<![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, scott moore]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, scott moore]]> http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/scottmoore http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/scottmoore <![CDATA[Why did Scott Moore really leave Yahoo?]]> The departure of Scott Moore, head of Yahoo's Media Group, seemed hasty. Microsoft exec Jeff Dossett, in talks with Yahoo for an entirely different job, ended up replacing Moore. And in an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Moore only gave the vaguest of hints as to what he'd do next — which suggests he hadn't really had time to think it through. But a tipster suggests why Moore might be leaving now: Retention bonuses, issued to top execs after Microsoft's takeover offer, are kicking in.

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<![CDATA[If Scott Moore leaves Yahoo, does that mean it's buying AOL?]]> Scott Moore, the head of Yahoo Media Group, is leaving the company, reports BoomTown's Kara Swisher. A bad sign for the company: Moore ran some of Yahoo's most successful operations, including its news, finance, and sports websites. Why is Moore leaving now, having survived most of Yahoo's annus horribilis with his charm unruffled? The first conclusion I'll jump to: Talks with Time Warner to sell AOL to Yahoo are advancing, and Moore does not like his position in the merged entity. Update: Swisher writes: "Dead wrong guess as usual. Talks are slower than ever. He had the top job over Bill Wilson." Well, why didn't you say so in the first place, Kara?

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<![CDATA[Yahoo replaces departing Entertainment VP, for now]]> Yahoo Sports head James Pitaro will take over departing VP Karin Gilford's responsibilities as head of Yahoo Entertainment. But with no end to the Microsoft ordeal in sight, how long will Pitaro stay? Yahoo Media boss Scott Moore put Gilford in charge of Entertainment only this spring, but the promotion obviously didn't stick. She's going to Comcast."She got poached," a Yahoo exec tells us. "C’est la vie at Yahoo these days, unfortunately." We hear Moore's had his hands full trying to keep Pitaro in place, too.

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<![CDATA[Yahoo Entertainment VP bolts for Comcast]]> When Scott Moore reorganized Yahoo's media business in April, we called VP Karin Gilford, head of Yahoo Entertainment, "the big winner." Now she's just another goner. Gilford has quit the company and will take a new job at Comcast. We admire Moore's ability to regularly crush the competition — In May, for example, Yahoo! News had 38.8 million users to AOL News' 29 million — but we wonder if Moore's shitkicking winniness might also crush his own reports. That Gilford joins a long list of Moore's reports who have suddenly exited the company doesn't do much to defend Moore's reputation. Former head of Yahoo Entertainment Vince Broady is gone. So is onetime Yahoo News editor Neil Budde. Yahoo Music boss Ian Rogers only gave Moore two days' notice when he left. Instead of running Yahoo Food like she used to, Deanna Brown is busy running Scripps Interactive to the company's notable profit. Here's an example of Gilford pitching Yahoo in happier days:

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<![CDATA[Who's moving up, moving out or on the fence at Yahoo]]> Yahoo CEO-in waiting Sue Decker continues to push the company through yet another reorganization. An her minions aren't happy about it. One told Kara Swisher: “I am not sure right now, with all this drama and all this tension from Microsoft’s failed takeover and the rest of it, why we have to do this. This feels crazy.” We figure the best way to do this is rip the band-aid off and move on. So below, who's in, who's up and who's out in quick and dirty bullet points.

  • Loathed EVP Ash Patel will head up Global Products group.
  • Global Partner Solutions EVP Hilary Schneider will oversee both ad sales and product development for the entire US region and be Patel's peer.
  • Scott Moore, who runs the Yahoo Media Group, will report to Schneider. Though he has startup offers.
  • Brad Garlinghouse will probably leave by the end of the summer.
  • Yahoo Search’s Vish Makhijani will leave the company.
  • Front Door head Tapan Bhat will either report to Patel in Global Products or bolt.
  • Yahoo SVP for Strategic Alliances, Chris Bolte, will leave the company.
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<![CDATA[Who will replace Jeff Weiner at Yahoo?]]> If Jeff Weiner, head of Yahoo's search, community, and media properties, leaves the company, who's left to run things? An outside hire seems unlikely, Michael Arrington points out, given Carl Icahn's fight with the Yahoo board. That leaves a battlefield promotion for one of Weiner's direct reports, shown here from left to right: Brad Garlinghouse, Scott Moore, Vish Makhijani, and Tapan Bhat. Here's our handicapping of this horserace:

Brad Garlinghouse: The obvious candidate; a former CEO, Garlinghouse wrote a controversial "Peanut Butter" memo calling for Yahoo to focus on fewer products and do them well, a strategy Yahoo has followed. He currently oversees communications properties like Yahoo Mail and Messenger, which are shaping up as the centerpieces of Yahoo's attempt to catch up with Facebook and turn its user base into a social network. The odds-on favorite to succeed Weiner.

