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Ex-Yahoo exec to head Microsoft online business

Ina Fried CNET News

Published: 05 Dec 2008 12:57 GMT

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Ex-Yahoo exec to head Microsoft online business

Microsoft is hiring former Yahoo executive Qi Lu to run the company's online-services business, but, in the process, is also losing one of its own top advertising executives.

Announcing Lu (pictured) as the president of Microsoft's online-services group, the software maker said that Brian McAndrews, former chief executive of Aquantive, would be leaving Microsoft. McAndrews was seen as the top internal candidate for the post, which became open when Kevin Johnson left to become chief executive of Juniper Networks.

Lu will start at Microsoft on 5 January and will report to Steve Ballmer, Microsoft said.

"I am genuinely excited about the opportunities ahead for Microsoft to make an enormous impact on the online industry," Lu said in a statement. "Microsoft has built a great foundation for its search and advertising technologies and put an amazing team of researchers and engineers in place to drive the next wave of innovation in online services."

Lu was at Yahoo for a decade, most recently as vice president of engineering, overseeing the company's search and e-commerce efforts. Before Yahoo, Lu was a researcher at IBM's Almaden Research Center.

Reporting to Lu will be Satya Nadella, who has been heading Microsoft's search business, as well as senior vice president Yusuf Mehdi and two new vice presidents — divisional finance head Rik van der Kooi and Scott Howe — who will head advertiser and publisher efforts in the wake of McAndrews' departure.

Microsoft said McAndrews "has decided to transition out of Microsoft, and will do so over the next several months, serving in a consultative capacity to Steve Ballmer and Qi Lu during that time."

Ballmer praised the departing executive in the statement.

"Brian McAndrews built a world-class business for advertisers and publishers and led the successful integration of Aquantive into Microsoft, setting the foundation for our next phase of growth," Ballmer said. "While I am sorry to see Brian leave the company, I respect and understand his decision and wish him nothing but the best in the future."

Credit: It's official: Qi Lu to head Microsoft's online effort from CNET News

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