What lured Yahoo's new CEO Marissa
Mayer away from Google
SAN FRANCISCO: Yahoo
lured Marissa Mayer from Google with a lavish pay package that could total $129
million over five years - if she is able to get the company growing.
Yahoo disclosed details of its new chief executive's compensation package in a
regulatory filing on Thursday. It is larger than the pay package of the average
chief executive in Silicon Valley, but not the largest among chiefs of publicly
held technology companies.
Tim Cook, Apple's chief executive, has a compensation package valued at $378
million in salary, bonus and stock award that vests over 10 years. His annual
base salary is $900,000.
Mayer's pay package is higher than that of Meg Whitman, her counterpart at Hewlett-Packard.
When HP hired Whitman as its chief executive, it offered her a $1 salary and
stock options valued at $16.1 million that she cannot exercise unless HP's
stock meets certain targets by October 2013. She will also get a $6 million
annual bonus if all goes well.
Mayer's former boss at Google, Larry Page, receives only $1 in annual salary.
But as a co-founder of the company, he owns more than 26.2 million shares of
Google stock, which, at Thursday's closing price of $593.06 a share, is worth
about $15.5 billion.
Mayer's package includes a $1 million annual base salary and a bonus of up to
$4 million a year, depending on the company's performance. She will receive $12
million in the form of a stock payment this year - half of it in restricted
stock, the remainder in options - and comparable awards in subsequent years.
Yahoo will also give her a one-time "retention equity award" worth
$30 million that vests over five years.
Google never had to disclose Mayer's salary because she was not one of the
highest-compensated executives at the company, although she was one of the most
visible. But to make up for what she left on the table at Google, Yahoo said it
would pay her a one-time "make whole" stock grant of $14 million.
"It's big," said Colin Gillis, an analyst at BGC Partners. "But
Yahoo is a multibillion-dollar company. If she can create value, it's a small
percentage. If she doesn't, she'll join a long succession of Yahoo CEOs with
sizable pay packages who did not add value."
Yahoo offered Mayer more than it had her immediate predecessors, Scott Thompson
and Carol Bartz. It offered Thompson a $1 million base salary and stock grants
worth about $22.5 million. He left four months into the job, without severance,
amid accusations that he had exaggerated his credentials on his resume, but he
managed to keep $7 million in cash and stock grants that had already vested.
When Bartz joined Yahoo in 2009, the company offered her a $1 million salary
and stock and cash grants worth $19 million, plus options worth 5 million
shares that exercised at $11.73.
Mayer, known for holding extravagant parties, collecting expensive art and
wearing designer gowns, does not lack for money. As Google's 20th employee, she
made millions in Google stock while running its search business and overseeing
successful products like Gmail and Google Maps.
Sony
Ericsson fined Rs 34,500 for defective mobile
A panel of the Central District Consumer Disputes Redressal
Forum has ordered Sony Ericsson to pay Rs 34,500 to a customer. Along with the
total cost of the defective phone (Rs 24,500), the bench directed the company
to pay the Delhi-based complainant Rs 7,000 as compensation for harassment and
Rs 3,000 as legal costs. The panel also ordered the retailer who sold the
defective handset to the consumer not to store "hazardous good" in
the future.
The customer, Neeraj Arora, had filed a complaint in the consumer court, saying
that the Sony Ericsson phone (model U1i) he purchased in July 2010 did not
perform well since the beginning and used to 'hang-up'. When he submitted the
device for repairs, its ringer ceased to work abruptly. The retailer, which
also operated as an authorised service centre for Sony Ericsson, was unable to
fix the defects in the handset, said Arora.
The bench, headed by B B Chaudhary, ruled, "We hold that the complainant
(Arora) who had purchased the mobile handset of Sony Ericsson, a brand name in
the market, from opposite party 2 (retail shop) has established that the
opposite parties 1 and 2 (Sony Ericsson and the retail shop) are guilty of
selling the defective goods. A consumer cannot be asked to remain at the mercy
of service provider in the era of consumers-friendly environment."
The forum gave its decision against the manufacturer and the retailer since neither
of them appeared in spite of being subpoenaed. It said that they failed to
resolve the customer's concerns, even though it was their duty.