Skip to main content
Galleries Recent Posts Archives
Tags

AAPL Abuse of Executive Power Acquisitions Addiction Adult ADD Adult Video Convention Advertising Age AIG Airline Travel Alan Greenspan Allen & Co. Amazon american airlines Analog solutions Analysts Andrew Carnegie Anger Annoying Employees Anxiety AOL Apple Archimedes Arjun Murti Armageddon Arnold Schwarzenegger Ask Bing Assistants Augustus Auto Bailout Baby Boomers bad days Bad guys Bailouts Bank Failures Bank of America bank write downs bankers Banking laws Barack Obama Barry Bonds Barry Diller Batman Bear market Bear Stearns Bed Bath & Beyond Ben Franklin Bernanke Bernard Madoff Bert Fingerhut Best Buy Beverly Hilton Big Bad Corporations Big Fish Games Bill Clinton Bill Gates Bill O'Reilly Bing Bing Awards bing recommends Bing Videos Bing's Law bingstuff Bipolar BlackBerry Bloggers Bluetooth Bobby Flay body language bogus dudes Bonds Boneheads Bono Bonuses Book Stores books Boomers Booze Booze in First Class Bosses Boy Scouts Brand Encroachment Brand Loyalty Brazil Brian Greene British Air Britney Britney Spears Brooks Brothers BS Bubbles Bullies Bulls**t Jobs business dinners business ideas Business Language Business Life Business Media Business Stories of the Year business travel Buzzwords Caesar call to action Canada Canon Capitalism Captive Marketing Carat Carbon Footprint Careers Carl Icahn CBS News/NY Times Poll Celebrity Meltdowns Cell phones CEOs CES Character Character Issue Chauncey Gardiner Cheese balls Cheese Logs cheeseburgers Cheryl Crow China Christmas cheer Chrysler Chuck Prince Citibank Citigroup Clone Monkeys Cloud computing CNBC cnnmoney Comment of the day Complisults Computer geekery computers Confidence games Congress Conspiracies Consultants Consumer Confidence Consumer Electronics Show Consumerism conventions Corporate Apologies corporate culture Corporate Retreats Corporate Sanity cost of housing Costco Countrywide coyotes Crazy Bosses Creative Capitalism credit cards Credit Suisse crooks (alleged) cubicles Cutbacks Dalai Lama David Beckham David Geffen Davos dead cat bounce Debt Dee Dee Myers Democrats Dennis Levine Depression Depression (emotional) Derivatives Designer Stubble Diabetes Dictator of the Week Diets digital elph Digital solutions to analog problems Digital Transition Dracula Drinking Drunken Excess Duke Nukem Dumbest Moments Dummies E-Mail E.U.R. E3 EBay Economic analysis Economic Imperialism Economic Meltdown Economic Stimulus Economic Trends Economics Economists Edith Piaf Edward Liddy electronic communications Eliot Spitzer Elvis in Business Elvis! Emeril Employee Dementia eOnline Equity Eric Schmidt Erin Callan Euphemisms Excel Excellence Excessive Exit Packages Excuses Executive Compensation Executive Dementia Executricks Exits and Entrances F. Scott Fitzgerald Fables Facebook Fannie Mae Fascist Architecture Fashion Father's Day Fathers FEMA's response to hurricane Katrina Fidel Castro Financial Times Firing People Flight Attendants Ford Ford and Chrysler Foreign Investment Fox News Franklin D. Roosevelt Freddie Mac Free Market Capitalism Fried Chicken Frivolous lawsuits FUBAR Fungibility G20 Summit G7 Galleries Game Theory Gas Mileage gas prices Geithner Gen-X Gen-Y Gen-Zero General Electric General Motors Genghis Khan Geoff Colvin George Soros George W. Bush George Washington Georgetown Getting a raise Global solutions Global Warming Gluten GM God Goldman Sachs Good Guys Good News in Bad Times Goodwill Goofing Off Google Google Alerts Government Accountability Office Grammar Gray Goose Martini Greed Greedy Banks Greenware Grocery Stores Hamburgers Hank Greenberg Hans Christian Anderson Happy Trends Hardware Stores Harry Potter Harvard Business School Harvard Community Health Plan Harvard Graphics Harvey Weinstein Health Care Health Plans Heart Disease Heath Ledger Hedge Fund Managers Hedge Funds Heidi Klum Henry Clay Frick Henry Ford Henry Schleiff heparin Herb Allen Highlights for Children Hitler HMOs Holiday Cards Holiday Cheer Holiday Parties Holiday Shopping Season Home Depot Honda (HMC) Hope Horrendous Blunders Hot dogs hot nuts House Republicans How to Get A Promotion Howard Hughes Human Genome Human Misery Human Resources Hyenas IBM Ideas for Warren Buffett IHOP Illegal Firing of Attorneys General Immigration Impostors Inauguration Inc. inflation Information in the Digital Realm Information Overload Insourcing inspirational stories Insurance Companies Interest Rate Cuts International Project Managers Association Investment Advice Investment banks Investment Trends IPhone IPod IQ Iran ITT ITunes J.P. Morgan Jack Welch Jamie Dimon January 1 Japan Japanese Corporations Jargon Jerks Jerry Levin Jerry Yang JetBlue JFK Job Interviews Joe Armstrong Joe Mama Joe Sixpack Joe the Plumber John Dvorak John Ford John Keats John Mackey John McCain John Stewart John Thain John Wayne Johnny Walker Black Johnny Walker Red Jon & Kate Josef Stalin Journalism JP Morgan Chase JPMorgan Chase Karl Rove Karoshi Kazaa Ken Lewis Kenneth Lay King Kong Kiplinger Kurasawa LA stuff Labor Day Lame Ideas Larry Craig Larry Page Las Vegas Layoffs Lehman Bros. Leonard Cohen Leopard OS Leverage LG Lindsay Lohan LinkedIn litigation Local Business London