Technology News

  • 13 May 2012, 18:48

Yahoo's 'bogus degree' boss quits

Yahoo has swept out embattled chief executive Scott Thompson to try to clean up a mess created by an exaggeration about his education that destroyed his credibility as he set out to turn the long-troubled internet company around.

Ross Levinsohn, who oversees Yahoo's content and advertising services, is taking over as interim CEO. He becomes the fourth person to run Yahoo in eight months.

Yahoo hired Mr Thompson, the former head of eBay's PayPal, in January to orchestrate a reversal. Though Yahoo is one of the internet's most-visited websites, the company has struggled to grow in the face of competition from the likes of Google and Facebook.

The company's difficulties have angered investors and Mr Thompson, 54, took the helm as Yahoo's fourth chief executive in less than five years.

Mr Thompson's abrupt exit on Sunday night after just four months in the job was encouraged by Third Point, the activist hedge fund that owns nearly 6% of Yahoo shares. Third Point claimed Mr Thompson had exaggerated his CV with a degree in computer science from Stonehill College.

He did earn an accounting degree from Stonehill, a Catholic school near Boston, in 1979, a fact that Yahoo correctly lists, but did not earn a computer science degree.

Third Point's CEO, Dan Loeb, and two of the hedge fund's other nominees will join the Yahoo board. Five directors who had planned to leave later this year will now leave immediately. Interim CEO Mr Levinsohn is someone that Mr Loeb had suggested for the job. In a statement issued through Yahoo, Mr Loeb said he was "delighted" to join the Yahoo board and promised to "work collaboratively with our fellow directors".

Yahoo gave no official explanation for Mr Thompson's departure, but it was clearly tied to inaccuracies that appeared on his biography on the company's website and in a recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Yahoo dumped its previous CEO, Carol Bartz, in September, disappointed that she had not been able to increase revenue. When Mr Thompson came on board, he made big changes immediately. Co-founder Jerry Yang left the board in January. Mr Thompson announced a reorganisation and planned to lose 2,000 workers, or about 14% of the workforce But Third Point, which had pushed for Mr Yang to leave and applauded Ms Bartz's dismissal, was still not satisfied. On May 3, it issued a press release with what turned out to be an explosive accusation: Mr Thompson had embellished his CV.

Privately, Mr Thompson told his colleagues that he was not responsible for the incorrect information and blamed a Chicago headhunting firm, Heidrick & Struggles. In an internal memo last week, Heidrick & Struggles denied Mr Thompson's accusation. "This allegation is verifiably not true and we have notified Yahoo! to that effect," CEO Kevin Kelly wrote to employees.

what do you think?

3 comments

Michael Jordan

8:29am on 14/5/2012

Number 1- this man has obtained the Yahoo job by exaggeration, it makes me think what else has slipped through the system. Number 2- is there a mechanism for strengthening the system, could it be that Yahoo are in a position for sponsoring that mechanism.

Simon Wheeler

11:20am on 14/5/2012

I dont wanna sound mean but who actually gives a S***. it was clearly a take over by some dodgy hedge fund. If he lied does it matter if he gets the job done. 1979 was very long time ago and for most people except boring old Farts a life time has passed by since then and he's been to that thing called the University of Life and comes with the qualification of QBE. Just a thought. MJ bet you never lied !

Adrian Wagstaff

12:21pm on 14/5/2012

I've spent a week sifting through pages of garbage online apps, most of which do nothing at all except angle towards the neighbours' cars and are in the same colours. The fact that the entire World of computing is probably run by people in suits who have fake qualifications and know absolutely nothing about computing science ... is no surprise to me, whatsoever. This story is very unlikely to be the last of its kind. I very much doubt even CERN, the particle accelerator has ever even measured a single atom or subatomic particle or is even capable of doing so.

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