Yelp craters as much as 32% as advertisers abandon the site

Authored by cnbc.com and submitted by iMarkRS
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Though the cancellations were expected, Yelp failed to compensate with lower-than-expected gross customer adds. The company reported revenue of $241 million for the quarter, just shy of analyst projections of $245 million.

"We do not believe that there was any one single factor behind the new sales shortfall relative to our expectations. Instead, a number of smaller, compounding issues arose, including slower-than-expected sales head count growth, a change in advertising promotions, a technical issue in flowing leads to our reps and a lower success rate in contacting business decision-makers by our outbound sales calls," Chief Financial Officer Charles Baker said on the company's earnings call.

In light of lower-than-expected net adds and corresponding advertising revenue, Yelp slashed its full-year revenue guidance to a range of $938 million to $942 million, down from a previously stated range of $952 million to $967 million.

"One of the reasons we've expressed this year some caution about the transition to non-term contract is a recognition that the business is operating at a bit of a different clock speed today than it was before. And so one of the things we've learned is that the business is now more sensitive to the short-term productivity issues that probably were there in the past as well," CEO Jeremy Stoppelman said on the call.

Yelp also saw negative impacts resulting from changes in Google's search algorithm and sales representatives leaving the company in higher-than-normal numbers, executives said.

At least three Wall Street firms downgraded their ratings or lowered their price targets for the stock following the report.

"Unfortunately, to compete more effectively against digital platforms like Google, Facebook, Twitter, and Snap (among others) for local ad budgets, Yelp may need to eventually make more dramatic changes to its self-service ad platform," Stifel analysts wrote in a note. "We have seen how disruptive this type of change can be for a publicly traded company from watching Snap over the past several quarters; however, we think Yelp will face challenges in penetrating its paying advertiser [total addressable market] without this level of ad platform flexibility."

Stifel maintained its hold rating on the stock but lowered its price target to $34.

rocktogether on November 9th, 2018 at 18:01 UTC »

I gave up on Yelp! when I read a review of the restaurant I managed. They claimed how our pork chop was over cooked and it was the worst they had ever eaten.

We did not have pork chops.

MediumSizedTexan on November 9th, 2018 at 17:03 UTC »

I once got a 1-star review on Yelp because I delivered the food too quickly. It was sushi. I then got another 1-star review because the menu was put together using staples down the middle.

zs15 on November 9th, 2018 at 15:42 UTC »

I haven't used Yelp since they stopped allowing you to view mobile reviews outside of the app. Its frustratingly slow. When I have seen reviews, the quality of content is piss poor and unhelpful.

They were pioneers, but really lost what made then a useful tool.