Microsoft Circles Back to Yahoo With New Offer 143
Ian Lamont writes "Microsoft has come back to Yahoo with a new offer that would involve it buying part of Yahoo. No details have been released, but sources told the Wall Street Journal that part of the arrangement would involve Microsoft selling display ads next to Yahoo search results. No word yet on how this will impact Carl Icahn's proxy war with Yahoo's board."
How's this going to work?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, if MSFT, say, goes through and buys just the Yahoo Search division, it sounds like Yahoo is free to go become a content/media/etc. company free of worrying about Google and search.
My question: who gets domain over the homepage, Yahoo.com? If Yahoo retains Yahoo, but MSFT owns the little search box on the page, then who decides how prominently the search is featured on the homepage, how it is integrated into the content, etc.? Yahoo would have incentive to make the content front and center, and who cares about the search box...
It might be hard for MSFT to integrate all of Yahoo, but it's even harder for MSFT to integrate part of Yahoo...
I still expect a full acquisition to occur. Whether its $32, $33, or $34 or something else, we'll see...
Re:How's this going to work?? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How's this going to work?? (Score:4, Interesting)
I still expect a full acquisition to occur. Whether its $32, $33, or $34 or something else, we'll see...
I was just wondering... Yahoo's stock fell after Microsoft withdrew their original offer. Did it slide all the way back to pre-acquisition-attempt value or did it remain above that?
I knew immediately that Microsoft withdrew only to reduce Yahoo!'s value, but if Yahoo! decide to hold out again, the tactics may prove to be disadvantageous to Microsoft.
All in all, Microsoft is playing catch-up instead of innovating. Somehow, I think they will dominate the search market a year after Linux starts dominating the desktop market.
Re:How's this going to work?? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How's this going to work?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
I was just wondering... Yahoo's stock fell after Microsoft withdrew their original offer. Did it slide all the way back to pre-acquisition-attempt value or did it remain above that?
Yahoo!'s share price remained above the price before MS's original offer, more than $7 above. Yahoo!'s lowest price this year was $19.05 on 31 January. It's lowest point in May was on the 5th, at $24.37. It closed today, er yesterday the 19th at $27.68. And on the 16th, $27.66
FalconRe: (Score:2)
Search is already losing the marketing edge that google was able to fabricate around it a marketing illusion, at the end of the day search is just an extension of a web portal and the rest of the portal is far more important in keeping the user on site.
The only real adjustment portal
The trust factor of MS has to be considered. (Score:2)
Search engines are not THAT tough to build. Technologically, it's within their grasp. But people just don't WANT to do business with MS. Without a captive market, customers and would-be partners take their business elsewhere.
And if Microsoft wants Yahoo! because of the eyeballs that will be a problem for them. It's easy for people to switch to another search engine or email provider. I've heard a few people say that if MS does acquire Yahoo! they'll switch, though I use mostly Google for searching I us
Re: (Score:2)
What's the difference in typing in www.yahoo.com or www.live.com. I will give you this much live.com is better looking though it always seems to give me strange results in the top ten.
MSFT is trying to duplicate google the problem is MSFT can't use their monopoly to force an advantage, since MSFT can't compete they are forced to buy customers.
Re: (Score:2)
Web advertising (Score:5, Interesting)
Media companies have grown huge on advertising, but they have also spent huge sums to produce and purchase programming that attracted viewers. Online content is nowhere nearly as expensive to produce, and the target web audience is much smaller than TV audiences. I just don't see how online advertising can carry a company much farther than they've already come.
I just don't get it. It seems like anyone trying to sell online advertising space is trying to squeeze pennies out of sheep. For all the effort going in to providing these online advertising spaces, I just can't imagine the payoff being that great.
Re:Web advertising (Score:5, Insightful)
I keep waiting for companies to figure this out, but online advertising keeps growing. I don't get it.
Re:Web advertising (Score:5, Insightful)
A good consumer will click on anything shiny, just like (s)he will sit through 20 minutes of ads per show, and buy something based on the ads. Marketing folks aren't dumb - they're highly paid and rating systems show what works and what doesn't.
