Before anyone tries to stereotype the latest CEO casualty at Yahoo, they would benefit from taking a step back. Terry Semel's departure falls smack dab in between two widely claimed trends: Founders returning as CEOs -- insert Yang now in the CEO seat at Yahoo, Citrin at Vonage and Dell at well, you know -- and inclusive CEOs, which three Booz Allen consultants report at length in the latest issue of Strategy+Business (see link http://www.strategy-business.com/press/article/07205?gko=04dd3-1876-26242394)
In the Yahoo case, neither trend applies. It's time for the company to move away from its legacy and into areas that help grow and differentiate the business. There's no way a founder or long-time insider can accomplish turnaround on their own. Particularly in entrepreneurial companies, which Yahoo is despite their incredible rise as a brand.
Even Michael Dell, who no one would bet against, has turned outside for a rapid infusion of talent. What's the takeaway here? Performance rules. Always has, always will. Change means real change, not more of the same. Or heaven forbid, a call for "let's return to the basics."
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