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July 20, 2009 8:23 PM PDT

Yahoo launching front page open to others' content

by Stephen Shankland
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A significant redesign is finally coming to the Yahoo.com home page, one of the most well-traveled destinations on the Internet, and the company's search page will follow suit starting next month.

Yahoo plans to let people in the United States start selecting a new, more personalized version of the home page beginning Tuesday afternoon. The revamp lets people select basic applications to use not just Yahoo sites, but also others' such as eBay, Facebook, and Twitter, said Tapan Bhat, Yahoo's senior vice president for consumer experiences.

These applications are available on the left side of the page under a customizable section called My Favorites; hovering over them with the mouse pointer makes each application and its accompanying advertising pop up.

"We're pulling together everything about the user they care about, be it on Yahoo or off, to create a personally relevant experience," Bhat said. "In a world like this, Yahoo needs to make the user experience come first."

The effort is a centerpiece of Yahoo's effort to revitalize its core business: showing content and accompanying advertisements to a large, general audience on the Net. Yahoo's profitability for years has trailed that of its main rival, Google, which depends chiefly on search ads for revenue, and Yahoo faces increasing pressure from Microsoft's online business and new arrivals such as Facebook as well.

Yahoo's new home page permits applications from Yahoo or others. This shows use of Facebook.

Yahoo's new home page permits applications from Yahoo or others. This shows use of Facebook.

(Credit: Yahoo)

The company also hopes for more success with advertisers. "We're creating great opportunities for advertisers to target content and context," he said, demonstrating a movie application that showed a prominent ad along with movie showtimes locally tailored for a particular user.

The My Favorites feature will arrive on Yahoo's search page, too, making the search site and results shown on it into more of a portal to access content. Yahoo faces search pressure from dominant Google and now to a certain extent from Microsoft's Bing, too. Even if it consummates a possible search and advertising deal with Microsoft, being able to show its own display ads in applications adjacent to search results could help the company extract more money from its search operation.

Long-coming changes
Newer Web sites change rapidly, but Yahoo proceeds at a relatively glacial pace to change its site, visited by a whopping 340 million people monthly.

Yahoo announced the new front page plan in October 2007, recognizing that people wanted to get to other destinations on the Net besides Yahoo's. It began "bucket testing" it a year afterward, trying variations of the new page on randomly selected users, some of whom squawked at the changes and their inability to revert.

New Chief Executive Carol Bartz has been trying to light a fire under the company's developers, but even this revamp is only is the beginning beta testing on Tuesday. The change will arrive in the U.K., France, and India later this week, in Spain and Mexico next month, and in Asia next year, Yahoo said. Users had no choice about earlier tests, but now they'll be able to select it as default on their own by visiting http://yahoo.com/trynew or clicking on Yahoo promotions for the change.

Yahoo's revamped front page.

Yahoo's revamped front page.

(Credit: Yahoo)

"The home page was tested by thousands and thousands of people. We got tons of feedback--tens of thousands wrote about what they liked and didn't," Bhat said. "It was really key to helping us figure out what worked and didn't."

The new home page will become default for others when beta testing is done "in the coming months," Yahoo said. The revamped search pages will enter bucket testing in August, meaning that users can't choose to use or not use the new design.

More changes
Opening up Yahoo's content to other sites' operations--and letting other sites use Yahoo data can use such as Facebook-like status updates--is part of the Yahoo Open Strategy. That effort, under way for well over a year, is designed to increase users' activity on Yahoo, to draw more people to Yahoo, and to make the company a better partner for advertisers.

There are about 60 applications available now, and more are being added daily, Bhat said. Users can create their own, too.

Also coming in August will be the ability to select what type of news people can see, with a slider that moves on a spectrum between "fun" and "serious," he said.

In addition, Yahoo is revamping its mobile site. One big feature: when users customize Yahoo for use with regular computers, that customization will carry over to their mobile version.

Bhat wouldn't share details about whether the new home page fares better, either in terms of user engagement or revenue. However, because Yahoo plans to make its official home page announcement Tuesday while detailing second-quarter financial results, it's possible Bartz may be more forthcoming than Bhat.

