View, Calif.-based company.

The AllThingsD blog reported early Friday that Google is considering paying "well above" $3 billion for Chicago-based Groupon, which has garnered a wide following for its daily online offers of heavily-discounted local deals on everything from cheese steaks to theater tickets.

According to SharesPost, which provides an exchange for equity in private firms, investors have been seeking shares of Groupon for roughly $38 apiece, implying a valuation of about $1.6 billion.

An acquisition of Groupon would represent a significant foray for Google further into the market for locally focused online services and information.

A Google spokesman declined to comment. A Groupon spokeswoman also declined to comment, referring to the reported merger talks with Google as "just speculation."

Google, which emerged from the recession relatively unscathed, began the year by announcing it intended to buy at least one company per month.

The company disclosed last month that it spent roughly $1.6 billion on acquisitions during the first three quarters of 2010--which included $681 million paid for mobile phone advertising firm AdMob, $179 million for social-networking software developer Slide, and $626 million spread across 37 smaller purchases.

In addition to DoubleClick, other significant Google acquisitions have included YouTube, the popular video service bought for $1.65 billion in 2006.

Google recently disclosed that it is now pulling in revenue from over 2 billion video views on YouTube per week.

Google's M&A activity has drawn increasing scrutiny from antitrust regulators. Google's purchase of AdMob, for example, was delayed several months before receiving approval from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.

Google currently intends to purchase travel software developer ITA Software for $700 million. The company said in August that the U.S. Justice Department would be conducting an extended antitrust review of the deal.

Groupon, which was launched in late 2008, says it now offers daily deals in over 300 different markets around the world. The company announced earlier this week that it signed a distribution agreement to make its offers available on Yahoo Inc.'s (YHOO) websites.

 -By John Letzing, 415-439-6400; AskNewswires@dowjones.com

http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20101119-712884.html

Users need to be cautious while using Facebook messaging: Sophos

Users need to be aware of the security risks before signing up for Facebook’s next generation online messaging service that includes online chat, text messages and other real-time conversation tools, computer security firm Sophos cautioned on Thrusday.

Facebook on Monday launched its new messaging system, which includes facebook.com email addresses.

Sophos particularly noted that fraudsters are increasingly using hacked Facebook accounts to send spam messages as they are more likely to be opened by recipients, who think the messages are from friends.

"Users need to realise that these new features increase the attack surface on the Facebook platform, and make personal accounts all the more alluring for cybercriminals to break into," Graham Cluley, Sophos senior technology consultant, is quoted as saying in media reports.

According to Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, almost 350 million of Facebook's more than 500 million members send messages using its existing service, with more than 4 billion digital missives sent daily.

"Users also need to be aware that Facebook will be storing a complete archive of all their communications with one person. This raises concerns as to how this data could be misused if it fell into the wrong hands," added Cluley.

In a press statement, Sophos said that Facebook accounts will now be linked with many more people in the users' social circles - opening up new opportunities for identity fraudsters to launch attacks.

Sophos also warned Facebook users about their accounts, password and new application selection.

However, despite the security threats, according to market watchers, free personalised facebook.com email service is a challenge to the established e-mail giants, such as Microsoft's Hotmail, Yahoo! Mail and Google's Gmail.

http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/84050/20101120/facebook-users-online-sophos-spam-security-risks-mark-zuckerberg.htm