Just six weeks after taking over as chief executive of Yahoo! (YHOO) from co-founder Jerry Yang, Carol Bartz has now made it quite clear who's in charge and what demands she'll place on her executive team. On 26 February, Bartz announced an overhaul of the embattled company's management. The new, streamlined structure is intended to make the company "a lot faster on its feet", Bartz wrote in a post on Yahoo's official blog.Rico says that, in the Zelig quality of his life, he met Ms. Bartz back when he was working at Claris and she was head of Autodesk and came to see Bill Campbell. (Hey, it's not like we hung out or anything, just that Rico got introduced.)
In one of the biggest changes, Chief Financial Officer Blake Jorgensen, who joined Yahoo in June of 2007, will leave in the next few months after a new CFO is chosen. Jorgensen was a close ally of former Yahoo President Sue Decker, who left in January after being passed over for the top job. Jorgensen's departure follows those of mobile chief Marco Boerries earlier this week and news head Neeraj Khemlani, who's leaving for Hearst as vice-president and special assistant to the CEO for digital media.
The changes, though largely expected after recent reports in the blog BoomTown, are no less momentous for a company that for years has been hobbled by slow decision-making and ineffective execution on those decisions. As far back as 2006, one executive who has since left, Brad Garlinghouse, penned a now-famous 'Peanut Butter Manifesto' that outlined those management problems. The new management organization has all major executives reporting directly to Bartz, who lamented in her blog post that there's "plenty that has bogged this company down". "It looks like she isn't afraid to go in with a chain saw," says Kevin Lee, CEO of search marketing firm Didit.
27 February 2009
Bartz cleans house
Business Week has an article by Robert Hof about the changes at Yahoo:
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