Bhat did indicate, though, that things are moving in the right direction for the company.

"Our experience in our test indicates that people are excited about this home page. They feel this meets their needs and is fresh new look for Yahoo," Bhat said. "We are designing the page around users. What we do know when design page that users like, they tend to get more engaged."

Stephen Shankland writes about a wide range of technology and products, but has a particular focus on browsers and digital photography. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered Google, Yahoo, servers, supercomputing, Linux and open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/stshank.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (17 Comments)
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by Jonathan Machen July 20, 2009 10:04 PM PDT
Thank you, Stephen, for making reading about browsers and their attendant minutiae fun!
Reply to this comment
by HlLLARY CLITON July 20, 2009 10:06 PM PDT
I hope they fix the email...its been so slow last few months
Reply to this comment
by odubtaig July 21, 2009 6:06 AM PDT
They've been titting about with the mail code. One surreal result is that they've tried to AJAX up the Classic mail interface with the result that it has no new functionality but now you don't get any real feedback on loading progress, browser history is occasionally broken and they've reintroduced a bug that was fixed about two years ago in that it won't go to the absolute newest mails when you click 'check mail'.

Can't imagine why they're not kicking Google's arse.
by samwcook July 21, 2009 10:03 AM PDT
I used yahoo mail until a couple years ago, but gmail won me over it is very good! Competition is always nice though.
by kcopen July 20, 2009 11:26 PM PDT
now if they can get rid of the crappy teeth whitening, lose fat and other horrible front page ads along with the redesign, maybe i'll come back
Reply to this comment
by flickrz July 21, 2009 1:13 PM PDT
Very true. If they are making money only off of those ads; they are doomed.
by ofmyony July 21, 2009 3:04 AM PDT
I hope it works better than it looks. That screen shot is messy. The expanded view needs to take over the whole page not just a pop-up. Not good so far
Reply to this comment
by ofmyony July 21, 2009 3:12 AM PDT
Maybe they can block out the background or dim it somehow I think that would help.
by July 21, 2009 6:00 AM PDT
When is this link (http://yahoo.com/try new) supposed to be working, because it surely isn't yet ...
Reply to this comment
by Shankland July 21, 2009 6:22 AM PDT
Check back in the afternoon of July 21--probably after 1 p.m. PDT some time, but Yahoo wasn't specific--for the new home page option. The company will start in the United States and gradually spread the new home page to other regions this week, next month, and next year.
by n3td3v July 21, 2009 9:39 AM PDT
It's a typo by the journalist, the correct address is http://yahoo.com/trynew

The journalist added a space inbetween try and new by mistake.
by July 21, 2009 8:24 AM PDT
I like the sidebar preview idea, but why didn't they reuse my settings from their other systems?!? Why do I always have to replace the default weather city, the stocks I am watching etc I am doing the same thing with multiple Yahoo products (One Search, My.yahoo.com, widgets...) I spent a lot more time to customize my.yahoo.com and I don't really want to redo all that.
Reply to this comment
by Rod Roddy July 21, 2009 9:43 AM PDT
Uhhh??....I believe AOL has been doing something similar to this for months.....??????
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by jessiethe3rd July 21, 2009 2:09 PM PDT
Yahoo = turning into AOL... portal with their search business probably being sold off.
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by ca5ter July 21, 2009 2:22 PM PDT
After the home page Yahoo is a mess of different designs. It doesn't even feel like one site, but a bunch of sites tacked together. For all the employees Yahoo has, you would think they could at least have a consistent presentation layer.
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by TV James July 21, 2009 2:30 PM PDT
They should fix the spam problem with their email. I don't give out the address and get 800 spam in my spam folder each month and another 10-20 that they miss.
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by bpob1977 October 29, 2009 2:42 PM PDT
I still think the new home page is terrible. The old page, while not the greatest, at least was quick to load and fairly straight-forward. In particular, I feel like I'm playing whack-a-mole with links on the new page as they seem to consistently move around and hide themselves.
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