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Yahoo CEO sketches out new plan to jump-start growth

The Yahoo! offices are pictured in Santa Monica, California April 18, 2011. Yahoo! will report its quarterly results on Tuesday. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

(Reuters) – Yahoo Inc Chief Executive Scott Thompson outlined how the Internet pioneer will

revive itself by putting in place a new structure to sharpen its focus on users, advertisers and overlooked areas such as

commerce.

The Yahoo! offices are

pictured in Santa Monica, California April 18, 2011. Yahoo! will report its quarterly results on Tuesday. REUTERS/Mario

Anzuoni

The company said last week it would lay off 2,000

people or 14 percent of its workforce, and it set in motion a broad restructuring.

Thompson, a former PayPal executive

credited with driving growth at eBay Inc’s payments division, said in an internal memo on Tuesday the company would be

organized along three core divisions beginning May 1. Commerce, an area of Yahoo’s business that will receive new emphasis,

will be critical to future growth, Thompson said.

Once the dominant Internet media and search company, Yahoo has been

eclipsed by Google Inc and Facebook.

“To be very clear, our highest priority is winning in our core business, and that

will earn us the right to pursue new growth opportunities,” Thompson said in his memo.

Thompson, who was named

Yahoo’s CEO in January, will preside over an all-hands staff meeting later on Tuesday.

The company’s three new

divisions will include a consumer arm that will focus on media content under Ross Levinsohn and comprise “connections” like

Flickr, search and email, and e-commerce.

A new “regions” division will deal with advertisers, while a technology

division will handle Yahoo’s infrastructure and platforms.

“You will hear more from our business leaders about their

plans to move each of these groups forward in the coming days and weeks,” Thompson said in the memo.

“Ultimately, only

our customers will decide whether we win or lose in the market.”

As expected, the new structure does away with a

centralized products group that straddled several client types, formerly headed by Blake Irving, who will depart in coming

weeks and is not expected to be replaced.

FROM MEDIA TO COMMERCE

Yahoo releases first-quarter results on April

17. On Tuesday, its shares were down 1.1 percent at $14.93 in early afternoon trade.

“Right now they’re just trying

to put all the pieces in place and trying to figure out some kind of coordinated way to move forward. It’s pretty obvious

the new leadership thinks they need to be leaner,” said Michael Yoshikami, fund manager for Destination Wealth

Management.

“All the reorg is really secondary to really figuring out what Yahoo wants to be.”

Thompson’s

Tuesday memo also mentioned expanding beyond “traditional” e-commerce.

Yahoo will soon name an executive to head up a

new team to wring more advertising revenue from existing businesses covering automobiles, shopping, travel, jobs, personals

and real estate.

In media — a key area for Thompson’s predecessors — the CEO plans to highlight Yahoo’s customary

news, finance, sports and entertainment pages,

and work closely with content producers and editors on breaking news as well as pivotal events such as this year’s Olympic

Games and the coming U.S. elections.

The layoffs and internal overhaul come as Yahoo’s revenue falls under

competition from Google and Facebook. Last year, Yahoo’s revenue totaled $4.98 billion, compared with Facebook’s $3.71

billion, a number achieved with just 3,200 employees.

Yahoo is also fighting a battle with hedge fund manager Daniel

Loeb, whose Third Point is the company’s largest institutional shareholder with a 5.8 percent stake. Loeb is seeking to

appoint four new board directors.

“It’s time for Yahoo to move forward, and fast,” Thompson said in his

memo.

(Writing by Edwin

Chan; Editing by John Wallace and Steve Orlofsky)

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