I don't know if comparable rating systems exist for web advertising though.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
So I think it's not specific to nerds to not buy, but rather a special group of ad-buyers that buy.
Re:Web advertising (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:1, Insightful)
You're missing the point. These are still people YOU KNOW. There are people who click on ads, people who think the blink tag is useful, people who pay AOL for their dialup, etc..
Stop being such a pretentious ass. Paying attention to ads isn't a sign of being stupid. Every once in a while, I will see an ad that lets me know of something I didn't know existed.
If you weren't so cocksure that you knew everything already, perhaps you could derive some benefit from targetted ads. You probably use blocklists to block even unintrusive ads, though (lol advertising is TEH EVIL).
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
"click!"
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Unless maybe you meant just the year 2000?
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Marketing folks aren't dumb - they're highly paid and rating systems show what works and what doesn't.
you dont think the marketing folk would lie to the PHB and pretend to make a difference.
your 1/2 right in your post anybody informed (not sure that's the right word, but meh) enough to read slashdot will have friends that are smart enough not to go, ooooh shiny, clicky, clicky, but I think something has to be said for the fact that marketing folks tell the higher ups their important and sell THAT message really well.
Re: (Score:1, Redundant)
It wouldn't surprise me if parent is right and the actual real numbers show that banners/ads don't generate nearly the revenue that the ad placers claim they do. In that respect, the marketers, not the consumer, may be the bigger cause of the banner/ad nightmare we are in now.
Unfortunately, my daily re
Re:Web advertising (Score:4, Insightful)
However, there have been times when I've been interested in some item, like a particular kind of pen I'm partial to, and Google will return retailers' links. Granted, these are not your typical web ad but more of a simple (paid for) link. But I have clicked on them simply because I want to buy the product.
Gerry
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
I think there is a difference between a sponsored link and your generic web ad that one might get on site frequently visited for information and that gets updated daily like a news site. Most people probably ignore those out of necessity since they visit the site too often to waste time on the ads.
However, there have been times when I've been interested in some item, like a particular kind of pen I'm partial to, and Google will return retailers' links. Granted, these are not your typical web ad but more of a simple (paid for) link. But I have clicked on them simply because I want to buy the product.
Gerry
When you want a particular product, go to its website or a website of a supplier. NEVER click on ads of any form. Doing so just encourages more ads. If there's something you absolutely want and there's a text ad sitting there taunting you, go search for it. DO NOT CLICK THE AD.
Re: (Score:2)
When you want a particular product, go to its website or a website of a supplier. NEVER click on ads of any form.
Once in a while when googling I'll click on a Google ad, open it in a new tab, then close the tab. I do this because I want to support Google.
Doing so just encourages more ads.
Ads allow content providers to provide content. Without ads there would not be much content and what was available users would have to pay for. Even /., /. displays ads as well as asks users to subscribe. I don'
Re:Web advertising (Score:5, Interesting)
What is really the motivation for this transaction is that Microsoft got caught with its pants down in an emerging field. Again.
A new Internet is developing. (No, really. Hear this one out.) An Internet that is centered around your location (your GPS coordinates) and where you currently are, and what is around you. If the Internet, to date, brought you access to the world, then the next generation of Internet services will bring you access to your community (or will bring your community access to YOU!)
Think of all your data, all your requests, everything, but tagged with GPS coordinates. What fun services can you provide? GPS + Flickr = location and time based picture sharing. Went to a concert? Easily get photos from other people who attended the same event. See? Internet + GPS = fun.
Guess what also can be location based? Yup. Advertising. I won't get into the whole host of ideas here (online coupons, business search with advertising, favored search results, etc etc) but there is a great opportunity here. If people are currently using the Internet to market to the nation/world, then perhaps a different group of people will want to use the Internet to advertise to people in their own community.
For example, a mom-and-pop sandwich shop. Trying to find a good sub shop to go to for lunch? The mom-and-pop business can pay for favored search results. Perhaps dangle a digital coupon to entice your business. A completely different advertising customer and advertising model than we have today.
