Yahoo on Tuesday dove deeper into being an Internet Age media company,
bringing in news, music and television stars for the launch of online
magazines focused on technology and food.
The fresh online offerings
were showcased by Yahoo chief executive Marissa Mayer during a Consumer
Electronics Show (CES) keynote presentation at a packed theater here.
“Yahoo
is about making the world’s daily habits inspiring and entertaining,
and there are few places as inspiring and entertaining as CES,” Mayer
said. “We have been hard at work re-imagining Yahoo’s core businesses
across search, communications, media and video — all powered by two
powerful platforms, Flickr and Tumblr.”
Late last year, Yahoo had
more than 400 million mobile monthly users for the first time in the
Internet pioneer’s history, according to Mayer. About 800 million people
use Yahoo monthly overall, the California-based company said.
The
theatrical keynote production included appearances by newly-hired Yahoo
Global Anchor Katie Couric and Yahoo Tech vice president David Pogue, a
former New York Times reporter.
Cecily Strong and Keenan Thompson of
beloved US comedy program Saturday Night Live appeared in a faux news
report skit lampooning trendy technology companies and concepts. Targets
included SnapChat, Bitcoin, and in-flight smartphone use.
Grammy award-winning musician John Legend entertained the audience with a set of songs.
Announcements
woven into the stage show included the launches of a Yahoo News digest
app design to deliver concise, personalized summaries of global
happenings twice daily to smartphones.
“Yahoo News Digest, at its
core, simplifieds news and solves the problem of information overload
and TL;DR,” said Yahoo product manager Nick D’Aloisio, referring to an
acronym for ‘Too Long; Didn’t Read.’
Digital magazines Yahoo Food and Yahoo Tech were launched with fanfare.
“We found our inspiration in magazines,” Mayer said. “They are elegant, beautiful and have a distinctive voice.”
Yahoo
Food is devoted to things culinary, while the Tech magazine team headed
by Pogue has a stated mission of demystifying the world of geeky
gadgets, services and trends.
“Everyone at CES is a gear-head, but the rest of the country is struggling,” Pogue said.
“The first language we are going to speak is called English; it’s called human.”
Pogue
said Yahoo Tech would be a “jargon-free, cool-looking” source of news
and information presented in terms people not immersed in the industry
can appreciate.
And instead of banner or display ads, Yahoo digital
magazines will follow the lead of their glossy predecessors and weave
clearly labeled advertising into content, according to Mayer.
Pogue
said he will be reviewing projects seeking backing at crowd-source
funding websites Kickstarter and Indiegogo, giving as an example a stand
that keeps a single razor blade sharp for five years.
“It is brilliant, but it also costs $600,” Pogue said of the razor system.
Mayer
mentioned the acquisition of yet another firm, Aviate, which
specializes in automatically organizing applications on smartphone home
screens based on clues such as location or time of day and on people’s
habits.
Mayer took over as Yahoo chief in July of 2012, and her plan
to revive the company includes being at the center of people’s Internet
habits, especially on mobile devices.
“We reach for our mobile
devices as soon as we wake up to check the morning headlines,” Couric
said, telling the audience she was eager to get to work interviewing
“anyone with an important or interesting story to tell.”
Digital magazines were touted as part of Yahoo’s longterm strategy.
“A common theme for us is simplifying our business and how people consume information,” Mayer said.
Forrester
analyst David Cooperstein saw it as a savvy move to differentiate Yahoo
from Google, Facebook or other online venues by providing the
professional content people are looking for instead of user-generated
material they might find interesting.
“It is a more mainstream play, basically,” Cooperstein said.
“By
bringing in familiar faces from John Legend to SNL it indicates to me
she is talking about more traditional content online, which is the only
angle her competitors haven’t taken. And every good keynote should have
some theatrics in it.”
Despite many investments, Yahoo last year lost
its Number 2 position in the US digital ad market to social networking
titan Facebook, according to industry-tracker eMarketer.
Yahoo’s
share of global digital ad revenue slid about a half percent to 2.87
percent last year, while Facebook and Google say their shares rise,
eMarketer reported
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