Lord Voldemort Los Angeles Love at the Office Loyalty Lying Mac Air Macadamia Nuts MacBook Air Macbook Pro mache Machiavelli Macy's malware Managing Up maniacal Marcus Aurelius Marilyn Monroe Marketing Marketing breakthroughs Marketing In Your Face Marshall Field's Martha Stewart Marvel Comics Mass hysteria Mass Media Massive writedowns Materialism Maxim Magazine Maybach MBIA MBWA McCain McClatchey McDonald's McKinsey Mean Bosses Media mediabistro.com Medical impact of bad management Medicare Meerkat Gang Sculpture Meeting Narcolepsy Memorial Day Mergers Merrill Lynch Michael's Microsoft Microsoft Bing Microsoft Outlook Mike the Headless Chicken Misogyny MIT Mitch McConnell MMORPGs Mob Behavior Modest Proposals Moguls Monday Morning Monetization monetizing celebrity Monetizing the Internet Monster.com Motivational Issues Mountain bikes Murphy Bed Mussolini MySpace Nano Technology Napster Narcissists National Boss's Day National Bureau of Economic Research NATPE Netscape new year's New Year's Resolutions New York Nigeria Nigerian 419 scam nightmares Nintendo Non-Fungibility Obama Obesity obnoxious spam Occupational Hazards Oil prices Olestra on the road Oprah optimism Organization theory Organizational Life OS X 10.5 OS X Leopard Osama Bin Laden OSHA outsourcing Overused words Panasonic Panic Panic of 1819 Paranoia Paris Hilton parsley Paul Krugman Paulson Pay Cap Payback PCs Peeves Perp walks Personal Injury Lawyers Personal Integrity Pessimists Petaluma pets Physician's Desk Reference planes Pogo Poisoned Toothpaste Politics Pontiac Ponzi Schemes Possible solutions to air travel crises Post-Bailout Letdown Post-Christmas slump Powerpoint PR Kudo of the Day prayers President for Life of Turkmenistan President Obama Pretentious Buttheads price of automobiles price of gasoline Price of Oil Pricing Productivity Prognostications Propaganda Public Disgrace Public Relations Pundits putters Quality Question of the Day Quizzes Quote of the Day Rabbits on the golf course Rachael Ray Rampant consumerism Random Acts of Spending Reader Bulls**t Jobs Reader Crazy Bosses Reader Wisdom real estate speculation Real Estate Values Reality TV Recession Recession Skills Recovery Regulatory Policy Republicans Restricted Share Units retail Richard Fuld Richard Gere Richard Nixon Rick Wagoner Right brain function Ring Tone Abuse ritual sacrifice RLS Robert Nardelli Robotics Rock Hard Abs Rod Blagojevich Roma Ron Perelman Root Canal Russian Vodka Salarymen Sam Zell San Francisco Santa Claus Saparmurat Niyazov 1940 -- 2006 savings vs. spending Savvy investments in a down market scandals Scapegoats Scary Bosses Scary Trends Scott McClellan Search Engines SEC Second Life Second thoughts Security Analysts Self-Inflicted Injuries Self-Interest Self-Promotion Senate Republicans Sergey Brin Severance Sex Shakespeare Shoichi Nakagawa Short sellers Side Effects Silver Linings Sir Isaac Newton SkyMall Small Pleasures Snafus Snail Mail social networking Socialist solutions to capitalist problems Sony Sony Playstation 3 South Park Sovereign Wealth Funds Spandex speeches spying Stalin Stan O'Neal Stanford Stanley Bing Starbuck's Steve Ballmer Steve Jobs Steve Kroft Steve Ratner Steven Seagal Stimulus package stinky coworker Stock Market Stock Options Stock Pick of the Day Strategies Stress Stress Test Stupid Contests Stupid deals Stupid moves Stupid Surveys Sub-Prime Loans Sudoku Summer Vacation Sun Valley Super Bowl Super Tuesday Superfluous Information Surveys Swine Flu System Administrators T.M.I. Target tax evasion Taxes technoid drivel Ted Casablanca TGIF Thanksgiving The 3:10 to Yuma The Associated Press The Black Crowes the blame game The Collared Peccary The Death of Retail The Dollar The Economist The economy The end of the world The Euro The Fall of Rome The Fantastic Four The Fed The Four Seasons The Four Seasons bar the Hope Bubble The Housing Market The Killer Quotient The Kindle The Media The Meltdown The National Mood The New York Times The Oscars The Rudeness Police The Silver Surfer The Stock Market The Tata The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire The Value of Money the War in Iraq the weather Things I Want You To Do Things That Are Gone Tibet Time Warner Time Zone Meltdown Timothy Geithner TMZ Toasty Christmas Tales Todd Purdham Tom Peters Top Performing Stocks Toxic Assets Toyota Matrix Toyota Prius Traffic Trends Trollope Tropical Fish Truth tuna fish Turkey turnaround Twinkies Twitter UAW UBS Uncategorized Uncontrollable Urges Unemployment Unfriendly takeovers Unions United Airlines United Fruit Unnecessary spending unwelcome marketing intrusions into daily existence Urban Legends Vacation Value of the Dollar Vampire Zombies Vanity Fair Venture Capitalists Verizon Verne Troyer Virtual Economy Wachovia Wal-Mart Wall Street Walt Kelly WaMu War in Iraq Warcraft Warren Buffet Warren Buffett Warren Spector Washington Mutual Waste Management Wealth Web Madness Weird Things We Eat Welfare Westinghouse Wetware Wharton What Your Boss Expects of You Whistling past the graveyard Who Is To Blame Whole Foods Wikipedia Woody Allen Work Life Initiative Work-related injuries Working From Home www.bracketsmackdown.com XBox 360 Yahoo YouTube Zen

