Yell Group

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yell Group plc
Type Public (LSE: YELL)
Founded 2001
Headquarters Reading, England, UK
Key people John Condron, CEO
Industry Media
Products UK:Yellow Pages, Yell.com, Yellow Pages 118 24 7;US: Yellow Book and Yellowbook.com and in Spain: Paginas Amarillas and PaginasAmarillas.es
Revenue £2,075.1 million (2007)
Operating income £512.0 million (2007)
Net income £216.3 million (2007)
Employees 13,589 (2007)
Website www.yellgroup.com

Yell Group plc (LSE: YELL) is a leading international directories business operating in classified advertising markets in the UK, US, Spain and Latin America through printed, online and telephone-based media.It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index of leading UK quoted companies. It is based in Reading in Berkshire, over 40 miles west from London.

The group has its origins in the division of the privatised former British state telecommunications operator BT Group plc which produced the UK version of Yellow Pages, and has been an independent quoted company since 2001. It provides paper, online and telephone-based classified directories.

Contents

[edit] History

In 1966, Post Office Telecommunications a division of the UK General Post Office, launched the first UK Yellow Pages classified directory in Brighton, Sussex.[1] Yellow Pages were rolled out across the UK by 1973,[2] and became the first information provider on Prestel.

The group launched its iconic J. R. Hartley adverts in 1983, and became a separately identified business within the BT Group after BT was privitised in 1984. The red fronted Business Pages launched in 1985 in Bristol and South Wales, and the group piloted Talking Pages in Brighton and Bristol from 1987.[3] The number for accessing Talking Pages was unified in 1994 to 0800 600 900, and the group launched Yell.com, its internet and now its most public brand, in 1996.[4]

Due to the dot-com crash of 2001, BT restructured and agreed to sell the now separated Yell.com to Apax Partners and Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst for £2.14 billion/$3.5 billion,[5] making it then the largest non-corporate LBO in European history. Yell later bought US directories publisher McLeodUSA for about $600 million, and floated on London's FTSE in 2003.

[edit] Acquisitions

It started an acquisition program in the U.S. in 1999, and this has continued since it became an independent company. In May 2005 Yell announced that it intended to purchase U.S. directory publisher TransWestern Holdings L.P. from a consortium of private equity houses for $1,575 million (£829 million). Transwestern operated in 25 states and had core positions in California and Texas. The deal went through later in the year, making Yell's U.S. subsidiary Yellow Book the fifth largest directory publisher in the United States at that time. It has made further small acquisitions since then.

Yell's turnover for the year ended 31 March 2007 was £2,075.1 million. Profit before tax was £248.0 million and net profit was £216.3 million.

In April 2006 Yell agreed to purchase a 59.9% stake in Spanish phone directory firm Telefonica Publicidad e Informacion (TPI) from Telefonica, and launched a bid for the remaining shares which valued TPI at a total of £2.3 billion (3.3 billion; US$4.1bn). Since then, Yell has bought further capital and in September 2007 reached agreement with the minority shareholders to acquire the remaining 1.28% of what is now named Yell Publicidad.

In July 2006, Yell [6] threatened Yellowikis with legal action, claiming that people will confuse the two organisations. [7].

[edit] See also

  • J. R. Hartley - The man featured in many UK Yellow Pages adverts

[edit] References

  1. ^ Yell.com History - 1960-1969. Yell.com. Retrieved on 2008-01-11.
  2. ^ Yell.com History - 1970-1979. Yell.com. Retrieved on 2008-01-11.
  3. ^ Yell.com History - 1980-1989. Yell.com. Retrieved on 2008-01-11.
  4. ^ Yell.com History - 1990-1999. Yell.com. Retrieved on 2008-01-11.
  5. ^ Yell.com History - 2000+. Yell.com. Retrieved on 2008-01-11.
  6. ^ Yell. Yellowiki. Retrieved on 2006-07-12.
  7. ^ Legal threat to wiki listing site. BBC News (Wednesday, 12 July 2006). Retrieved on 2006-07-12.

[edit] External links


Languages