How to Fix Yahoo: The Innovator’s Dilemma (Exclusive)

How to Fix Yahoo: The Innovator’s Dilemma (Exclusive)

Published: September 09, 2011 @ 9:27 am
Print this page
By Mike Jones

EXCLUSIVE

Yahoo -- a great media company, a pioneer in its day and one of the largest aggregators of traffic in the U.S. and abroad -- is a valuable company that is undervalued in the market and ripe with opportunity.  

The primary question now is whether it makes sense to keep it as a consolidated media company or if it is time to break up the assets and create numerous mid-sized businesses to operate independently.  But the challenge is -- how do you transform a legacy property with large scale valuable assets into a dynamic, innovative idea factory?

 

Also read: AOL Keen on Yahoo Merger -- Again (Report)

I can attest, this an incredibly hard problem to solve. It can be an expensive and stressful venture for those of us who have attempted to lead the transformation of a legacy brand.   In a world where startups can be created on shoestring budgets and new brands are launched every 10 minutes, we h

ave to question whether our industry can sustain reinvention. 

Are new online brands and technologies simply easier to make successful than reinventing old ones?

Our industry loves invention -- we reward it, worship it and all strive to be that next inventor. The challenge is when we confuse invention from reinvention. Invention is to create something new, reinvention is to make something old, new again.

Internet entrepreneurs believe that ideas and products need to have constant iteration, constant innovation. We build upon, and upon and upon -- never stopping. We stack our organizations with project managers, product managers, developers and designers -- constantly trying to improve, improve and improve our product lines. The flaw is we sometimes don't recognize when we’ve hit the point of diminishing returns.

Given that early stage innovation is cheap and fast and later stage innovation is expensive, slow and often unrewarded, it’s time for us to fundamentally change the way we think of legacy assets. We must accept that peaked properties need to be put on maintenance mode and put our energy into investing in new products.

During my time at both AOL and Myspace, we frequently used boating as a metaphor. My colleague, Dave Morgan, and I took a few weeks aside during our time at AOL and mapped out a completely new operational strategy from the current one. He liked to say, "Separate the fast moving boats from the slow moving boats." I think this is true.  

Also read: Who to Run Yahoo? Strong Candidates Abound -- But First a Vision, Please

(Note: some folks will think about the BCG Matrix as a similar structure, with the four growth share quadrants of Stars, Question Marks, Dogs and Cash Cows.)

Three examples of the Growth Share Market:

Tags: Media, Mike Jones, MySpace, Yahoo
Sign Up For First Take

Get Our Daily Email, and Receive Invitations to Our Screenings Series

Start your day with all of the news worth knowing

What's First Take?

Description

 

Mike Jones is an internet executive, investor and advisor located in Los Angeles. A long-time entrepreneur, Mike founded his first successful internet company in college and since then has founded, built and sold numerous online and mobile businesses. His experience and expertise in both large and small companies focuses on strategy, growth and operational efficiency resulting in many successful investor outcomes. Most recently Mike was the CEO of Myspace.

Subscribe to Mike Jones
Most Popular
Columns
Wrap Tweets