Wednesday 18 February 2015

Yahoo prowls for mobile developers

Yahoo prowls for mobile developers
Yahoo, the aging Internet giant, still has a lot of catching up to do.
While the company's mobile ad revenues rose to $254 million last quarter, accounting for 20% of its total revenues, Yahoo still trails behind Facebook and Twitter, which generate well over half their revenues from mobile ad sales, too.
To help turn the tide, Yahoo on Thursday is throwing its first-ever mobile developers conference. For Mayer and other Yahoo executives, it's a day-long, in-person campaign to convince developers to use Yahoo's mobile development tools. If Yahoo Gemini and Brightroll let app-makers respectively create display and video ads, the analytics firm Flurry promises better ad targeting and insights into user engagement.
In some ways, Mayer's turnaround strategy is working. Mobile ad revenues climbed significantly for the first time last year, and the total number of mobile visitors to Yahoo properties rose to 575 million the previous quarter.
But an ad network is only good if there is compelling content and services to match — Mayer has known that since becoming Yahoo CEO nearly three years ago. Which is likely why she spearheaded a long string of pricey acquisitions, like $1.1 billion purchase of Tumblr, and splashy hires like broadcast journalist Katie Couric.
Still, this is where Yahoo lags. Its quest to find the “next big thing" has yielded some solid software — like a slick weather app — but nothing that keeps users entertained a la Facebook's time-sucking mobile software.
Meanwhile, competition from Google and Facebook is only getting fiercer. Last quarter, revenues for Yahoo's display advertising — its core business — dipped nearly 5%. Yahoo is technically selling more ads, but the prices of those ads are dropping, in part due to advertisers who are banking less these days on Yahoo eyeballs.
That presents a sort of "chicken and egg" scenario for Yahoo. User engagement won't significantly increase without more innovative products, and developers remain cautious about investing in the tech giant's slow-growing user base. But perhaps Yahoo's conference on Thursday will convince some app-makers to take the plunge.
Posted by : Gizmeon

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