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Yahoo and Microsoft Sitting in a Tree, K-i-s-s-i-n-g

By David Weir | Jul 29, 2009

Well over a year of flirtation, rejection, avoidance, reconnecting and late-night romantic trysts has finally yielded a Relationship today between Microsoft and Yahoo. The wording in the joint statement released as part of an SEC filing was delightful:

“This agreement comes with boatloads of value for Yahoo!, our users, and the industry,” was the shout-out from Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz, who BTW really does seem to be turning the Sunnyvale company around, quarter by quarter.

Good old Steve Ballmer, Bartz’s counterpart at Microsoft, aimed his verbiage at the Great Google Monster. This deal, he proclaimed, will “create more innovation in search, better value for advertisers and real consumer choice in a market currently dominated by a single company.”

The deal boils down to Microsoft powering Yahoo search and Yahoo providng the global ad sales force for the joint project, the term of which is ten years. Yahoo values the deal at about $500 million a year plus $200 million in annual cost-savings; it also anticipates an annual operating cash-flow benefit of about $275 million.

The SEC filing contains pointed wording aimed to smooth any regulatory concerns that the Obama administration might have: “The agreement does not cover each company’s web properties and products, email, instant messaging, display advertising, or any other aspect of the companies’ businesses. In those areas, the companies will continue to compete vigorously.”

Got it. They’ll only be having sex in the bedroom, at night, with the lights off. No funny stuff during work hours.

Meanwhile, the consummation of this Relationship comes roughly a year later than Microsoft originally envisioned, and that’s been a year when Google consolidated its huge lead in search and search advertising over these two distant competitors. Assuming the outlines of the deal obtain regulatory approval, it will probably be another year before the implementation can get under way; and another two years after that before the kinds of revenue Yahoo predicts can be realized.

Still, it is a notable moment in the compete/collaborate syndrome between the three Internet giants, particularly given the favorable response Microsoft has gotten to its new search engine, Bing. Congratulations to the happy couple!

Please check out these takes by other Bnet bloggers on the Yahoo-Microsoft partnership:

Microsoft and Yahoo: Too Little Too Late

Microsoft Wins, Yahoo Holds, Google Still Reigns in Search Game

Yahoo on Sunset Boulevard


In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Microsoft swallows Yahoo search on the installment plan

    Adotas - 117 days 17 hours 34 minutes ago

    ADOTAS — Can Microsofts cash and Yahoos advertising market talent finally take on Google? We’ll see. The two giants announced an agreement today, with no upfront money, with Microsoft now powering Yahoo search while Yahoo will become the exclusive worldwide relationship sales force for both companies premium search...

  • Mirosoft and Yahoo Finally Announce Deal

    WebProNews - 117 days 21 hours 39 minutes ago

    Well, they've finally gone and done it. Microsoft and Yahoo have partnered to "change the search landscape." The two companies today announced a long-awaited deal, in which Microsoft will power Yahoo search while Yahoo will become the exclusive  search advertising provider for Microsoft's search engine, Bing.You know this history by now. Here's...

  • Traders reward Microsoft, punish Yahoo for deal

    VentureBeat - 117 days 17 hours 38 minutes ago

    “This agreement comes with boatloads of value for Yahoo!, our users, and the industry,” Carol Bartz said in her prepared statement about Yahoo’s agreement to turn over the bulk of its search and advertising business to Microsoft. Day traders don’t seem to agree. YHOO shares have dropped more than 10 percent from yesterday’s closing...

  • Viacom Reaches Separate Deals With EchoStar, Sling.com

    PaidContent.org - 305 days 21 hours 58 minutes ago

    Viacom (NYSE: VIA) has a new carriage deal with the DISH Network, avoiding any of those pesky late-night staredowns like the one it had with Time Warner (NYSE: TWX) Cable on New Year's Eve. More interesting, perhaps, is the deal finally signed with sibling EchoStar (NSDQ: SATS) to distribute content from MTV Networks, BET and Paramount Pictures...

  • Denny's adds value items to late-night menu

    Nation's Restaurant News - 227 days 19 hours 2 minutes ago

    SPARTANBURG, S.C. (April  8, 2009) Denny's is trying to give young diners more incentive to burn the midnight oil at its restaurants by adding more value options to its late-night menu. The 1,500-unit family-dining chain last spring launched its Allnighter menu featuring shareable dishes and rock-star-inspired creations available exclusively...

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  •  
    1

    @smokejumper

    07/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Yahoo and Microsoft Sitting in a Tree, K-i-s-s-i-n-g

    Sounds like the courtship pattern of what preceded my failed
    first marriage - perhaps both parties (Y! in particular) should
    have followed it's heart, not it's head.

  •  
    2

    hotweir

    07/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Yahoo and Microsoft Sitting in a Tree, K-i-s-s-i-n-g

    Haha! I've been watching this couple circle each other for so long, my first reaction as news broke earlier this morning was a sigh of relief!

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