<![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, yandex]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, yandex]]> http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/yandex http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/yandex <![CDATA[Yandex nixes IPO, which sucks for that Yahoo it just hired]]> This summer's no-brainer career move now looks like a headscratcher. Vish Makhijani left his job as Yahoo's head of search in June to join Yandex, a Russian search engine which had filed for a $3 billion public offering the month before. Getting pre-IPO stock options, with the exit in plain sight? Much better than watching Yahoo shares sink from $34 to below $13. But Yandex has postponed its IPO plans. Anyone want to take bets on how long Makhijani will stay as CEO of Yandex Labs, the company's U.S. outpost? Memo to Vish: Microsoft may still be hiring.

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<![CDATA[The 5 countries where the locals won't let Google win]]> World newspapers joined to call for the U.S. Justice Department to reject the Yahoo-Google deal yesterday, which is odd not only because the deal won't reach beyond the U.S., but also because Google isn't always the dominant search engine outside its home country. A story in today's Financial Times reminded us of this, pointing out that in China, Russia, Japan, South Korea and the Czech Republic, Google comes in second to the five companies below.

In Russia, 46 percent of all search queries go through Yandex, which the FT says plans to list itself on a US stock market this spring.

Seznam sees 63 percent of all searches in the Czech Republic. Google exec Mohammad Gawdat says its for a good reason, telling the FT his company "did not initially match the locals in the quality of its local language results."

CEO Eric Schmidt says Google has an excuse in China, where the government favored local company Baidu, which still controls 60 percent of all local searches .“All of us should tell the Chinese that their local markets need to be open to foreign investment, they need not favor their local competitors," Schmidt told the FT.

Japanese Internet users prefer portals to Google's simple search engine. It's one reason Google actually trails Yahoo in the country.

Naver in South Korea owns 60 percent of the search market. Portals are popular in the country, too. Naver's most successful feature, according to the FT, is a questions and answers service similar to Yahoo Answers. Google recently acqured blogging software company TNC in hopes of becoming more portal-like in South Korea.

The common theme among Google's global failures? Summarizes the FT:

Google has played second fiddle to rivals who invested much earlier, perfected their technology to work with local languages and came up with innovations that Google is now having to copy.
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<![CDATA[Sergey Brin wants to milk Mother Russia]]> One place Google is losing the battle for Web search market share is in Russia, the ancestral homeland of Google founder Sergey Brin. The company has developed better Russian word and language processing, but still trails Yandex, which is planning an IPO on an estimated company value of $3 billion. Why doesn't Brin just embrace his inner oligarch and buy Yandex? That seems easier.

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