Yahoo Inc. and eBay Inc. are doing the right thing with the partnership they announced Thursday, but the impression is that they are running scared.
Industry experts have said for years that Yahoo and eBay could help each other in key areas via a strong partnership like
the one they announced Thursday, in which they will cooperate on search technology and advertising and share revenue in the
U.S.
However, by doing it now, they're giving the impression they acted out of fear of their competitors, namely Google Inc.
"There's no question that this is a significant partnership, but it seems reactive," says Allen Weiner, a Gartner Inc. analyst.
"It's anti-climactic, because we've been waiting for years. If they had done this two or three years ago, they would have
done it from a position of strength."
Yet observers agree that it's better late than never and that Yahoo and eBay have outlined a smart collaboration plan that,
if properly executed, should yield positive results. And some think it's likely the partnership will be broadened later.
"It's not earth-shattering, but this could be a first step. I think there will be ongoing collaboration in their research
and development," says Philip Remek, a Guzman & Co. financial analyst.
The deal did fall short of previous rumors that one of the parties would buy a stake in the other, or that they would merge.
For Yahoo, the biggest coup is becoming eBay's exclusive provider of graphical and sponsored search ads. Despite heavy investments,
Yahoo remains a distant second to Google in search.
It should be very attractive to Yahoo advertisers to appear on eBay pages, because eBay users are by definition online shoppers.
EBay, of course, will get a commission from Yahoo. This is the first time eBay will allow a third-party provider to deliver
these types of ads to its pages, a spokeswoman says. So far, it has handled ad sales in house, but it will stop doing so once
Yahoo steps in. Obviously, it's a big loss for Google and Microsoft to have the ads from their networks kept out of eBay.
The blow is especially tough for Microsoft, whose new adCenter needs to build credibility.
Happily for Google, at least eBay didn't agree to market its services and listings exclusively on the Yahoo network. "Such
a move would not be in the best interest of eBay, considering Google's dominance in search and the traffic Google delivers
to eBay's site," says Dustin Rector, an analyst with Tier1 Research, in a research note.
Meanwhile, eBay will boost the use of its PayPal online payment service through the agreement to make it the exclusive third-party
provider of Yahoo's online wallet. Users can store their credit card, shipping and billing information in the Yahoo Wallet
for online shopping and for paying for Yahoo services. Yahoo has also pledged to heavily promote PayPal across its network
and among its merchants and advertisers. "That has been a focus for eBay in recent months: to get PayPal featured on major
online merchant sites," Remek says.
Tighter PayPal integration will give Yahoo the full-featured micropayment mechanism it lacks, and which it needs to further
boost its fee-based business, which is growing but is still much smaller than its advertising revenue, Weiner says.
Moreover, this PayPal collaboration puts eBay in a better position to fend off any future threat from budding online listings
services such as the fledgling Google Base and Microsoft's Windows Live Expo, now in beta, Weiner says.