Yahoo on 16 July named longtime Google engineer and executive Marissa Mayer to be its eighth chief executive.
Mayer replaces interim chief executive Ross Levinsohn, who had subbed eight weeks for Scott Thompson, who served as chief executive for four months-January to May 2012-before he was let go for embellishing his resume and then covering up the untruth.
The announcement came immediately after the close of the New York markets and one day before the troubled company is to announce its quarterly results.
Levinsohn, who had been serving as Yahoo’s executive vice president of American operations prior to being elevated into the interim chief executive post, had been considered by a number of analysts and industry watchers as having the inside track on the permanent job. In fact, the Los Angeles Times and several other media outlets had reported that Yahoo was expected to give him the job on 12 or 13 July.
Mayer is a 1997 Stanford University graduate and a native of Wausau, Wisconsin, who worked for SRI International in Menlo Park, California, and UBS Research in Zurich briefly prior to joining Google.
Most recently, Mayer was responsible for Local, Maps, and Location Services for Google, the company’s suite of local and geographical products, including Google Maps, Google Earth, Zagat, Street View, and local search, for desktop and mobile.
Mayer has led group efforts for many of Google’s most strategic products, including the development of its flagship search product and iconic home page for over 10 years.
Mayer, who resides in Palo Alto, California and once hosted President Barack Obama at her home, has managed some of Google’s most successful innovations, launching more than 100 features and products including image, book and product search, toolbar, iGoogle, Google News and Gmail-creating much of the “look and feel” of the Google user experience.
Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo has some new products up its sleeve that Mayer will supervise, including the new Axis browser. The Axis App runs on iOS devices (no Android at this time) and as a desktop plug-in for HTML5-enabled browsers. It runs as a plug-in to Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer, Chrome, Safari, Opera and others.
“Marissa is a well-known, visionary leader in user experience and product design and one of Silicon Valley’s most exciting strategists in technology development,” Yahoo co-founder and former Stanford classmate David Filo said.
Ben Schachter, an IT business analyst with MacQuarie Securities in New York, said in a television news interview on 16 July that the first thing Mayer needs to do is “establish herself as a leader for the long haul by recognising that Yahoo has to get smaller, more focused, and realise that it’s a media company.
“We expect Yahoo to do a lot more in the future with search, entertainment and video, for example. They already have the loyal user base; what Mayer has to do is bring out what Yahoo does best and stay focused on that.”
Enterprise Strategy Group Vice President Brian Babineau told eWEEK that “her accolades and accomplishments speak for themselves. A person her caliber usually sees things that the rest of us do not, and I am guessing – in fact, I am expecting – that such is the case.”
Mayer is expected to stop the revolving door leading into the Yahoo chief executive’s office.
Thompson, who had a good track record as PayPal’s chief executive, had replaced the deposed Bartz, whom former board chairman Roy Bostock fired in a phone conversation in September 2011, after two years on the job.
Since 2007, the Sunnyvale, California-based company has had seven chief executives: former Warner Bros. Chairman and co-chief executive Terry Semel (2001-2007), co-founder Jerry Yang (2007-2009), Bartz (2009-2011), interim Tim Morse, Thompson, interim Levinsohn, and now Mayer. Semel resigned in 2007, with Yang replacing him.
Tim Koogle (1995-2001) was the original Yahoo chief executive.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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