By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times
09/27/01 10:26 AM PT
Yahoo! said its videoconferencing services offer a low-cost alternative
to business travel for meetings.
In a move apparently timed to capitalize on a slowdown in business travel,
Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO) unveiled a service Thursday that
will provide corporations with Internet broadcasting capabilities.
Yahoo! Broadcast Services are designed to replace face-to-face meetings for business
conferences, sales meetings and trade shows.
The conference services will allow "companies to continue vital communications that
were centered around large scale meetings, and maintain critical and focused outreach to
customers, sales forces and business partners," said Yahoo! senior vice president James
Fanella.
Fanella noted that business travel has been severely curtailed in the wake of the
September 11th terrorist attacks on the U.S., in which four hijacked planes were crashed
in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania.
Many apparently expect the travel woes to continue, as stocks in the
videoconferencing industry were among those to see
gains when the stock markets re-opened following the attacks.
Rapid Deployment
Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo! said its services can be deployed rapidly and offer a
low-cost alternative to travel and meeting planning.
The offerings will initially include the "virtual conference," which offers the ability to
make presentations and interact with distant audiences. For example, audiences will be
able to submit questions and respond to polls during the meetings.
The second service, the "executive communication center," is being promoted as a way to
quickly communicate with far-flung audiences, such as employees or shareholders.
Yahoo! said it will have employees on call 24 hours a day, enabling them to receive and
prepare video transmissions for re-broadcast within four hours.
Adjusting Focus
Yahoo!, which slipped from profitability to fiscal losses as the market for online
advertising slumped, has been relentlessly expanding its reach in an effort to decrease
its dependence on advertising.
This month, the portal unveiled an
e-book sales site
that will be run in conjunction with several leading publishing houses.
Yahoo! has also announced it will host the Web site of
soccer's World Cup, and that it is also going to create and host a Web site for Sony
(NYSE: SNE) under a sweeping deal
with the entertainment and electronics company.
Many of Yahoo's efforts have been aimed at the corporate market and seek to leverage the
Internet media company's expertise in Web hosting, design and technical issues.
Yahoo! Gets World Cup Contract September 12, 2001
The Web site for the last World Cup, France98.com,
registered 1.1 billion page views during the event.
Yahoo! Joins With Publishers for E-Book Site September 05, 2001
By most accounts, e-books need help finding their way to the mainstream,
because as yet, consumers have only been mildly curious.
More by Keith Regan
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