Scott Moore: The head of Yahoo's Media Group, overseeing properties including news, finance, sports, celebrity portal OMG and women's site Shine. Not in the running, we think: He was only recently promoted, and he likes living in the L.A. area, where the Media Group is based.

Vish Makhijani: Runs Yahoo Search. No chance; given the performance of Yahoo in the search market, it's not clear why he has his current job, let alone why Jerry Yang would give him a new one.

Tapan Bhat: Runs the Yahoo.com homepage and My Yahoo, among other "front doors." Bhat keeps a low profile, but he recently launched Yahoo Buzz, a Digg competitor which has been well received. The most likely scenario for Bhat: Garlinghouse gets promoted, but Bhat gets handed his communications and community portfolio. We'd like to see what Bhat does with sites like Flickr, whose product development has stagnated. (How long did it take to launch video on Flickr?)

Your thoughts on these Yahoo executives in the comments, and your tips in our inbox, are welcome.

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<![CDATA[Valleywag spots secret Yahoo conclave at D6]]> CARLSBAD, CA — On stage at D6, Sue Decker couldn't offer any explanation why she was qualified to be president of Yahoo. But if you ask Valleywag, she's doing a bang-up job of pursuing Yahoo's strategy of embracing openness. For example, by holding a meeting within camera-lens length of Valleywag in the Four Seasons Lobby Lounge. Our eye was first drawn by Yahoo Media Group chief Scott Moore's blindingly colorful Madras shirt; we then saw he was sitting with Decker. Two of the other participants: Gordon McLeod and Matthew Goldberg, business-side executives at Dow Jones, which means they were likely discussing some kind of news-content partnership between Yahoo and the Wall Street Journal. I'd thought I spooted Brad Garlinghouse, the Yahoo executive who wrote the famous "Peanut Butter Memo," in the group, but I'm told he wasn't there. I later spotted him strolling down the halls with Yahoo board member Bobby Kotick, the CEO of Activision. More pictures of the meeting:

Yahoos
Yahoos

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<![CDATA[Yahoo's Scott Moore catches Time Warner CEO fudging numbers]]> Jeff BewkesCARLSBAD, CA — How rarely can one give one's enemies an in-your-face comeuppance? For Yahoo's Scott Moore, the chance came during Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes's interview at D6. Bewkes claimed that AOL was No. 1 in news, finance, and a host of other categories. "Where are you getting your numbers?" asked Moore during the session's open-mic portion, pointing out that AOL led Yahoo in all the areas Bewkes mentioned. Bewkes offered a feeble parry, suggesting that the numbers were close. Not even, Moore replied, rattling off how many millions of users the Yahoo sites he leads beat AOL. A satisfying moment, but shouldn't Moore be keeping his career options open at a time like this? (Photo by Asa Mathat/AllThingsD.com)

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<![CDATA[Ousted Yahoo exec completes Scripps Interactive turnaround]]> ScottMoore.jpgEarnings season can bore, but behind some numbers, there's very human drama. Scripps, the home-and-garden media mini-empire, saw profits rise 22.8 percent to $84.1 million in the first quarter, thanks in large part to Scripps Interactive, led by former Yahoo executive Deanna Brown. Her unit swung to a profit of $21 million in the first quarter. A year ago, Scripps Interactive lost $15 million in the first quarter. At Yahoo, Brown, we had heard, choked under the rule of Yahoo media czar Scott Moore, whom some ex-employees called "suffocating." At the time, Brown only told us, "Sorry, not going to get into this." How politic. Numbers speak louder than words, at any rate.

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<![CDATA[Departing Yahoo music chief gave Scott Moore two days' notice]]> ianrogers.jpg Departing Yahoo music chief Ian Rogers wasn't "reorganized out" of the company, a source tells us. "The reorg was caused by his departure with two days' notice." Rogers left for all the obvious reasons: to escape both Microsoft and — like others before him — Yahoo Media czar Scott Moore's high-pressure management style. "He was tied of swimming upstream," our source says. "But he was careful to make nice with Scott before he left as to not burn the bridge."

