by David Heyerman on January 11, 2009

- With CES last week, and the Detroit Auto Show to come, the tech scene, especially the cleantech scene has been bubbling with news, whether it be positive or negative. There’s been a lot of talk about energy infrastructure investment to come in 2009, and one sector sure to benefit from this investment is cleantech automotive. The economy should benefit tremendously as near 280,000 jobs could be created with the deployment of a smart grid in 2009.
- Toyota – Because of a snag in the battery pack, Toyota will be pulling their plug-in Prius from the Detroit Auto Show next week. DIY’s need not worry, there are plenty of kits out there. With production slowing down seriously, the company has also begun lowering salaries of its Japanese employees.
- Aptera – Like previously mentioned, Aptera’s promised end-of-2008 delivery date didn’t happen but turns out it’s way worse than expected. We’re not talking a couple months delay here, an official letter from the Google.org backed company explains that volume production won’t come until October 2009. Great job, as Fambro and Musk high-five!
- Mazda – This might be the most impressive green car development yet in 2009. Currently catalytic converters are very expensive due to the amount of precious metals (platinum, rhodium) used in their production, however are incredibly important because of their emission reductions. The company just developed a new manufacturing process for catalytic converters that will cut the amount of precious metals by 70% in their 2010 Mazda3. Hats off Mazda, maybe you won’t live the rest of your life in Japanese car manufacturer mediocrity.
- Nissan – Straight off an electric network partnership with Switzerland, Nissan’s back at again, this time with a battery announcement. Nissan and NEC plan to invest $1.1 Billion into a the production of 200,000 high-capacity electric vehicle batteries. Only problem, the investment will be made by 2011 or later.
- Dodge – Pictured above is the new Dodge EV to be name the Circuit. The electric car is to be unveiled next week at the Detroit Auto Show.
- Ener1 – Lithium-ion vehicle battery producer Ener1 is looking for some government cash as they apply for $480 million in low-interest loans from the Advanced Technology Vehicle Manufacturing Incentive Program (ATVMIP). Tesla is asking for $400 million from the same program.
- Stay tuned for updates as the announcements roll in from Detroit. Already we’ve seen leaks from Chrysler with their new 200C extended-range EV, Toyota with their full electric FT-EV, and Ford promising a pure electric by 2011.
by Jason Wilk on December 8, 2008

- Yahoo is to begin their long awaited layoffs this Wednesday. The number is expected to be at least 1,500 people, however some analysts are projecting as many as 2,000.
- Areas expected to get the boot: General, human resources, finance and advertising will take the biggest hit. Sales, programming and business development staff are all expected to stick around.
- Sources inside Yahoo say that they will exercise the Calacanis strategy of ‘fire them quick, don’t let the fear linger around the office’. Once the first person is laid off, the rest are expected to come within a few hours of eachother. To assist with the big layoffs, security will be present to help escort any upset staff. Mind you, in this bad economy, many will not want to go easy considering the struggling job market.
- Many will look to Yang as the one to blame for the layoffs. He is the one who originally initiated the layoffs and is still holding the head seat on the day of the firings. He say’s to CNET “I look at these cuts as both a short-term and long-term effort. In the short term, we have consolidation and organizational corrections to make. In the long term, we will look at our whole portfolio and are now asking ourselves in each case if we need to be in this business. We’re asking ourselves–should we sell it or should we shut it down? That is the kind of comprehensive look we are doing across the company.”
- Speculation is that this will be the week that a successor to Yang will take over as CEO. It would have been bad practice to name the new director to do the firings. One of the current executives John Chapple, Maggie Wilderotter or Frank Biondi Jr. are expected to take over temporarily within days after the firings to represent a feeling of ‘change’ around the office and inspire new hope for the future while they continue to search for a good fit.
- Although this will initially look bad for Yahoo on the day of the firings, it represents a new day for Yahoo. The stock will remain stable through the firings and will continue to look for a big day as they near making the final decision on a new CEO. The day Yang is succeeded will be a big day for shareholders. There is still rumors that ex-AOL CEO Jonathan Miller is planning something with Yahoo.
by Jason Wilk on December 1, 2008

- ValueClick, the holding company that controls major advertising/shopping properties Mediaplex, Comission Junction and PriceRunner, is on the fritz. Big time.
- Display advertising is one of the ValueClick’s biggest revenue drivers, which at the moment is the least economical ways for advertisers to spend their money due to low CTR, high bounce rates and often immeasurable demographic metrics.
- All of Internet advertising is taking a hit though. Google saw a major drop in their stock when they pulled back their earnings forecasts this week, while ValueClick has seen their stock drop to $5.42 from a high of $29.97 this year. Ouch.
- This isn’t all ValueClick is worried about. The Google Affiliate Network is quickly becoming the largest CPA advertising network in the world over Commission Junction, a profitable asset for ValueClick. Google is already gaining speed and as soon as they integrate analytics for publishers, it will be over for ValueClick affiliate marketing.
- Lastly, their PriceRunner comparison shopping search still has momentum in Europe, but back home they are a second thought, even more so now with people’s wallets closing shut from the financial crisis.
- Their market cap is down 60% this year to $474M. Watch out for even further falling prices. We called this drop off in October, since then their stock price has fell significantly.
- In related news, Sam Paisley, their former head of M&A has already left for SpotRunner.
Is it possible ValueClick will be the first major tech stock to bite the dust?
A tiny exclusive
by Jason Wilk on November 25, 2008

- Market share results in the search game came in yesterday.
- Google’s growth rate slowed in October to 29.9 percent, while Yahoo’s and Microsoft’s came off the flat line.
- Yahoo’ s U.S. search volume grew 7.7 percent (up 0.6) and Microsoft’s grew 4.2 percent (up 1.2).
- Together they still only account for 29 percent of U.S. search market share, but what if Microsoft’s secret Kumo project were to be the project that would result out of a Yahoo acquisition).
- Keep LiveSearch as a CashBack incentive search program and continue to increase lead generation money for shopping and travel destinations. Let Yahoo operate it’s search homepage and powerful content properties. Launch Kumo as a Google search competitor, sell ads across all three destinations, increase market share with another brand and slowly creep up on Google. Launch Kumo with LiveOffice products, better mail, and many Yahoo BOSS API elements. I’m not saying this will 100% work, I’m saying if I were doing business development for Microsoft, I would be pushing hard for this to happen.
TC
by John Jorgensen on November 25, 2008

- AdBrite CEO Iggy Fanlo predicts that within 6 months, half of their ad inventory will be sold on a cost-per-click (CPC) basis instead of cost-per-impression (CPM).
- AdBrite serves 25 BILLION ad impressions per month across 85,000 sites. Average CPM is between 50 cents and $2.
- This isn’t surprising. CPM ads have been generally looked upon to serve a brand awareness function, creating an ROI that is near impossible to track. Direct-response CPC is much more straightforward.
- AdBrite laid off 40% of their staff in October.
TC