Analysis of Yahoo's acquisitions under Marissa Mayer

Steven Loeb · February 3, 2014 · Short URL: https://vator.tv/n/34c3

Yahoo likes to swoop in early, picking up seed-stage companies that have raised very little money

The most notable thing about Yahoo under the leadership of Marissa Mayer has been its acquisitions. So many acquisitions!

Sure, all big companies buy up smaller ones. It's the way the ecosystem works. Last year, Facebook bought eight startups, Microsoft bought seven Google and Apple bought 10. Yahoo, however, took it to the extreme. 

Last year alone, it picked up 27 startups. In the first month of this year, it bought another five. Since Mayer took over Yahoo in the summer of 2012, the company has made a total of 37 acquisitions. 

I've covered almost all of these purchases as they happened, but with so many of them it can almost become overwhelming to try to dissect them. Thankfully, CBInsights has now done it for us.

new report, put out on Monday, dove into Yahoo's acquisition strategy, including how much money the startups had raised and what stage they were in when they were purchased.

Funding

Of the 37 companies that Yahoo bought, 14 of them had received no reported funding. For the 23 that did raise some money, the average amount totaled $253 million, with only four having raised over $5 million.

 

Notice that one at the bottom that is over $100 million? That is Tumblr, which Yahoo bought for $1.1 billion in May of last year; it had raised $125 million, almost as much as the three other companies, Xobni,  Qwiki and  IQ Engines, had all raised combined. 

Peeling back Yahoo’s investor-backed acquisitions by funding amount, we see that the large majority raised fewer than $5M prior to exit.  The aforementioned Tumblr was the most well-funded of the bunch and its $125M in total funding was nearly equal to the total funding across all other investor-backed Yahoo acquisitions including Xobni, Qwiki and IQ Engines.

Stage

Since so many of the companies received little to no funding, you probably already could have guessed that a majority of them were in the angel/seed stage when they were acquired, including Stamped, MileWise and GoPollGo.

Only eight of the companies that raised money were a Series A or higher.

On average, Yahoo startups with funding raised just 2.2 rounds prior to acquisition. The average time between first funding and acquisition was 26.5 months.

Geography

No surprise that more than three-quarters, or 78%, of Yahoo’s U.S.-based acquisitions were based in California. That was pretty much a given.

Where did the other 22% come from? Mostly New York, which accounted for 13%, including Stamped and MileWise, and Washington, which made up 6%, including Alike and Sparq.

Investors

Finally, CBInsights broke it down to which investors were the most prolific backers of Yahoo-acquired companies.

The winner is Khosla Ventures, which funded acquired startups that were then bought by Yahoo: Xobni, Incredible LabsSnip.it and  Rockmelt

Andreessen Horowitz, CrunchFund, True Ventures, Spark Capital, Google Ventures, First Round Capital, RRE Ventures, Betaworks and SV Angel each funded at least two of the companies. 

(Image source: https://www.i-mockery.com)

Support VatorNews by Donating

Read more from our "Trends and news" series

More episodes

Related Companies, Investors, and Entrepreneurs

Alike, Inc.

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

alike enables you to use the places you like to find new places you’ll love.

Keywords suck.  First, they are too simplistic.  When you search for a coffee shop a keyword based engine won’t know if you wanted the best java in town or a nearby place to crank out some emails.  Second, they are too vague.  Google returns 12,938 results for coffee shops in San Francisco.  And finally, they are generic – with rankings based on popularity/SEO rather than relevance. None of the current options let you organize results to find what you really want.

The alike engine takes search beyond the keyword to solve this problem.  Using alike anyone can simply enter the name of something they enjoy, alike will identify this ‘entity’, and then alike will provide the user with similar ‘entities’ that they will love.

The alike search engine has developed a semantic understanding of many different entities (places, products, people) and their attributes (locations, cost, reviews, preferences).   

 

Xobni Corporation

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

Xobni offers a new way to organize and search your Outlook email. Xobni creates profiles for each person that emails you. These profiles contain relationship statistics, contact information, social connections, threaded conversations, and shared attachments. Our users tell us that Xobni makes your inbox work the way your mind does.

Snip.it

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

Snip.it collects the best of the Web. It enables consumers to easily “snip” content - videos, images, and articles - and share their opinions with the world.