Layoffs at Yahoo likely to come next Tuesday

By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published January 22, 2008, 12:25 PM

A rumor brought to light this morning by notorious financial insider and blogger Henry Blodget may this time be true, as Yahoo's response appears to warn of bad news ahead in its next restructuring move.

A Yahoo spokesperson's statement to BetaNews this morning appears to indicate that the company may be preparing to announce some tough news during its upcoming quarterly analysts' call next Tuesday. Specifically, the spokesperson declined to deny a rumor posted to Henry Blodget's Silicon Alley Insider blog yesterday evening, saying the company was preparing to dismiss as many as 2,500 employees -- about 17% of its present workforce.

"Yahoo has embarked on a multi-year transformation that includes making tough decisions about the business to help the company grow," stated Senior Director for Corporate Communications Diana Wong, in an e-mail this morning to BetaNews.

"Yahoo has focused its efforts to support its strategy to become the indispensable starting point for consumers, advertisers, publishers and developer," Wong continued. "Yahoo plans to invest in some areas, reduce emphasis in others, and eliminate some areas of the business that don't support the Company's priorities. Yahoo continues to attract and hire talent against the company's key initiatives to create long-term stockholder value."

The reduced emphasis part of Wong's comment may not be a mystery: Since Jerry Yang resumed the CEO post last June and Susan Decker moved up to the president's position, it has been very clear that Yahoo is no longer interested in being a big multimedia content producer. The scaling back would obviously take place with regard to former CEO Terry Semel's pet projects: the Hollywood-style production projects he initiated which harked back to his time as Warner Bros.' co-CEO.

If the news does come next Tuesday, financial analysts are likely to welcome it. In fact, some indicated this morning that a headcount reduction of anything fewer than 2,100 would be viewed as a negative.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

perhaps, yahoo needs to tighten that big belt buckle and literally implement a couple of rough decisions:

1) cut executive pay by 50% which can then subsidize the workers payroll and

2) ask the workers if they would rather have a temporary cut in pay.

Score: 0

|

EC's Kroes to US senators: Mind your own business on Oracle + Sun

If the AP is accurate, the EU's antitrust chief just told the United States Senate that any merger that takes place in the world is more her affair than theirs.

What does AT&T's 'Mark the Spot' app say about service quality?

That's a question for Betanews readers to answer in comments to this post.

Windows fix for TLS security bug still forthcoming, won't be Tuesday

Anyone looking for a fix for last month's discovery of a potentially serious security hole in TLS and SSL may have to wait until everyone is ready to act together.

Google rolls out real-time search, Near Me Now, extended personalization

Over time, searches from PCs and mobile phones will grow even "more personalized." But what about user privacy and search results that give you "the truth"?

Betanews Podcast: Rupert Murdoch and the buying stuff online problem

We'll have a more difficult time paying for online news if the underlying protocol for online payment has a big gaping hole in it.

Not the first, not the last, technology predictions for 2010

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: The real truth is probably that what went around in 2009, will come around to haunt us next year.

Google Goggles: Hands on with the Shazam of the Real World

Google today unveiled Goggles, its visual search lab for Android devices that identifies objects by sight.

Microsoft: Windows 7 Family Pack wasn't 'pulled,' it just sold out

If you hurry, you may still be able to find the last Family Pack upgrade editions hanging around retail store shelves, but probably not so much online.

Clever iPhone game returns after being bumped over a name dispute

The game's simple concept and multitude of platforms and puzzles manage to pull off a retro, 8-bit style that's reminiscent of an old Atari game given a modern makeover.

Intel's marriage of CPU and GPU not ready for prime time

Although there will be an Intel component this month that can compute and plot in parallel, Betanews was told today, it won't be based on Project "Larrabee."

An alternative to Research in Motion's enterprise e-mail? There's an app for that

Good Technology today released an iPhone app compatible with its enterprise e-mail solution.