March 17, 2009 5:00 AM PDT

Yahoo to streamline redesigned home page

by Stephen Shankland
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Yahoo's Burke Culligan

Yahoo's Burke Culligan

(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET)

This story has been corrected. See below for details.

SUNNYVALE, Calif.--After getting an earful from disgruntled testers of its revamped home page, Yahoo is working on a new incarnation that will dramatically speed up access to e-mail.

The new home page, code-named Metro and due to launch later this year, will let users customize what they see and install a range of applications. But upon beginning "bucket testing" last September, in which different subsets of Yahoo users are involuntarily presented with variations of the new home page, Yahoo found out it was making it too difficult for people to continue with their accustomed practice of dropping by the page to scan for changes, said Burke Culligan, senior director product management for Yahoo front doors, in an interview at Yahoo headquarters here.

In particular, people were incensed that it took too many mouse clicks to glance at their e-mail inbox. But changes are coming to fix that, Culligan said.

"We have moderately addressed it in this round and we're going to radically address it in upcoming testing," Culligan said. "We've rethought the flow and design based on feedback we've gotten from users. I think users will...feel much better about it."

The change is part of a bigger discovery, that many Yahoo front page users want to keep abreast of events with updates a few times a day. "The biggest thing we've learned is that these are quick-hit check-ins--tell me what I want to know and let me see it quickly," Culligan said. "We developed a philosophy we call quick in, quick out."

Yahoo faces an enormous challenge with its Yahoo.com site, which despite the company's strategic troubles still is used by hundreds of millions of people monthly. Changing too fast or too deeply risks alienating users, but changing too slowly risks losing those members to challengers such as Facebook or iGoogle.

My Yahoo for power users
Another complication: Yahoo already has a customizable home page, My Yahoo. The company has a plan for keeping the two properties relevant, though: as Yahoo.com becomes more flexible, the Internet company will reposition My Yahoo for sophisticated users who demand even more customization such as themes and movable modules, Culligan said.

"We'll move the mass market to the Yahoo front page," he said. My Yahoo will be "the powerful high-end product for the users who really want to go to the nth degree."

For the main home page, Yahoo has opted to proceed cautiously to avoid shedding loyal users.

Yahoo redesign, home page

Yahoo is testing a new home page. The new site is more personalized and customizable. This version is a 'baseline' for user testing; Yahoo will add more features later. (Click to enlarge.)

(Credit: Yahoo)

"You want to bring them along with you. You have to find the right things that are familiar but innovative. We walk that line," Culligan said. "We want to make sure we don't miss on something major that's going to cause retention issues."

So far, Yahoo hasn't seen overall problems retaining that loyalty among those in testing, he said. And the company has seen improvements in both page views and time spent on the site.

"Overall the story is positive and heading in the right direction. With our refinements we hope to push it further," he said.

Easier reconfiguration
That doesn't mean the company isn't learning from its missteps, though. Another change: Yahoo has made configuring the applications easier. A cautious start required people to fill out forms for the customizable list of services on the left edge of Metro. Now, though, Yahoo has moved to more of a design in which changes can be made on the fly.

Culligan is particularly proud of a new horoscope application that lets people add a different sign of the Zodiac to their pages. The only drawback of the faster approach: settings are stored locally on the computer, so logging in elsewhere won't show the same horoscope. A similar change was made with the weather report module.

"When we originally launched, we were thinking users would want to sign in and store locations as part of a Yahoo profile. But a lot of people wanted to just add cities without signing in," he said.

One internal advantage for Yahoo is that Metro's customizable interface will be simpler to manage internationally. Today, "We have 30-plus front pages. This puts us all on the same platform but allows for local customization," Culligan said.

Correction 9:53 a.m. PST to correct the spelling of Burke Culligan's name.

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.
by darfjono March 17, 2009 5:06 AM PDT
People use Yahoo?
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by flickrz March 17, 2009 9:32 AM PDT
Yeah. According to ComScore 145 million in US. Sorry to see that you live in a cave with access to only a handful of website.
by FranksPlace2 March 17, 2009 6:04 AM PDT
Yahoo sucks.

