Showing posts with label Yahoo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yahoo. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Yahoo! to improve Yahoo Mail Service. Project Codename: Minty!


It looks like Yahoo has finally woken up to the fact that its mail service is on a downward spiral at the moment. This is evident from the fact that this fall Yahoo Mail will be revamped. Yahoo! not only aims to bring in more users with this much needed facelift but also plans to improve browsing experience on slow connections.
The new Yahoo mail project is code-named (and quite appropriately too!) ‘Minty’, will improve the web based email service. The Wall Street Journal reports that the new Yahoo Mail will look like the iPad and Android versions of the service. Yahoo is also reportedly looking at a sleeker design and improved integration with social networking websites.
new yahoo email Yahoo! to improve Yahoo Mail Service. Project Codename: Minty!
And these changes may be necessary for Yahoo to make sure that it does not lose ground to either Gmail or Hotmail. Though Yahoo leads the both of them by more than a country mile in the US, the number of total Yahoo users has been going down, as has been reported by a ComScore study. Yahoo has lost about 10 million users in the period of one year, while worldwide; it has lost 7% of its user-base.
In the same period Hotmail has gained 3% and Gmail has gained a whopping 22%, more users than last year. But these numbers are not the only source of worry for Yahoo.
It has been reported that people in US spend more time on Facebook than Yahoo and Gmail. So there is a threat from these social networking services, which allow users to communicate without the need for email.
Instead of trying to combat the tide, Yahoo has taken the wise option of riding with it. The company is having a partnership with Facebook, to give Mail users the power to update Facebook status from a Yahoo inbox.
And then Yahoo has to address the rise of smartphones powered by Google’s Android, which usually are preloaded with Gmail. Android apps for Yahoo Mail and Messenger have been launched very recently and their impact is not yet known fully.
So, it looks like a lot depends on this ‘Minty’ update!

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Yahoo Points the Way to the ‘Social Inbox’

Email was a huge innovation when it became widely available more than 10 years ago. It changed the way people communicated in both business and personal settings. And of course it radically changed the way businesses communicated with customers and prospective customers.
But the platform itself has not changed much in that time. Most email inboxes today look more or less the same way they did 10 years ago. Specifically, they follow a “last in-on top” hierarchy (though users have long had the ability to sort in other ways) and they mix all the classes of email together. At any given moment you can look into your inbox and have a note from a friend next to a CNN news alert next to a free shipping offer from J. Crew. And that doesn’t even take into account the corporate stuff.
And while this design was not necessarily intentional, it had a huge benefit for marketers. A user going to the inbox to check for email from friends and family will stumble across some (hopefully) great offers from marketers.
But now we are starting to see shifts in the way large mailbox providers construct the inbox experience, mostly in response to the loss of eyeball share from social networking sites — where an increasingly large share of person-to-person messaging is occurring. Dubbed “the social inbox” by industry pundits, these innovations focus on including social networking features (like status updates) within the inbox and also make it easier to find and respond to messages from friends and family.
The most recent foray into the trend came from Yahoo, which unveiled changes to its mail interface. The new UI features a “What’s new” tab that is displayed by default when you log in. This tab shows unread email from contacts (meaning any email address in your Yahoo address book) and connections (meaning people you are connected to through Yahoo). And, as part of an earlier update, the inbox also gives users filtering options for viewing email. You can now view “all” email, email just from contacts, or email just from connections.
Meanwhile, the “What’s New” tab includes other social media features like status updates from connections and contacts (people in the address book) from Flicker, Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and more. You can read more about these changes — and see screen shots — at the Yahoo mail blog.
What should email marketer do in the wake of these changes? I see three key takeaways:
Change is the new constant: Mailbox UIs are probably going to change more frequently. There will be more innovation as Yahoo continues to iterate, and other large mailbox providers try their version of the social inbox. You are going to have to learn to adapt — quickly.
Engagement has a whole new meaning: Being a “contact” is more important than it used to be at Yahoo. In the past, “add to address book” has largely been a deliverability tactic. It now becomes more important at Yahoo. Perhaps it will become more important at other mailbox providers. What are you going to do to make it worth the subscriber’s while to add you as a contact? What value are you creating?
Friends with benefits: In addition to being in the address book, it may be that certain types of “friending” or “following” or “connecting” will also be important. Again, the same question: What can you offer Yahoo subscribers and others to make it worth their while to friend you or make you a connection? This also creates interesting opportunities to cross social media marketing with email marketing. For example, Yahoo’s “What’s New” tab shows tweets from connections before the messages in the inbox.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Say Hello to the New Yahoo Mail

Yahoo isn’t ceding the webmail market to the likes of Gmail and Hotmail; the company has announced the launch of a cleaner, faster and more social version of Yahoo Mail.
The new Yahoo Mail Beta, which will debut in the next few weeks, focuses on providing the user with a slicker, cleaner and snappier interface. Yahoo says that many of its core features have been “re-architeched” in an effort to make downloading and e-mailing a faster experience. The interface itself is reminiscent of the Gmail interface.
Yahoo has also made its e-mail client more social. Like Gmail or Hotmail, if someone sends you a link fromFlickrFlickr or YouTubeYouTube, those photos or videos will automatically be embedded in the e-mail. Flickr (a Yahoo property) also includes a new slideshow feature.
FacebookFacebook and TwitterTwitter are the big social additions to Yahoo Mail, though. As part of its strategy to integrate social media into its products, Yahoo is giving its mail users the ability to update their statuses on Facebook and Twitter. The “What’s New” tab also lets you see your friends’ updates from Facebook, Twitter, and Flickr.
Google and Microsoft have been upping the ante recently with updates to their webmail products, so Yahoo’s move shouldn’t surprise anybody. Microsoft recently reinvented Hotmail, bringing a faster interface, integration with Office Web Apps and a new “Sweep” function. Gmail Priority Inbox on the other hand is a major reinvention of e-mail management that has launched to mostly positive reviews.
What do you think of the new Yahoo Mail? Is it enough to get users to switch, or does Yahoo have to do more to compete with Microsoft and Google?