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        Microsoft and Yahoo Agree on Search Deal
        
        
        
        
		Microsoft and Yahoo finally consummated an Internet search advertising-text  deal after almost two years of contentious wooing.
The deal, announced on Wednesday, calls for Yahoo to use  Microsoft's latest search advertising technology, called Bing. Yahoo, for its  part, will take over the advertising sales roles for both companies worldwide.  Yahoo will use Microsoft's adCenter platform to conduct ad-space auctions,  which is the process by which advertisers compete for search ad placements.
The deal doesn't affect Web display advertising, in which  the two companies plan to continue their competition. Display ads typically use  animated graphics in a broad area on a Web page, rather than being confined to  text.
Microsoft introduced Bing in late May after it had hired  away several of Yahoo's search technology personnel. One of those hires was Dr.  Qi Lu, who now runs Microsoft's Online Services Group after having served  as the head of Yahoo's Engineering and Advertising Technology Group. 
Microsoft had initially submitted an unsolicited  proposal to acquire all of Yahoo on Jan. 31, 2008. However, that offer  never got off the ground in negotiations with Yahoo's then-CEO Jerry  Yang, who has since stepped  down. This latest deal was established with Yahoo's new CEO, Carol Bartz. 
While Bartz had earlier declared that such a deal would  require a "boatload of money," she described it slightly differently  in a joint Microsoft-Yahoo press conference on Wednesday, saying that this deal  was a "boatload of value" for Yahoo. The deal requires no upfront payment of cash from Microsoft to Yahoo.
Yahoo's personnel loss to Microsoft may have contributed to  this current deal. In  February, Microsoft's CEO Steve Ballmer bragged about hiring 10 of Yahoo's  chief search technologists. Today, in a recorded press conference, Ballmer  suggested that having Qi Lu on the operations side will smooth the transition  as Yahoo begins to use Bing, which may occur in three to six months' time.  Yahoo will continue to use its own user interface on its owned-and-operated  (O&O) properties, but Bing will run in the background, powering Yahoo's search.
Cash considerations may also have been a compelling reason  for the deal. Yahoo  reported a 10 percent decrease in cash holdings in its second quarter, down from $427 million in 2Q 2008 to $385 million in 2Q 2009.
One of the perks of the current Microsoft-Yahoo search  advertising deal is that Yahoo will get about $275 million in annual operating  cash flow.
The deal is established for 10 years, and Yahoo is expected  to gain $650 million in "savings from reductions in spending on Yahoo's  search technology," according to the fine print of a press  release. That seems to imply that Yahoo is exiting the search-engine development  business, and that there may be personnel changes or cuts on the Yahoo side.
In the joint Microsoft-Yahoo press conference, Ballmer  suggested that some of Yahoo's personnel might go to Microsoft.
"From an op-ex perspective, we have a plan in which,  over time, some Yahoo engineers may move to Microsoft," Ballmer said.
Under the deal, Microsoft will license Yahoo's core search technologies for 10 years. 
Both Yahoo and Microsoft contend that this search advertising  deal will be good for advertisers, publishers and consumers -- and that it won't  run afoul of regulators in Washington or Brussels.
"We suspect we will face some opposition from the  competitor [Google], who may not like more competition because we actually  think this is one of those cases where us coming together will produce more  competition to the market leader, not less," Ballmer said in the press  conference.
Google's search engine handles about 70 percent of search  traffic on the Web (StatCounter suggests it's more like 88.6 percent), making it the leader in search text  advertising. A similar search ad-text deal proposed between Google and Yahoo  was vehemently opposed by Microsoft last year. That deal was finally dropped  after some members of Congress suggested that antitrust scrutiny would be  initiated.
In  a July hearing conducted last year, Brad Smith, Microsoft's senior vice  president and general counsel, had suggested that the Google-Yahoo deal would  amount to illegal price fixing for ad costs, as well as opening up privacy  concerns for users of the search service. It's not clear how advertisers will  benefit if the Microsoft-Yahoo deal goes through, as there will be one less  search ad market to compare prices.
Under the proposed Microsoft-Yahoo deal, the two companies  expect to maintain their current privacy policies. The deal will provide  greater scale to both Microsoft and Yahoo, which will lead to improved search  technology, Ballmer said.
The deal is subject to regulatory and U.S. judicial approvals, but Yahoo  and Microsoft are expecting it to go through "by early 2010,"  according to the press conference.
Other details in the deal include a proposal in which  Microsoft will share revenue on Yahoo O&O and  Yahoo-affiliate Web sites. 
"Microsoft will pay traffic acquisition costs (TAC) to  Yahoo! at an initial rate of 88% of search revenue generated on Yahoo!'s  O&O sites during the first 5 years of the agreement," according to the  press release. Since the deal is a 10-year agreement, it's not clear what  happens in the subsequent five years. Microsoft will guarantee the revenue for  the first 18 months.
Further details about the agreement are described at a Microsoft-Yahoo  Web site, which can be accessed here.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.