Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsYahoo Inc

Yahoo seeking partners for ads

The search firm reaches out to social network Bebo and other sites to boost revenue.

INTERNET

September 13, 2007|Jessica Guynn, Times Staff Writer

Openness is the yin to Jerry Yang's Yahoo.

For its first decade, Yahoo Inc. grew by attracting more and more people to its stable of websites. Now, with its co-founder and new chief executive at the helm, it's reaching out to find advertising opportunities elsewhere on the Web.


Advertisement

Under Yang, Yahoo is crafting a series of partnerships and deals designed to reinvigorate the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company, which has been beset in recent years by sluggish financial growth and strategic fumbles.

The latest deal is an exclusive agreement to sell advertising on Bebo in Britain and Ireland, where the social networking site leads the market with 11.6 million members.

The deal is part of Yahoo's aggressive strategy -- one that Google Inc. has already used to great effect -- to seek more revenue outside of its own corporate constellation in a bid to become a dominant online advertising network.

"These are very sound strategic moves," Standard & Poor's analyst Scott Kessler said. "Whether or not it's too little, too late is unclear."

Yahoo has taken significant steps this year to boost its ability to deliver ads to other sites. It bought an online ad exchange, Right Media Inc., for $680 million and said it planned to buy direct marketing network BlueLithium for $300 million. Yahoo also has forged partnerships with hundreds of U.S. newspapers, EBay Inc. and cable television operator Comcast Corp. to broker ads for their websites.

These maneuvers are intended to counter growing competition. Microsoft Corp. recently paid $6 billion for online ad service AQuantive Inc. Google is vying to buy another one, DoubleClick Inc., for $3.1 billion, in a deal that's being closely scrutinized by federal regulators.

Google has a commanding lead, with a vast network of partner websites that display the ads it brokers in exchange for a cut of the revenue. The only way for Yahoo to compete is to build better advertising systems and networks to draw more advertisers, analysts say.

Yahoo, which has struggled to attract users to its social networking site, Yahoo 360, has weathered heavy criticism for missing out on advertising partnerships with social networking leaders MySpace and Facebook.

Google sells ads for News Corp.'s MySpace, and Microsoft nabbed Facebook as a partner.

But the right to sell ads on a fast-growing social network can be expensive. Google outbid its competitors for the MySpace deal, guaranteeing News Corp. at least $900 million in cash through 2010 regardless of how lucrative the ads turn out to be.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|