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    The Global Garage Sale Wants to Live in a Better Neighborhood

    Written by

    Evan Schuman
    Published January 14, 2005
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      eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.

      eBay is in a very exclusive club of the early Web innovators who have stuck to their original playbook and been true to what makes the Web powerful. This weeks news that eBay is boosting some prices shouldnt be a surprise, nor should the Garage Sale Goddess right to enhance its margins a bit.

      How much has eBay changed everything? Consider this headline in Thursdays edition of the St. Paul Pioneer Press: “Local Girl Scouts Irked by eBay Cookie Sales.” Put aside for the moment the fact that it doesnt take a heck of a lot to irk a girl scout. The fact that people are taking girl scout cookies and providing them to the unfortunate souls who do not have parent co-workers has got to be right up there in the list of unintended consequences of eBay.

      When I say that eBay has done almost everything right, Im not just referring to its ability to make $1 billion profit on barely $4.2 billion in revenue. Neither is this limited to its creation of PayPal, which is single-handedly rewriting the rules of payment systems and scaring the magstripes off of Visa, MasterCard and American Express, who were having a hard enough time selling to small online businesses before PayPal started showing the world the right way to do it.

      The best recent example that eBay simply gets it happened in late September. After having announced to the world that it was shutting down its Half-com subsidiary, it reversed itself this September. Half-com was fiercely popular, so one might think, so what? It was the right thing, one might say.

      One doesnt spend a lot of time hanging out with billion-dollar corporations. The politics is typically such that public decisions are defended for ego purposes, lest the company concede that its not perfect. eBays willingness to publicly reverse itself showed a flexibility that is far too rare today.

      /zimages/6/28571.gifeBays PayPal is especially popular with younger consumers. To read how retailers are using eBay to sell more to teenagers, click here.

      Many companies casually talk about the power of the Internet, but other than eBay, Amazon and a handful of others, few actually deliver.

      Until recently, I could say that eBay has been so true to the Internet vision because it doesnt have brick-and-mortars to distract it and cloud its thinking. But through a wide range of partnerships, it is becoming physical store people, too. The difference? Its culture, heritage and the bulk of its revenue is still grounded in the Internet. When other retailers try to strike a balance, they conclude that they are physical with an Internet afterthought. At eBay, its very much the opposite.

      But as eBay grows and continues its string of acquisitions, the larger company will become less and less pure Internet. It is staying global and focusing on classified advertising (a $152 million buyout of a German classified advertising site and $290 million for a Dutch classified ad operation) and trying to corner the worlds online trading markets: $50 million for an Indian auction site, an increased stake in a Korean trading site for $485 million and an additional $37 million for a Korean auction site.

      For how long will eBay continue to stay true to its birthright? The day it starts thinking and acting like a brick-and-mortar is the day when its rate increases wont be accepted so willingly.

      Retail Center Editor Evan Schuman has tracked high-tech issues since 1987, has been opinionated long before that and doesnt plan to stop any time soon. He can be reached at Evan_Schuman@ziffdavis.com.

      To read earlier retail technology opinion columns from Evan Schuman, please click here.

      /zimages/6/28571.gifCheck out eWEEK.coms for the latest news, views and analysis on technologys impact on retail.

      Evan Schuman
      Evan Schuman
      Evan Schuman is the editor of CIOInsight.com's Retail industry center. He has covered retail technology issues since 1988 for Ziff-Davis, CMP Media, IDG, Penton, Lebhar-Friedman, VNU, BusinessWeek, Business 2.0 and United Press International, among others.

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