comment Email     comment Subscribe

News that Carl Icahn will be joining the board of Yahoo (YHOO) is clearly good news for everybody involved. One can only imagine the sense of eager anticipation with which Jerry Yang and his fellow board members are anticipating the arrival of the “activist investor.” 

I put the phrase “activist investor” in quotes because it’s something of a euphemism, sort of like “freedom fighter” when used in association with the word “Afghanistan.”

Be that as it may, I’m sure there is nothing but smiles and capitalist fist-bumping going on in the streets and corridors of Sunnyvale, where Mr. Icahn’s insights into the daily management of the Yahoo business organization will, I am sure, be most welcome, as will be the pleasure of his affable and reticent company.

Sometimes when an important visitor or new associate comes to call, it’s tough to figure out how to prepare for the great event. Here are a few thoughts on how Mr. Yang and his associates might work it out:

  1. As a statement on how seriously Mr. Icahn takes the various strategic options facing the company, fellow board members could don conical caps with elastic chin straps and greet his arrival with the tooting of little paper horns. Confetti will be optional.
  2. As an expression of fiscal restraint, lunch should be served on paper plates. Plastic spoons and forks are advisable. While Spam is not required, mid-shelf cold cuts should suffice.
  3. In recognition of Mr. Icahn’s expertise as an operating executive, every piece of paper generated by the company’s various segments should be deposited in a polite pile by his seat. A subsequent meeting should be set up immediately to glean wisdom based on his command of the details.
  4. During all board meetings, an open conference call line should be established between the Yahoo board room and the office of Microsoft (MSFT) CEO Steve Ballmer in Redmond, Washington, to avoid confusion and lack of clarity in subsequent communications.
  5. While it is almost certain that Mr. Icahn, with limited experience with the Internet and its many challenges, will take a low profile at board meetings, management and the existing board should make sure to listen carefully to anything the new member has to say, in the unlikely event he is moved to speak on any given issue, and to avoid the impulse to blurt imprecations. A fresh perspective from a smart source untarnished by jaded experience is always valuable.
  6. Under no circumstances should Mr. Icahn or any of his associates be offered any financial incentive to go away. This would obviously be a highly insulting move, since he has joined the board as an activist dedicated to the well-being of fellow Yahoo shareholders everywhere and by no means for personal lucre.