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<![CDATA[Scott Moore shakes up Yahoo Media Group, music chief leaves]]> Scott Moore, the former Microsoftie now running Yahoo's media businesses, has reorganized his group, which runs Yahoo's original-content websites. Out the door: Ian Rogers, the outspoken head of Yahoo Music, who had loudly criticized the music industry for insisting on copy protection. Rogers says on his blog that he's joining Topspin Media, a music startup, as CEO. Rogers also oversaw some of Yahoo's video efforts, which Moore now says he'll run personally. The reorg comes in advance of two days of all-hands meetings in Sunnyvale and Santa Monica in two weeks. Moore's memo:

moorememo.png

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And now for the Kremlinology: Karin Gilford, head of Yahoo Entertainment, seems like the big winner here. Amy Iorio, the widely disliked executive whose team launched women's site Shine, loses out. Moore's mostly winnowing the number of direct reports he has — which should give him more time to call old pals in Redmond. And Rogers? Got out while the getting was good.

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<![CDATA[Yahoo GM not expecting, just parking like she is]]> AmyIorio.jpgNow we know why Yahoo News general manager Amy Iorio surrounds herself with family at work. She's low on friends. That's sometimes what happens when you make a habit of parking in the spot Yahoo reserves for expectant mothers, as a tipster alleges Iorio did until caught. Iorio's "overly aggressive attitude" also caused two of Scott Moore's well-liked executive assistants to quit. "Its really sad how he can let someone like her take over a role that Neil Budde was in," our tipster writes. "Like the two even compare."

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<![CDATA[Insiders say no way on MSNBC.com sale]]> Some take umbrage with our report suggesting buying Yahoo forces Microsoft to sell MSNBC.com to NBC. These sources claim MSNBC.com earns more money than Yahoo News and they'd be surprised to see Microsoft divest itself from such a profitable property. And where there's money, there's motive to renegotiate the contract that restricts what Microsoft can do in the news business.


While NBC would jump at the chance to fully own MSNBC.com, NBC knows MSNBC.com's value depends on traffic from Microsoft sites. NBC would likely not buy MSNBC.com without guaranteeing access to Microsoft's online audiences.

A more likely scenario would have NBC and Microsoft renegotiating the MSNBC.com joint venture to make MSNBC.com the exclusive provider of news to Microsoft-branded sites, rather than all sites it owns — which would exempt Yahoo News and other Yahoo-labeled sites. One source points out that Microsoft seems plenty comfortable owning competing brands, like MSN and Live.

The other flaw in our theory, according to insiders, is our claim that former MSNBC.com president and current Yahoo media czar Scott Moore remains respected and admired by "many" at Microsoft. "I'd like to meet just one of those many!" former MSNBC.com executive producer Rex Sorgatz commented on our post. And Sorgatz isn't the only skeptic. Other insiders dispute the characterization as well, claiming Moore burned his bridges on his way out of Microsoft.

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<![CDATA[Yahoo deal spells a sale for MSNBC.com]]> MSNBCvsYahooNews.png"I shudder to think about a MSNBC.com and Yahoo News integration," a source formerly employed by both companies in the proposed Microsoft-Yahoo merger tell us. The "cultures," she says, "will be really tough to integrate." In that case, we're happy to report the good news: There's no way it will happen. Legally, Microsoft can't keep both news sites, and if it has to choose between the two, Yahoo News would be its natural choice.

Microsoft can't run both because back when NBC and Microsoft formed MSNBC.com, Microsoft agreed that the venture would be the only source of news on Microsoft sites. A Microsoft-owned Yahoo News would violate that agreement. One of the two properties would have to go.

Expect Microsoft to keep Yahoo News and sell MSNBC.com to NBC Universal, which already owns 82 percent of the associated cable channel.

Insiders say NBC is eager to take over, and Microsoft should be happy to sell. MSNBC.com is more successful online than its TV counterpart is on cable, but according to ComScore, Yahoo News is more popular. Besides, Microsoft has specific reason to trust Yahoo News managment. It's run by the man many consider to have once made MSNBC.com what it is: Microsoft veteran Scott Moore, who's said to be missed in Redmond.

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<![CDATA[Microsoft's exiles]]> Before the formal takeover offer came, an informal Microsoft takeover of Yahoo was already underway, thanks to Yahoo's hiring of several executives from the software giant. Some have even speculated that Microsoft has encouraged this poaching, using its ex-employees as plants to keep track from the inside on Yahoo's progress. And Microsoft has, in turn, hired its share of Yahoos. How will they fare if Microsoft's $44.6 billion offer goes through?