Microsoft totally has its pants down on the local Internet that is developing behind the scenes. Microsoft will be handing out the money all over the place to build the empire that they neglected to develop themselves. One that Google is totally dominating.... and it isn't even out there to the public... yet.
Re:Web advertising (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I only browse the web with Adblock Plus and noscript in Firefox. At the minimum I use Adblock Plus.
There's no need for ad blocking software. All you need is a Hosts file [wikipedia.org]. It's a simple text file where any website that you want blocked is mapped to 127.0.0.1 which is the local host. You can download a Hosts file [google.com] containing most ad servers, then when you come across an ad server that's not blocked it's easy to add to the file.
Falcon
Re:Web advertising (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Web advertising (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Web advertising (Score:5, Insightful)
google hit the advertising "holy grail" with adwords -- although no one has said/realized it, adwords are what the marketing industry has been wishing for since freud's nephew invented it -- specific and contextual advertising.
before adwords, advertisers mostly had to throw a bunch of shit at the wall and hope that some stuck. billboards and subway ads are a good example. anybody and everybody sees that ad, so if you have a niche or specific market, you have to advertise to 10k people to get to your 100.
radio and newspapers are a bit better -- if you want to advertise your new cat food, you can call the publishers of "cat fancy", and hit closer to the bulls' eye.
adwords allow advertising to a demographic of one. if you sell gloves that are missing the middle finger on one hand (for people who've lost that finger), you could theoretically dial in your adwords to catch that person.
adwords and gmail make it even more powerful. now, instead of catching people who are actively searching the web, you can just filter their email.
i use gmail, and i have actually clicked on a few adwords because i had sent an email to someone asking if they had xyz for sale, and the adwords threw up a link to an online store that did.
adwords are NOT banner ads. they're specific, they're not obnoxiousm, and they work. this is the piece of the pie microsoft wants to in on, and they're trying to acquire yahoo (at least their traffic) to do it.
i may be going too far here, but if they don't get yahoo, they're going to lose out on the (consumer) desktop in a big way -- is there a part of their business that isn't slipping?
mr c
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Did it work?
a. Well, our sales last month were pretty good.
*vs*
b. We spent 1000 dollars and those ads led to 1300 in sales.
If b, well, why not spend 10000 then? This cycle continues! And that is how google is raking it in. Everything else google does is for fun and laughs (business-wise).
Re: (Score:1, Interesting)
Needs of people will be created by the people themselves and capitalists can revert to owning labor to produce stuff that is really wanted.(I'm not saying that that necessarily isn't Britney Spears, though)
Why click on an ad for someone who paid for it, when the community, with its free soft
Re: (Score:2)
You are right that the rise of the free press and the internet and so on has led to a proliferation of information, but a lot of that 'information' is just lightly disguised advertising, or corporate funded studies and such. There are indepent reviews and such out there which is good, but there is absolutely no reason for corporations to stop advertising as long as idiots^H people keep buying based on ads they see rather than searching for themselves and then goi
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Here's my anecdotal experience as a user of AdWords: several years ago, I started an online store to sell tabletop games. Started with just GW stuff (Warhammer and 40k), but planned on expanding into other areas before the divorce threw a monkey wrench into the works. In any event, all of my advertising was done through Yahoo and Google's ad systems.
The results? Between the two, the store turned a profit within three months. Even
Re: (Score:2)
mr c
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
I don't know one person that gets anything but annoyed from online advertisements...
You may not know anyone but many people do buy because of online ads. If they didn't then businesses wouldn't waste their money on ads.
FalconRe: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
I have clients who run ecommerce stores and their most successful marketing is done online (mostly google adwords).
What sort of words they use and how much they pay has a huge impact on their business - it works! I have no idea who clicks through (and buys the products), because its not me..
Re: (Score:1)
Ichan Will Force Yahoo's Hand (Score:5, Insightful)
Headlines after the merger (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft Embraces and Extends, Upon Completion Balmer Shouts YAHOO!!