First it hijacked my Bellsouth email account. I was not able to access my account on line. Then it would not let me switch back to Bellsouth. Then I found I could not be logged in to both BS email and My Yahoo. Help people had no idea about BS email and My Yahoo conflicts. So I abandoned My Yahoo and moved my stuff to extra pages on iGoogle.
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by lynjs March 17, 2009 10:11 PM PDT
Same thing happened to me. It came up like it was just a regular upgrade. I didn't want my bellsouth account conflicting with my yahoo account, so i moved to Google which wasn't much better for my asssessment. I eventually sent all my stuff to Hotmail, something I should have done in the first place.

Note to Yahoo Powers That Be: IF IT ISN'T BROKE, DON'T FIX IT.
by mikehill33 March 17, 2009 6:14 AM PDT
Yahoo is still demo'ing this new design for what, the third year in a row? Pull the trigger, test, and keep iterating.

Yahoo design is such a failure.
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by Shankland March 17, 2009 7:34 AM PDT
This is actually a *new* new redesign. They began testing this overhaul in September 2008. The next phase, after more bucket testing, will be a voluntary opt-in period for people in the U.S., U.K, India, and France.
by knowles2 March 17, 2009 10:56 AM PDT
That just the internet philosophy that has taken over, design, redesign and redesign and then redesign the redesign, not letting people adjust to new design and most of all do not let them have a choice about choosing the new design or old design,
by givolere March 17, 2009 7:45 AM PDT
Too little, too late. I can't imagine why Burke Calligan looks so smug in the article's photo. Yahoo's Beta Homepage SUCKED from the get-go, and user input was solidly ignored month after month. I finally concluded they had outsourced the design and programming to the Glorious Nation Of Kazcistan, and I closed my account (which I had been using for 8 years). I'd NEVER go back to Yahoo.
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by GardenLobster March 17, 2009 9:10 AM PDT
Every time I clean out my cookies, I keep the Yahoo one so I don't have to go searching for the Yahoo! Answers question where someone posts the link to get to the old home page. I keep that page as my home page. I really hate the new one. They did what Facebook recently did - put everything on the opposite side of where it was and squished the middle column so I feel like I need to yell at 3PO to shut down all the trash compactors on the detention level.
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by renGek March 17, 2009 12:57 PM PDT
everytime they "fix" something with yahoo mail, it breaks more....
but I still prefer its web 2.0 functionality to gmail....slightly.

This is what happens when an innovative company gets the royal wall street style of management treatment. It loses its edge and tries to make predictable quarterly results as a priority until it has nothing left and gets abandoned.
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by Dango517 March 17, 2009 8:55 PM PDT
What we expect from Yahoo is less and less for the same price. Our Yahoo service is linked through, a part of our AT&T DSL account. In recent months we have lost two very important services ... Luanchcast Plus Music Service and Flickr Premium Photo Accounts, both Yahoo services. Each bought separately at about $30.00 (US) a year, $60.00 total. Our AT&T DSL billing remains the same. No substitutes have been offered nor provided. This has not gone unnoticed. In response we have in effect shut down our GeoCities application and one Yahoo 360 page. An alternative E-mail program is within our sights. We would suggest both Yahoo and AT&T DSL both consider the effects their strategies are having on customer loyalty. I assure you we will be depending on Yahoo and AT&T less and less till possibly not at all. (My DSL service just crashed again.)
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by slpman March 20, 2009 11:08 AM PDT
west west muth f krs
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by kgb088 May 27, 2009 6:16 AM PDT
WOW "YAHOO IS THE BEST AND MAYN'T GONNA LEAVE MY HOME PAGE YAHOO FOR NO REASON...!
YAHOO KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK.

TRULY YOURS YAHOO!!!
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by MaddieR16 July 27, 2009 3:46 PM PDT
I think some search engines are overwhelming with the amount of content provided. I like to use www.dogreatgood.com - it provides clean relevant results and donates to charities such as the Humane Society and Big Brothers Big Sisters. If I want to go to Facebook or Ebay, I can go directly to those sites.
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