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  1. Koogle was born and grew up in the Washington, D.C. suburb of Alexandria and graduated from Mount Vernon High School in 1969. He obtained a B.S. degree from the University of Virginia in mechanical engineering in 1973, and his M.S. and Ph.D. in engineering from Stanford University in 1975 and 1977.

    • Repairing Cars as Proud Son
    • Founding A Company and Visualizing The Internet
    • Aggressively Advertising Yahoo!
    • Koogle's Accomplishments
    • Endless Work
    • Stepping Down as Top Yahoo!

    While growing up, Koogle was a race car enthusiast who liked to rebuild engines and aspired to become an engineer. In fact, when Koogle was five years old his father—who was a machinist and mechanic—began to teach him about repairing cars. Known for his industriousness, even before the age of 10, he sold gardening services to neighbors and later in...

    Koogle started his own company after graduation, making equipment for electronic manufacturing companies. He later sold the company to Chicago-based Motorola. After completing the sale, he began working for Motorola in 1983, spending nine years employed in the company's operations and corporate venture capital groups, where he attained a number of ...

    Jeffrey Mallett, as Yahoo!'s chief operating officer, and Koogle, as its CEO, engineered an amazing campaign to make Yahoo! the most famous brand on the Internet. Mallett concentrated on the day-to-day operations of the company, while Koogle focused on developing large-scale partnerships and deciding where all revenues would come from. Critical in ...

    Koogle accomplished his feat with Yahoo! by keeping tight control on expenses and avoiding the capital losses that were so common with most fledgling Internet companies. Perhaps the most important asset in Koogle's arsenal was the power of Yahoo!'s brand name. But equally important was its strong asset base of hundreds of millions of dollars. Durin...

    By the late 1990s competition was fierce for Yahoo! as many established brick-and-mortar businesses, such as NBC/General Electric, Disney, Time Warner, and Microsoft sought to establish their presence on the Web. Their number-one enemy was the upstart but mighty Yahoo! With this in mind, Koogle and his troops worked tirelessly to make sure that Yah...

    By 2000 the dot-com implosion was in full swing as the major stock market indexes reversed themselves after the long 1990s bull market, in which stock prices continually rose in value, came to an end. Koogle had a $295,000 salary and Yahoo! shares worth $365 million, but Yahoo! was no longer immune to the troubles that were plaguing other Internet ...

  2. Dec 16, 2013 · He left to join Western Atlas, an automated data collection and communications systems manufacturer located in Seattle, Washington, that had (earlier) invented bar code symbols. He then ran its subsidiary Intermec corporation.

  3. 2014 Computer History Museum. Marc Weber: So I'm Mark Weber of the Computer History Museum. And I'm here on December 16, 2013, with Tim Koogle, who was the first CEO of Yahoo, as well as of several organizations, and [who] has had quite an illustrious career that is continuing. And thank you for doing this.

  4. Jan 29, 2001 · Yahoo!'s CEO is accused of downplaying the Holocaust for having allowed online auctions of Nazi memorabilia.

  5. Dec 4, 2000 · TIM KOOGLE joined Yahoo! in 1995 as President and CEO and was named Chairman in January 1999. With more than 19 years experience, Mr. Koogle was named one of ‘The Top 25 Executives of the Year...

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  7. Sep 27, 1999 · September 26, 1999 at 9:00 PM PDT. This article is for subscribers only. Timothy A. Koogle never quite took to the trappings bestowed on senior executives in Corporate America. Even after nine...

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