Scott MooreScott Moore Moore is the golden child of this merger. Before joining Yahoo, he had a long career running Web properties at Microsoft, including Slate (before the Washington Post bought it), MSN, and MSNBC.com. No one's better suited to bridge the company's cultures. Moore was recently promoted to run Yahoo's whole media group; I wouldn't be surprised to see that expanded to include MSN as well.

David SobeskiDavid Sobeski Suspicions run strong over the executive who runs Yahoo's Seattle-area office. Alas, his job's not nearly as secure as Moore's. His latest project is DataOS, a large-scale, distributed Web operating system meant to undergird Yahoo's properties. Given Microsoft's propensities for favoring its own technologies, DataOS isn't likely to have a long runway. But if Sobeski lands a top engineering job inside Microsoft, that will just strengthen rumors about why he took the job at Yahoo — some think he's been a Microsoft plant all along.

Gary FlakeGary Flake Formerly Yahoo's head of research, Flake joined Microsoft in 2005, and now runs Live Labs, the company's Internet-software R&D effort. Flake's an obvious candidate to run a combined research team.

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<![CDATA[Vince Broady out at Yahoo]]> Broady.jpgFormer head of Yahoo Entertainment Vince Broady will leave the company, the New York Times reports. What? An executive pushed out as a result of Scott Moore's ascension? No way.

This time, of course, it's a good thing. What's Broady's legacy at Yahoo? Brand Universe, Yahoo's 2006 initiative to build sites for entertainment brands such as Harry Potter and Star Wars. That bad idea didn't last long. Neither did Broady's career at Yahoo.

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<![CDATA[We hear that Yahoo TechTicker, the online-video...]]> We hear that Yahoo TechTicker, the online-video show from Yahoo Finance featuring Valley fox Sarah Lacy and red-hot moneymen Henry Blodget and Paul Kedrosky, is delayed, and won't be airing early episodes next week as rumored. Dammit! Scott Moore, we blame you for this, too.

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<![CDATA[OMG! Yahoo gossips MIA on Semel daughter's ties to Lindsay Lohan]]> LohanSemel.jpgIs Yahoo censoring hot gossip about its Hollywood ex-boss's family? Page Six and other LA gossip rags tell us Lindsay Lohan's lastest BFF with benefits might be none other than Courtenay Semel. That's right, former Yahoo topper Terry Semel's daughter. Reportedly, the pair were seen together at a housewarming party with LA "power lesbian" Jeanette Longoria.

Proximity to lesbians is big news in celebrity gossip world, but for some reason we can't find the story on Yahoo's rag, OMG, which Yahoo executive Scott Moore recently took under his wing. What gives, Scott? We thought you were a "news guy." Or are you suddenly tired of seeing awkward relationships exposed on gossip blogs?

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<![CDATA[Scott Moore hires magazine editor to do nothing]]> Scott MooreYahoo has installed Brandon Holley, the former editor of Jane, a women's magazine, as executive producer of Yahoo Lifestyles. This doesn't bode well for her career. When Scott Moore was put in charge of Yahoo's media operations, he said Yahoo would start focusing on mass instead of niche content — news, finance, sports, and maybe entertainment. "Lifestyles is the same — lots of subcategories don't meet the bar."

Holley's now in charge of those very same niches — food, health, astrology, and technology — Moore has suggested he plans to drop or scale back. Maybe having a girlfriend in HR was actually a good idea.

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<![CDATA[He pushes them out, she does the paperwork]]> ScottMoore2.jpgNew Yahoo Media czar Scott Moore dropped Yahoo News star Neil Budde from his org chart. Rumor has it he ran Yahoo Food director Deanna Brown out of the company as well; when we asked Brown, now at Scripps, about the incident, she starchily declined to comment. Now we're hearing Moore was responsible for at least one more departure as well.

TeresaThomas.jpgGirlfriend Teresa Thomas's, that is. Thomas left Yahoo earlier this year when the relationship heated up, according to a source. Moore denies that's why she left. "We never dated while we worked together, period," he said.

In any event, Thomas never reported to Moore. A shame. Imagine the efficiency of such an arrangement. Moore could let his employees know when they've become useless to him, and then Thomas could push them out ever so delicately. Really, couldn't Yahoo could use more synergies like this?

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