REACT: Should women work through maternity leave?

In this Monday, Dec. 7, 2009, file photo, Marissa Mayer, VP of Search Products and User Experience for Google, speaks in Mountain View, Calif. Yahoo announced Monday, July 16, 2012, it is hiring Mayer to be its next CEO, the fifth in five years as the company struggles to rebound from years of financial malaise and internal turmoil. Mayer, who starts at Yahoo Inc. on Tuesday, July 17, 2012, was one of Google’s earliest employees and was most recently responsible for its mapping, local and location services. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File) (AP)
Marissa Mayer (AP)
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Updated: 7/18/2012 9:48 am
SAN ANTONIO - Can women really have it all? There's a new poster child to that question: the newly chosen CEO of Yahoo, Marissa Mayer.

She has an impressive resume that includes and Ivy League education and a top management role at Google, but it's her personal life that has people talking today.

Mayer is expecting. Yahoo is being applauded for hiring a pregnant CEO, but a comment from Mayer is drawing criticism. She says she'll work through her maternity leave.

How do you feel about that? Vote in our poll and then join the discussion on our Facebook page…

Yahoo turns to former nemesis to be its CEO savior

By MICHAEL LIEDTKE, AP Technology Writer – 2 hours ago

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — As a top executive at Google for the past 13 years, Marissa Mayer played an instrumental role in developing many of the services that have tormented Yahoo as its appeal waned among Web surfers, advertisers and investors.

Now, Yahoo is turning to its longtime nemesis to fix everything that has gone wrong while Google Inc. has been cementing its position as the Internet's most powerful company.

Mayer, 37, will tackle the imposing challenge Tuesday when she takes over as Yahoo's fifth CEO in the past five years.

The surprise hiring announced late Monday indicates Yahoo still believes it can be an Internet innovator instead of merely an online way station where people pass through to read a news story or watch a video clip before moving on to more compelling Internet destinations.

"I just saw a huge opportunity to have a global impact on users and really help the company in terms of managing its portfolio, attracting great talent and really inspiring and delighting people," Mayer said during a Monday interview with The Associated Press.

Like her predecessors, Mayer will have to come up with an effective strategy to compete with the juggernaut that Google has become and the increasingly influential force that Facebook Inc. is turning into as more people immerse themselves in its social network.

Both Google, the Internet's search leader, and Facebook have been beating Yahoo Inc. in the battle for Web surfers' attention and advertisers' marketing budgets. As Yahoo has lagged in that pivotal race, so has its financial performance and stock price. The stock has been slumping since Yahoo Inc. balked at a chance to sell itself to Microsoft Corp. for $47.5 billion, or $33 per share, in May 2008.

Yahoo shares haven't traded above $20 since September 2008. The announcement came after the market closed Monday. On Tuesday, it lost 3 cents to $15.62 in midday trading.

"If she can pull this off and turn around Yahoo, it will make her legacy," Gartner Inc. analyst Allen Weiner said of Mayer. "Yahoo's iconic yodel has been missing for a long time. Her mission will be to bring that yodel back."

This will be the first time that Mayer has run a company as she steps out of the long shadow cast by the Google's ruling triumvirate — co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, along with Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt.

Although she had her responsibilities at Google narrowed two years ago, Mayer is still widely considered to among the Internet industry's brightest executives. A Wisconsin native, Mayer is a mathematics whiz with a sponge-like memory and a keen eye for design.

Mayer joined Google in 1999 as its 20th employee and went on to play an integral role in helping Page and Brin exploit their online search technology to outmaneuver Yahoo at a time when it was still the larger of the two companies. Now, it takes Google a little more than a month to generate as much revenue as Yahoo does in an entire year.

During Google's rise, Mayer helped oversee the development and design of the company's popular email, online mapping and news services. She also became a topic of Silicon Valley gossip during Google's early years while she dated Page for three years. They have since gotten married to other people.

"We will miss her talents," Page, now Google's CEO, said in a statement.

In another statement, Schmidt hailed Mayer as "a great product person, very innovative and a real perfectionist who always wants the best for users. Yahoo has made a great choice."

Mayer becomes one of the most prominent women executives in Silicon Valley, a place whose geeky culture has been dominated by men for decades. This is Yahoo's second female CEO, though. Silicon Valley veteran Carol Bartz, 63, spent more than two-and-half years as Yahoo's CEO before she was fired last September.

Within a few months, Mayer expects to be on a maternity leave. In another interview late Monday, Mayer revealed to Fortune magazine that she is pregnant with a boy. Her due date is Oct. 7. She said she had informed Yahoo's board about her pregnancy before the 11 directors unanimously voted to hire her.

Other prominent female executives in Silicon Valley include Hewlett-Packard Co. CEO Meg Whitman and another former top Google executive, Sheryl Sandberg, who defected to a rival when she joined Facebook as that company's chief operating officer in 2008. Other female CEOs running major technology companies include IBM Corp.'s Virginia "Ginni" Rometty and Xerox Corp.'s Ursula Burns.

Yahoo picked Mayer over an internal candidate, Ross Levinsohn, who had been widely considered to be the front-runner for the job after stepping in to fill a void created two months ago when the company dumped Scott Thompson as CEO amid a flap over misinformation on his official biography.

Thompson's bio inaccurately said he had college degree in computer science — an accomplishment that Mayer can rightfully list on her resume. She earned a master's in computer science at Stanford University, the same school where the co-founders from both Google and Yahoo honed their engineering skills.

