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June 17, 2008 3:49 PM PDT

Voting with their feet? File this one under 'stampede'

by Charles Cooper
  • 9 comments

If Jerry Yang has been saving up a "band of brothers" moment with his troops, this is it.

The departure of Flickr's co-founders, the husband and wife team of Caterina Fake and Stewart Butterfield, follows the earlier resignation of Jeff Weiner, who was executive vice president of Yahoo's network division.

yahoo headquarters

Last week, it was Usama Fayyad , chief data officer and EVP of research and strategic data solutions, as well as the announcement by Yahoo's high-profile developer Jeremy Zawodny that he's leaving the company as well.

Flickr's one of Yahoo's best properties. I suppose there's more than enough institutional memory within the group to withstand the resignation of its founders. But the timing comes at a really bad time for Yang and Yahoo. The company just finished up an unsatisfying four month on-again, off-again dalliance with Microsoft with Carl Icahn and the Wall Street crowd barking from the sidelines. It's too soon to predict whether a current deal with Google will work, but the pressure is on Yang to prove he knows better than the critics.

Even before the latest departures, AllThingsD co-impressario Kara Swisher asked the $64,000 question about Yang's tenure.

It's the obvious question, of course, to ask whether the co-founder of Yahoo has what it takes to manage the company through what will doubtlessly be a very difficult year.

It's no longer an academic question. Right now, Yang needs to demonstrate he's made of the stern stuff one associates with successful CEOs. Rightly or not, Yahoo is giving off signs of being in distress. It may be more image than reality. But in this business, image really does matter.

Jerry, is anybody home? With all due respect.

March 16, 2008 10:48 AM PDT

Yahoo showing signs of life, albeit too late

by Charles Cooper
  • 6 comments

Earlier last week, we broke news of the thaw in merger negotiations between Yahoo and Microsoft. If two sides ultimately decide to tie the knot, get ready for months--maybe years--of furious debate about the wisdom of this deal. But the latest rumblings concerning Flickr speaks volumes about the problems Microsoft may be about to inherit.

Jerry Yang

My partner-in-crime Dan Farber was clubbing with assorted Yahoos Saturday night at a celebration of Flickr's fourth anniversary. That's where he got word that a Flickr video beta will debut next month. (Here's more from TechCrunch. )

Fantastic idea. Makes all the sense in the world. But where have you gone, Joe Dimaggio, or in this case, Jerry Yang? Flickr fans around the world--yours truly, included--will welcome word of a Flickr face-lift. Great, but why has it taken forever?

After Yahoo bought Flickr three years ago (this month, actually), management was rightly enamored of its new crown jewel. Flickr was a terrific property. Unfortunately for Yahoo, it blew a big opportunity. When Google bought YouTube in October 2006, the concept of video sharing was about to go viral. I don't know if that qualifies as one of Clayton Christensen's "disruptive technologies," but it comes close. While Yahoo's own video site was going nowhere fast, Yahoo decided to leave Flickr as a pure photo site.

Big mistake. With the benefit of 20/20 hindsight, I'm sure Yang and the rest of Yahoo management wished they had a do-over. Flickr was always the more valuable franchise. But Yahoo's made no secret about its intentions to gussy it up with a video makeover. Now it's apparently about to happen. (If the Microsoft deal goes through, Flickr would be one heck of a brand. Let's remember that if YouTube has 34 percent of the market, then that leaves 66 percent up for grabs. The challenge is that time's a wasting and YouTube has a huge lead.) Too bad for Yahoo that their developers failed to pull this off sooner. Kakul Srivastava, director of product management at Flickr, explained to Dan that the company wanted to guarantee that any move into video would be received as "authentic" by the community.

Move carefully, I can understand. But move at a snail's pace? Come on.

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About Coop's Corner

Charles Cooper has covered technology and business for more than 25 years. A graduate of Queens College and Columbia University, Cooper received the Excellence in Journalism award from the Northern California branch of the Society for Professional Journalists for column writing.

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