News: Allstate Illinois Data Center Achieves LEED Gold Certification
Blogs: M&M’s --- Part I - This stands for Marketing and Money
Blogs: Sometimes not making money is ok....
(WEB HOST INDUSTRY REVIEW) -- After putting it on the market for several months, web search provider Yahoo! (www.yahoo.com) has put a price sticker as high as $500 million on its business unit that hosts websites for small companies, two unnamed sources told Reuters.
Seeking $350 million to $500 million for Yahoo Small Business (smallbusiness.yahoo.com), Yahoo received interest from corporate buyers and private equity firms, however, it is unclear if any party has made an offer, one of the sources said according to the Reuters report. A second source said that these potential buyers have been reluctant to bid because the valuation is too high.
The sale of its web hosting assets is likely part of Yahoo's effort to free itself of assets no longer core to its brand. Reuters reported that it put Yahoo Small Business up for sale about six months ago, along with online job classified site HotJobs, and Zimbra, an open source email and calendar groupware application. Yahoo sold its stake in China's top e-commerce company Alibaba.com last week for $150 million.
These sales could be thought as a part of Yahoo's recovery strategy following a $47 billion acquisition negotiation failure with Microsoft last year, which saw its market value fall by more than $20 billion. Added to Yahoo!'s troubles were a failed partnership with AOL (www.aol.com) and an advertising revenue-sharing deal with Google (www.google.com), which dissolved in late 2008, which factored into co-founder Jerry Yang's decision to resign as CEO in favor of experienced technology executive Carol Bartz.
In a Data Center Knowledge post, Rich Miller wrote that insiders or investment bankers may be hoping Yahoo will rethink its valuation, "[b]ut the changes in the wind at Yahoo, along with Bartz no-nonsense reputation, suggest that Yahoo might be a motivated seller."
Elsewhere, the Yahoo has been trying to wrest search engine market share from Google. Late last month, in order to snare a regional online advertising market that may increase as much as 40 percent this year, Yahoo signed a definitive agreement to acquire Arabic-language Internet portal Maktoob.com (www.maktoob.com) to extend its search capabilities to the Arabic world.
In July, Yahoo and Microsoft (www.microsoft.com) entered into a web search partnership agreement in which Microsoft will power Yahoo search and Yahoo will handle worldwide sales for both companies' premium search advertisers.
![]() |
PREVIOUS: Rackspace Hires Andy Schroepfer as VP of Strategy | | | NEXT: Microsoft Data Center Chief Leaves for Cisco | ![]() |
Read Back Issues of WHIR Magazine
October 2009 - Web Hosting's All Star Team
This has been, for us, one of the most interesting, exciting and challenging build-ups to an issue of the magazine yet, Web Hosting's All Star Team. The balloting process was our first experiment with a kind of user participation we're planning to do a lot more with in the months to come. We had thousands of ballots submitted, with hundreds of write-in suggestions and a demonstration of user engagement that has us feeling super positive about the project.
About This Issue | Read Digital Edition
July 2009 - What am I Worth?
One of the interesting luxuries of working on a project like the printed WHIR magazine is that it allows us to play with things like our point of view from one issue to the next. In recent months we've been giving added attention to the kind of practical and applicable advice aimed at smaller hosts and resellers. This issue carries on with that point of view, asking, in our cover story, "what am I worth?" It's a complicated question without a clear-cut answer.
About This Issue | Read Digital Edition
May 2009 - The Blueprint for a Small Web Host
I was a little surprised by how difficult it became to see this idea through. We set out to assemble a blueprint for a small hosting business, but butted up pretty quickly against the general impossibility of covering all the territory that was out there to be covered. The basic constraints of a printed magazine, and the less-than-infinite amount of time we had available forced us to face the fact that we could never produce an exhaustive guide to starting a hosting company.
About This Issue | Read Digital Edition






















Comment anonymously or log into your WHIR account
Logging in allows enhanced commenting features (such as external linking) in news, features, blogs and more.
Comment by Del Succeden on Thursday, September 24, 2009
This streak of asset unloading shows Yahoo is still beseiged with financial woes. A $20 billion loss is a major blow for the company, who has yet to solve Google's dominance in the search engine market. Let's hope that Yahoo recovers -- competition is healthy.
Are you aware of IPv4 exhaustion and how it will affect your business? Click here to know more. http://ipv4depletion.com/