IndustryYahoo’s Q1 2012 Search Revenue Up 3%

Yahoo's Q1 2012 Search Revenue Up 3%

Yahoo's 2012 Q1 search revenue was $470 million, up 3 percent compared to the same quarter for the previous year. The company's search sales have evidently steadied after falling 27 percent year-over-year in 2011 Q4 due to the Microsoft partnership.

Yahoo LogoYahoo’s 2012 Q1 search revenue was $470 million, up 3 percent compared to the same quarter for the previous year. The company’s search sales have evidently steadied after falling 27 percent year-over-year in 2011 Q4 due to the immediate impact of a new strategic partnership with with Microsoft.

“I am personally working with Microsoft to make sure the alliance [is successful] going forward,” CEO Scott Thompson explained. This seems to contradict rumors that Yahoo is planning to torch its search deal with Microsoft

Yahoo’s 2012 Q1 display revenue was down 2 percent year-over-year, totaling $523 million. It marks the second straight quarter where display sales were slightly down, as the Internet company posted 3 percent dip for 2011 Q4.

During a call with investors, Thompson echoed his comments from just after he took the job three months ago, stating that strengthening relationships with brands and agencies was a key focus. The Sunnyvale, CA-based company projects display sales to show growth year-over-year during 2012 Q2, with execs citing good signs from premium ad performance and planned improvements for ad analytics.

“We are not going to be satisfied until we are taking share,” Thompson said. The CEO said he’ll continue to reach out to brands to learn what they need “to bring the best return on their advertising spend. And frankly we got a long ways to go.”

Meanwhile, the CEO said his firm was refocusing research and development talent on existing products instead of creating new platforms, including ones for publishers and theoretical sciences that “were outside our core.”

“Yahoo was doing too much for too long, and was only doing a few things well,” he said.

Citi’s Internet analyst Mark Mahaney has his thoughts on what Yahoo should do. He said Yahoo should be run as a “mature media business” and not a Silicon Valley rising star. “It should take its cash and return it to shareholders, but they won’t do that,” Mahaney said earlier in the day during the Ad Age Digital Conference in New York.

Yahoo, he said, is great brand, “but it was fundamentally mismanaged for years. It’s very hard to pull out of that kind of dive,” he said.

Yahoo’s overall Q1 revenue was up 1 percent year over year. Net earnings rose 28 percent year over year, indicating Thompson’s recent restructuring plan may already be working. 

Earlier this month, Yahoo cut 2,000 jobs and announced its reorganization plan. Yahoo’s search team is now housed under a unit called “Connections” within Yahoo’s newly created Consumer group, headed by Senior VP Shashi Seth.

This article was originally published on ClickZ.

Resources

The 2023 B2B Superpowers Index

whitepaper | Analytics The 2023 B2B Superpowers Index

8m
Data Analytics in Marketing

whitepaper | Analytics Data Analytics in Marketing

10m
The Third-Party Data Deprecation Playbook

whitepaper | Digital Marketing The Third-Party Data Deprecation Playbook

1y
Utilizing Email To Stop Fraud-eCommerce Client Fraud Case Study

whitepaper | Digital Marketing Utilizing Email To Stop Fraud-eCommerce Client Fraud Case Study

1y