April 16, 2008 11:12 PM PDT

A hidden Yahoo acquisition cost for Microsoft

Microsoft's attempt to acquire Yahoo is expensive, but there could be a significant other expense for the software maker: retention bonuses.

Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer publicly discussed these payments to keep Yahoo employees from leaving, saying that "we intend to offer significant retention packages to your engineers, key leaders, and employees across all disciplines." But The New York Times on Wednesday dug out a number that puts the retention bonus factor into perspective.

Specifically, the paper said Microsoft's acquisition of Tellme Networks, a deal valued at about $800 million, was supplemented by a further $100 million to retain employees.

There are major cultural and technology differences between Yahoo and Microsoft that would complicate integration and make retention bonuses more necessary. But Tellme Networks Chief Executive Mike McCue said Ballmer had become sensitive to at least one technology aspect of integration.

When McCue asked whether Tellme would have to move its software from Sun Microsystems' Solaris version of Unix to Windows, Ballmer replied, "No, no, we've learned our lesson," McCue recounted to the Times. That could be a reference to the long and arduous transition of Hotmail from FreeBSD Unix to Windows after Microsoft acquired the e-mail service.

That could be music to Yahoo ears, since the company uses open-source software extensively rather than Microsoft's products.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 8 comments
Microsoft Buying Yahoo
by bradbrooklee April 17, 2008 12:42 AM PDT
I will drop Yahoo like a hot potato if Microsux buys it. I nearly dropped them after the Chinese fiasco that placed a man behind bars, probably for life for talking about China. If M$ gets a hold of Yahoo, I'm gone.
Reply to this comment View all 3 replies
"Learned out Lesson-" LOL
by dbargen April 17, 2008 6:16 AM PDT
Yes, they learned that their OS is not built on standards or is nearly
as stable/secure as BSD UNIX, so they'd better not put them side-
by-side, lest they look even worse than usual.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Training employees
by Hernys April 17, 2008 9:01 AM PDT
Employee training is something you have to do wether you acquire employees through normal hiring or through an acquisition, so it is not a "hidden" cost of the aquisition, it is a normal cost of growing.
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