For all I know it could be pure coincidence. And yet, a
mountain of research tells us unequivocally that a diverse workforce will
improve the bottom line, so we ought to look at one example that seems to
disprove the point.
Case in point: Yahoo! Or better: Marissa Mayer’s Yahoo!
Background: we know that the leaders of America’s great tech
companies adhere to liberal values. They certainly believe in diversity. Sheryl
Sandberg, the COO of Facebook, has so much time on her hands that she is
leading a feminist crusade.
Unfortunately, they do not practice diversity. It is commonly
recognized that employees of Silicon Valley companies are predominantly white
and Asian males. To the general embarrassment of many of their leaders the
companies are anything but diverse. And yet, they are doing rather well in the
marketplace, don’t you think?
When Marissa Mayer took over Yahoo! she apparently decided
that she wanted more diversity in the workforce. She must have read the same
research that we have all read. So, she directed her staff to give preference
to women in hiring and promotions. Seems unfair enough. In truth, it is
discriminatory.
Now, a disgruntled male employee is suing Yahoo! for gender
discrimination. The Daily Caller has the story:
Yahoo
top level managers allegedly used an employment review process to discriminate
against male workers during an extensive restructuring process, according to a
lawsuit filed Monday.
Company
President Marissa Mayer implemented the review not long after being appointed
in 2012. Gregory Anderson claims managers used the review to discriminate
against male employees. He was fired from the media division of the company in
2014. Chief Marketing Officer Kathy Savitt allegedly gave females unfair
preference resulting in hundreds of male workers being terminated.
“[He]
alleges that Savitt has publicly expressed support for increasing the number of women in media and has
intentionally hired and promoted women because of their gender, while
terminating, demoting or laying off male employees,” the lawsuit, which was
obtained by The New York Times, stated. “Females with the same Employee Score
as male employees were treated better.”
We do not know the disposition of the ongoing case. For now,
we will limit ourselves to the more pertinent question: did the extra diversity
help or hinder Yahoo!’s bottom line?
Again, it may be coincidence. There might not be any direct
causation. Still, we are well within our rights to ask how Yahoo! has been
doing. We know that it was doing rather poorly when Marissa Mayer took over.
Mayer inherited a mess. She was hired to turn the company around.
How is that working out? As Google and Apple and Facebook
rule the world and the Fortune 500, Yahoo! is an also-ran.
If we exclude the value of some investments made before
Mayer’s arrival, Yahoo! has a negative worth. Timothy Lee tells the story on
Vox.com:
Yahoo
is one of the best-known brands on the internet, but its core internet business
is in a grim situation. How grim? There's a debate over whether the company
itself — what most of us think of when we think of Yahoo — is actually worth
less than zero dollars.
Back in
2005, Yahoo invested
$1 billion in one of China's hottest technology startups, Alibaba,
getting a roughly 40 percent stake. The bet has paid off handsomely. In 2012,
Yahoo sold part of its stake back to Alibaba for $7.6 billion. Since then,
Alibaba has continued to grow rapidly, and Yahoo's remaining stake is now worth
around $25 billion.
That
number is remarkable because Yahoo as a whole isn't worth much more than that.
Indeed, if you subtract the value of all of Yahoo's major assets — including a
multibillion-dollar stake in Yahoo Japan (an independent subsidiary in which
Yahoo is a minority shareholder) and a few billion dollars in cash — from its
market value, you get a big
negative number. "If you just solve for the missing number, you are
forced to conclude that Yahoo's actual core business of being Yahoo (and Tumblr
and whatever) is worth negative $13 billion," as Bloomberg's Matt Levine put it in December.
He continues:
In
2012, Yahoo's board hired Mayer, then one of Google's best-known executives, to
turn the company around. Nearly four years later, it's becoming clear that her
turnaround effort is failing. Mayer has invested lavishly in both engineering
and media talent, but there's no sign that these investments are paying off in
the form of higher revenue.
Things
came to a head on Tuesday, when Yahoo released its quarterly financial results
along with a new turnaround plan. Yahoo announced that it was laying off 1,700
workers and focusing on its most successful products — including its search
engine and popular email service. But in the same press release, the chairman
of Yahoo's board announced that the board is going to "engage on qualified
strategic proposals" — that is, consider offers to sell the company.
It's a
humiliating announcement for Mayer, because it clearly signals that the board
is losing patience with her turnaround efforts. And the looming possibility of
a sale is going to make it all the more difficult for her to motivate Yahoo's
remaining staff to work hard on her latest turnaround plan.
Mayer was hired to rescue a failing company. It is
altogether possible that Yahoo! could not have been saved by anyone. And yet, Mayer's plan
has clearly not worked. She bears primary responsibility for the failure.
1 comment:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/holocaust-survivors-and-their-descendants-accuse-israel-of-genocide-9687994.html
This is looking bad. Time to worry.
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