This marks the second time that Yahoo has snubbed Levinsohn, 48, who previously had been best known for overseeing the Internet operations for Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.

Levinsohn had been vying for the CEO job after Bartz's firing, only to be passed over when Yahoo lured Thompson away from eBay Inc.

Mayer told the AP that she wasn't looking to leave Google Inc. when Yahoo first contacted her June 18 about the job.

Her hiring threatens to alienate Levinsohn at a time when he has been steering Yahoo's recent emphasis on producing more original content and highlighting material provided by other media outlets in an effort to persuade its website's 700 million monthly visitors to stick around longer. Recent partnerships include those with ABC News and the financial news channel CNBC.

"Marissa's first order of business should be convincing Levinsohn to stay," Gartner's Weiner said. "If he leaves, there will be an exodus" among the Yahoo employees working on the content for the company's website.

Mayer declined to comment on any discussions she might have planned with Levinsohn.

Even if Levinsohn and his allies leave, Yahoo should still benefit from the connections and reputation that Mayer built during her years at Google, predicted J.P. Morgan analyst Doug Anmuth.

Mayer may "be able to attract more high quality engineering talent to Yahoo, which we think is needed after several years of strategic and leadership flux," Anmuth wrote in a research note late Monday. Yahoo decided to lay off about 2,000 employees, or about 14 percent of its workforce, in April while Thompson was still CEO.

Anmuth also expects Mayer to bring in new managers as she shapes her team. Mayer will be greeted by at least one familiar face on Yahoo's senior management team. While serving as Yahoo's interim CEO, Levinsohn last month lured away another Google executive, Michael Barrett, to be Yahoo's chief revenue officer.

The terms of Mayer's contract weren't spelled out Monday. Mayer is already wealthy from stock options that she got before Google went public in 2004.

Yahoo is set to report its second-quarter earnings Tuesday afternoon, just a few hours after Mayer starts her new job. Those numbers are expected to show Yahoo's revenue growth remains sluggish even though advertisers have been spending more money on the Internet.

Mayer said she intends to skip Yahoo's Tuesday afternoon conference call to discuss the results with stock market analysts so she can start to get a better grasp on the task ahead of her. She already has canceled vacation plans for next month.

"For me work is fun, and fun is work," Mayer said. "I am very excited about the big challenges here, and I can't wait to work on them. It's going to be very, very energizing."

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The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of News 4 WOAI (WOAI.com)

MCampaRamos - 7/19/2012 7:32 AM
0 Votes
im juste sayin you juste cante fire peeple left an righte becos they took a few months of leave due to childbirthe. there are laws in place to protecte thee. you meke a good boss like romney who likes to fire peeple.

trutex - 7/18/2012 7:27 PM
4 Votes
MCR you have been typing your comments in pidgin English for so long now you have apparently forgotten how to read and comprehend plain English. My previous post was a statement of fact, not of law.

MCampaRamos - 7/18/2012 7:01 PM
0 Votes
Show me someone who can just up and take off work for several months and I will show you someone who is not vital to the organization. - truetex did you forgets alreadys whate you type? If you own a BIG business were talkin company thee sizee of a typicale HEB stores for exampel, an you fire somebody becos they had a baby and thate person wore for you for a longs time, you will be in violations of FMLA lawes.

Guest - 7/18/2012 1:04 PM
1 Vote
I don't really care about some rich white blonde lady taking time off or not, but for the rest of us, I am of the old school baptist way of supporting homemaking mothers to raise the kids and the man to make enough to support them both happily not abusively. Too many men these days are selfishly mooching off women letting women support them during their stints between too many of their real professions prison. That happens too often especially in the lower economic homes. Learn a real trade, more women than men graduate college which shouldn't be the case. Engineering is a great paying career, Petroleum Engineering being the highest one UTSA and Texas State need to offer it, if enough people knew what they were missing, they would tell those 2 public universities to catch up to this century already to get some living wage careers around here, Eagle Ford is already happening. Men need to step it up.

trutex - 7/18/2012 12:20 PM
3 Votes
And to what "antic" are you referring, MCR? Oh, you mean the antic of stating facts to PC bureaucrats, politicians and other assorted identity politics misandrists. Also, not quite sure what you mean by "tenured". There is no such thing in the business world that I have ever heard of. You must work in government. Ahh, that explains a lot.

OU812 - 7/18/2012 12:15 PM
4 Votes
@MCampaRamos. I wud get yoor monee back frum huked on fonix!

metalhead - 7/18/2012 9:48 AM
2 Votes
materinty/paternity leave is a good thing. it helps the baby and family as a whole. if a women chooses to work through it, that fine. doesnt matter to me.

210bro - 7/18/2012 7:53 AM
2 Votes
It really doesn't matter who the CEO is for Yahoo!. The company is poised to be taken over or broken up. It's assets are worth double the current stock price. She's just a pretty face until the company is sold, probably to News Corp or Microsoft.

MCampaRamos - 7/17/2012 9:39 PM
2 Votes
truetex if you had a big buisness and you pulled thate kinde of antic becos somebody tenureds had a baby you will get pounded to thee wall by thee feds. Looke up FMLA lawes.

Zhao Kalin - 7/17/2012 8:09 PM
0 Votes
i ASKED me boss to have one week every month where I go insane, and got fired for simply making an inquiry.
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