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Icahn did absolute wonders for TWA when he bought them, and many other companies
/sarcasm
If Icahn gets control and Microsoft doesn't buy it all, expect Yahoo to be broken up into little pieces and sold off bit by bit if that's determined to be the most profitable thing for him. We may be seeing that happen now. Icahn gets a Board in there friendly to him, Yahoo only sells search to Microsoft, then starts selling off what's left to other companies.
I'd suspect if Microsoft buys all of it, I bet they absorb
Re: (Score:2)
Our friend Yahoo is dead, but Ballmer don't know it,
And Ballmer is dead, but Yahoo don't know it.
And both of them dead, and in the same bed,
But neither one knows that the other one's dead.
Apologies, I'm sure, to somebody.
What's the MS kill list for this year (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Hmmm, this familiar? (Score:1, Redundant)
Yahoo season!
Duck Season!
Yahoo Season!
Yahoo Season Fire!
*face foot of soot*
Re: (Score:2)
"Duck Season!"
"YAHOO Season!"
"Duck Season!"
"YAHOO Season!"
"Yahoo Season!"
"DUCK Season - FIRE!!"
(Daffy's beak gets blown around to the back of his head)
Re: (Score:2)
Freedom a la Microsoft (Score:5, Interesting)
Other times when their nice asking was refused, Microsoft just created an approximately equivalent service or product and swallowed the losses until the original company was destroyed. I think Palm was probably the best example of that, though it's quite a stretch to call Windows Mobile even vaguely similar. (Actually, in that case they did most of the damage by using advertising to drive Palm away from their original objectives.)
I love freedom and democracy, and therefore I conclude I must hate Microsoft. Freedom is about informed choices among real options, not limited to choosing today's flavor of Microsoft's poisonous cruft. They should cut Microsoft into four or five pieces and force them to compete against each other and against Linux and Apple. That would give us real choices and lead to much faster development of much better software. It would also prevent any part of Microsoft from getting so fat as to go around destroying other companies and other markets, Yahoo and online advertising merely being the latest targets.
Re:Freedom a la Microsoft (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1, Interesting)
And by Dow Jones and all their little averages,
Dont you forget it! Right, boys?"
With apologies to the creators of Li'l Abner
Mod me flamebait or troll if you like, but imo, corporations and central banking are more conducive to fascism then a free democracy. Corporations are a reaction to high taxation, particularly for inheritance taxes in many cases, as well as restrictive monetary control. So in some ways they can be a counterbalance to govern
Corporations are a reaction to high taxation (Score:2)
Actually corporations are a reaction to liability. The first businesses granted a Corporate Charter were the Honourable East India Company [wikipedia.org] in 1600 and the Dutch East India Company [wikipedia.org] in 1602. Both companies were in shipping which was a risky business. Ships had to deal with storms such as hurricanes and pirates. When a ship sunk or was attacked the ship owner was financially liable. The owner of the lost goods had to be paid back. The crewmen or their survivors had to be paid as well. This could bankrup
Re: (Score:2)
They have a large percent of the search "market"; they have been offering all sorts of exclusive and semi-exclusive deals to various mobile providers; and they've been buying up competition for a while.
It can only be good if they have at least one huge tough mean and rich competitor that hates their guts.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I think you just don't want to talk about Microsoft. Why are you so eager to change the subject?
I don't care about google, microsoft, apple, or whatever. I want to see competition. In my book, Google buying Yahoo is scarier than Microsoft buying Yahoo.
Do you care to cite any evidence of your concern?
i already did, but you don't read. in some countries, Google are trying out a nice little strategy of making exclusive alliance with phone companies.
the end result - unless i do something very convoluted, all my mobile traffic goes via google; i hear they are going to remove the convoluted option. even microsoft isn't that invasive.
