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Yahoo's 'strategic alternative' surprise involves AOL, Google

By Scott M. Fulton, III, BetaNews

April 10, 2008, 12:34 PM

(continued from previous page)

The case against AOL + Yahoo

There's at least one technological sticking point in making an AOL + Yahoo deal work: Both firms have assembled their restructured business models carefully around their respective next-generation advertising platforms, in which both have already invested millions. AOL's Platform-A is now literally a corporate division, with its own newly appointed executives. Just yesterday, AOL unveiled its Web-based management system for advertisers, through Platform-A's advertising.com subsidiary and Web site.

Meanwhile, Yahoo put a public face on its own management tools for its own ad platform on Tuesday, with its announcement of AMP! (and there's that pesky exclamation mark again), which enables individuals and companies to buy ad inventory across multiple platforms. Certainly this appears designed to compete with DART, the industry-leading toolset built by DoubleClick and now part of Google's arsenal.

In a theoretically combined Yahoo + AOL, though it would probably be the Yahoo brand that survived, it's not clear whose advertising platform would necessarily come out the last one standing. And any incentive for Google to contribute to the deal would probably include the prospect of one less competitor for DART, which means there wouldn't be any merger of equals in that department.

Counter-bluster

The counter-punch in Microsoft's corner this morning was the Times theory that Microsoft could join up with News Corp. (presumably through Fox Interactive Media, the parent of MySpace) to sweeten Microsoft's cash offer. Such a deal would make News Corp. or FIM part-owner of a new Yahoo.

What speculators on that side of the battlefield may have failed to take into account is that such an arrangement would run contrary to Microsoft's principal goal of the merger: the removal of MSN's key impediment to competition with Google. Under that theoretical plan, Yahoo would continue to be a kind of NBC Universal-style spinoff, with joint investors seated on a board led by independent directors.

The obvious problem there is that Yahoo would still exist separately, even if it's being directed 51% by Microsoft. And how strong would such direction be if on the other end of the table were appointees of Rupert Murdoch? In such a universe, MSN would also presumably continue to exist as both a brand and as a company division, rather than be zipped into a Yahoo portal consumed by Microsoft. Thus MSN would still have Yahoo impeding its competition in the online advertising space with Google.

What's worse, Microsoft would be competing with itself. And history has shown (Works, Money, "Bob," et al) that Microsoft's single worst competitor has usually been Microsoft.

Besides, on the News Corp. side, let's not forget that FIM just last week launched its latest restructuring based around...can you guess?...its own advertising and developer platforms. In a joint arrangement with News Corp., those platforms would likely have to survive, since it's Murdoch's money that's tied up in them; and as we've already seen, Microsoft isn't interested in having to acquire someone else's technology.

Conceivably, a Frankenstein-like, re-concocted Yahoo/Fox/MSN/MySpace would be a recipe for a lethally explosive combination, with Steve Ballmer feuding with Rupert Murdoch and Ray Ozzie warring with Peter Levinsohn. However, there's reason to speculate Google might not be opposed to such an arrangement, which would be like an IRL race where the leader is out in front by half a lap, while second and third place are teammates drafting against one another for position. Typically, the leader leverages that battle to widen the distance between itself and the pack.

In fact, with everyone else besides Google now mixing it up, there's good reason to believe that no matter the outcome here...Google may somehow end up in front anyway.

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By TomA102210

posted Apr 11, 2008 - 1:06 PM

To Hellcat_M:

Appparently you have no idea on what is going on under the hood with AOL. There's a lot of information available on the subject. Maybe Yahoo could do better, but by the same token, they could do one heck of a lot worse.

Score: 0

By Hellcat_M

posted Apr 10, 2008 - 3:41 PM

We're talking AOL and Yahoo. I mean I can see Yahoo and Time Warner (but then their would go the deal between Yahoo and AT&T). AOL ruins almost everything it touches (except Winamp which is still the best media player). I don't know if this would be worth stopping MS from taking over.

Score: 0

By 9h0s7

posted Apr 10, 2008 - 2:37 PM

who's yahoo? (j/k)

Score: 0

By bourgeoisdude

edited Apr 10, 2008 - 2:04 PM

No offense, but unless there's something huge that Yahoo isn't telling us about, the higher-ups at Yahoo are being stupid. How quickley are they willing to destroy themselves to prevent Microsoft from taking them over? Could they even survive a merger with their current financial situation?

That firm, precisely one minute later, could merge with Yahoo, with Time Warner potentially making a cash investment to help it get off the ground.

Yeah, that'd have to be a pretty big investment, and it'd be a huge gamble for Time-Warner. Not a smart gamble if you ask me.

(on the second page): ...The obvious problem there is that Yahoo would still exist separately, even if it's being directed 51% by Microsoft.

That could be a winning argument for fighting any anti-trust litigation too.

Score: 0

By crashoverride

posted Apr 10, 2008 - 11:56 PM

Yep, Yahoo is dead for sure:

Option #1 :Commit corporate suicide by joining with AOL.
Option #2 :Accept the Microsoft proposal....which in the end will likely not be any better.

Looks like either way Yahoo is doomed to me.

Score: 0

By Umapathy

posted Apr 11, 2008 - 8:13 AM

It's would be a fruitful decision for Yahoo! to accept the proposal by Microsoft rather than making these type of moves.

Score: 0