Those are just some initial thoughts. I’m sure Mr. Yang and his team are coming up with more and better ones even as we speak.

7. Expanding its board by adding one more person: Steve Ballmer.

(One of the reasons for no one else having made a comment is that this comment window is poorly constructed: it is fixed in size and if the font is not chosen to be the smallest, one doesn’t even see the “SEND YOUR COMMENT” button!!!

Posted By Mydad, Cerritos, CA : July 22, 2008 12:33 pm

8. All board members should be aware that the other two new board members joining with Mr. Icahn are Lucky Eddie and Vinnie the Fish.

9. In this modern era, Board members are encouraged to switch from low-tech cotton and wool suits to something more casual made from Kevlar or any other ballistic and flame retardant materials. However, retro attire is also appropriate for board meetings. Especially chic are TWA captain’s hats. In keeping with this aeronautical theme, golden parachutes, as always, are highly encouraged.

(He may only have 5% of the stock but he’s already got 3 seats, which is half of the six he needs to take control of the board.)

Posted By Ivan, Washington, DC : July 22, 2008 3:51 pm

A “MOGUL” is dipicted as somewhat of a “GLADIATOR” at times; when in fact, the gladiator in Roman days entertained the mogul with his weapons and overwhelming strength to fight street people and, or, animals.

A mogul has autocratic control over his organization. Looking as though he was responsible for the entire construction or reconstruction of it, he is no more than a replaceable officer and spokesperson.

The model of a mogul that I respect is that of “JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER” When mentioned to him that he is very smart to put such a conglomerate together, he replied: “I’M NOT SO SMART, BUT I HAVE A LOT OF SMART PEOPLE WORKING FOR ME”!

In effect, Rockefeller, for the wealth bestowed upon him, gave credit to the people who created the wealth they all enjoy.

Posted By Bob Shelby Twp. Mi. : July 22, 2008 6:41 pm

Yhoooey blew the microsoft deal and I-can is there to administer a spanking.Nothing like having somebody poking a stick in the old campfire ashes to see if they can rekindle the fire. No I don’t think I-can should get any compensation to leave, rather he should be paid to stay and remind the shareholders of the deal they blew.

Posted By Jack Hammond Canada : July 22, 2008 10:50 pm

Yahoo hates microsoft. There should be a celebrity deathmatch between Ballmer and Yang, and Icahn should be the Don King promoting both fighters. If I was Yang I would have stuck it to Microsoft too. Yahoo’s stock has dropped since then but it is foolish to think the company is just going to “go away.” It may take time for Yahoo to recover their losses, but for crying out loud they are the number two man in the market. Google may be creaming them now, but I’m sure all this publicity isn’t hurting Yahoo. I applaud Yang’s decision because he was likely looking at the long term implications here. In five years from now what if yahoo is at 75 bucks a share. Then everyone will be calling Yang a genius for not selling to Ballmer. People need to stop looking at markets myopically. Anyone who is going for short term profit in this environment is insane. I think yahoo will do fine in the long term and maybe even in the mid-term.

Posted By Josh, Tucson, Az : July 24, 2008 8:04 pm

what gives bing? your article didn’t show up on the website.

Posted By Josh, Tucson, Az : August 18, 2008 9:54 pm

Have you mastered your executricks?
Are you enjoying the perks of executive life, while working only when absolutely essential? Take this quiz to find out if you're an accomplished trickster.
Stanley Bing
Stanley Bing is a Fortune columnist and best-selling author of business books noted for their wisdom as well as their sharp, slightly acrid sense of humor. He is also the only writer on business and the workplace who still puts on a suit and tie and goes to do battle with the dragons that breathe fire at corporate America every day. This blog captures what remains of his brain after it has exploded in all other directions.