I imagine what will
Re: (Score:2)
I actually don't approve of Google's purchase of Doubleclick, but I have yet to see any evidence of abuse there. Just on principle I would even say that no company should be encouraged to pur
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
you are obviously an accomplished debater and a polite person.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
As usual,
So (Score:2)
Optimal strategy for Microsoft now (Score:5, Interesting)
This makes more sense than buying the whole company, which is way overpriced and overstaffed for its revenue. All Microsoft really needs, after all, is the brand, so they can drive traffic to MSN.
The Empire Strikes Back (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Easy. The mirror shows the fairest in the land Google. When "kill rates" looks at the mirror, he gets his way. The mirror lies and shows the fairest in the land to be "yahoo" then one "kill rates" is able to purchase. Then when he is not looking again. The mirror goes back to showing the truth....
Match Made in Heaven! (Score:5, Funny)
Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I am not an anti-MS troll at all, but I do think this highlights MS weakness. Perhaps the entire company did revolve around Bill, and with him stepping out more and more, it seems to directly correlate to the loss of innovation and competitiveness at MS. They were not able to turn themselves on a dime to adapt to the Internet as I believe they needed to about 10 years ago. Google is consistently coming up with AMAZING stuff that MS isn't even close to matching (have you actu
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
I agree.
My pet theory is that they are actually out to destroy competing application platforms, in this case LAMP(php) + YUI.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Who's going to lend MS $20bn to buy a Web company?
Who's going to lend them $20bn to buy an advertising company in a recession?
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Google make a hell of a lot of money from ads, and this is what this buy-out is about in the end, competing for some of googles ad money. Financial institutions love money, so how exactly can they lose here?
Re: (Score:2)
Ad Crumenum Fallacy (Score:3, Insightful)
Just goes to show that just coz you have a shed load of money, doesn't mean you have the first clue how you got it.
Maybe the board of Yahoo actually know what they are doing, because Microsoft seem to want this so bad, it hurts.
Re: (Score:2)
Just goes to show that just coz you have a shed load of money, doesn't mean you have the first clue how you got it.
Shouldn't that headline read: (Score:2)
Not so bad (Score:4, Insightful)
Having said that, it's probably still prudent to back up your Flickr and del.icio.us accounts, especially if you don't use Windows.
Re: (Score:2)
Why anyone would trust any third party company/site with important data that they don't have another copy of themselves I don't know...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Ballmer is crazy (Score:2, Interesting)
The proposed deal didn't make sense before, and it makes even less sense now. If Microsoft takes just search from yahoo, then the rest of Yahoo will be irrelevant within a year. Yahoo would be stupid to give up search.
The only way this can end well is if Microsoft just backs away and pretends that none of this ever happened.
There is just no getting around the fact that Yahoo is itself struggling to survive against google, and Microsoft has already pretty much admitted they can't compete with Google in
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The point is that if it doesn't hurt MS, Ballmer comes off looking good. He
Creepy (Score:2)
Yahoo! must be thinking: "Look, we had some laughs, talked about getting serious but hey, it just ain't working out.
And Microsoft is like: "I just won't be ignored!"
Reason: The core of Microsoft's interest (Score:3, Interesting)
This deal IS and always WAS about search. But not so much today's search. Tomorrow's search. Microsoft is playing for a market that exist... yet.
Online service are going to get a new focus, which is based on mobile computing and GPS. Your GPS coordinates will become a very valuable piece of data in numerous new online services, and will add flavor to existing services.
This will open the door to what I call the "local Internet" or the "location-based Internet". If the Internet to date has brought people access to the nation or the world, the local Internet will bring people greater information/access in their own communities.
Google is so far ahead of everyone else in this field, it is laughable. They've been playing the game well in advance of everyone else. Microsoft has almost nothing. Yahoo appears to be the second place player (and I'd argue a distant second).
Microsoft needs to play catch-up in the field that they, once again, recognized too late. Acquisition.
So, the deal may have the blanket of "search", but the desire behind it is more specific than that. They are looking to get their foot in the door of the NEXT generation of Internet services, specifically, Local Internet search.
Yahoo and AOL (Score:2)
No fan of yahoo, but... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)