If you were a Yahoo employee (I'm not), you would leave now or stick it out until there's an acquisition? Is it likely for you to get a severance package offering or is that only in the case when you are laid off, not voluntarily leaving?
You know, as much as people say a Microsoft acquisition is inevitable ultimately diluting whatever spice Yahoo! may have left, I think there's a chance for Yahoo! to emerge with much more force.<p>With Buzz, Fire Eagle, etc., their recent dabbles with Google, exceeding revenue expectations, and the prospect of going under, this situation may serve to provide Yahoo! with motivational and creative drives to create really cool applications and services. The drive people can acquire when they realize the severity of the situation and what's at stake can be astonishing.<p>So, for me, I'd wait it out. Some really innovative things can come of this.
I would wait to get laid off with severance package, or survive with my job. Will working in Microhoo be that terrible? I don't think so.<p>In the very long term, I don't see bright future for Y!, since they don't have any really unique technology. They basically profit from their being the first who created big directory of www links, which is now rather irrelevant.<p>But talking about employment, I don't think it's useful to think long-term, so it would be perfectly fine for me to work there right now.
Yahoo is still a multi billion dollar company; I think it’s unfair to talk about as a small shop. What ever happen to Yahoo, employees are still much better off than in most places.
There are some blogs(alleyinsider and techcrunch) that are saying a lot of the Yahoos are only waiting until the merger goes through since some contract clause would kick in to accelerate their pay, vest their options, etc.<p>If this were true I'd imagine I'd stay until the acquisition and then move on to greener pastures.
Also what do you guys think timing wise for an acquisition? It's moving at a far slower pace than I thought, though with such huge companies, I shouldn't be so surprised.