eBay Analyst day is upon us.

eBay kicks off their first analyst day in 3+yrs today at 8am PT, 11am ET.  The PR and IR teams have been active and the foreshadowing seems to point to a focus on Paypal as the crown jewel of the eBay portfolio.  

Some datapoints to consider:
  • BusinessWeek has this article that was driven by eBay PR, outright saying that PayPal is having a coming out party today.
  • Colin Sebastian@Lazard has a note out basically saying that eBay told him the marketplace changes will come out in April and be:
    • Product catalogs 
    • Improvements to search 
    • Robust product pages 
    • Category based pricing 
  • Jim Friedland@Cowen echoes Sebastian's view (driven by eBay's investor relations group I believe)
  • eBay issued a release and finally put the event on their investor relations site.  They list the speakers as:
    • John Donahoe, Chief Executive Officer, eBay Inc.
    • Bob Swan, Chief Financial Officer, eBay Inc.
    • Lorrie Norrington, President, eBay Marketplaces
    • Scott Thompson, President, PayPal
    • Mark Carges, President of Platform, eBay Inc. & Chief Technology Officer, Marketplaces
    • Stephanie Tilenius, Senior Vice President & General Manager, eBay Marketplaces
    • Josh Silverman, President, Skype
The speaker list is well balanced between Marketplace, PayPal and Skype.  It is interesting to see a technology person on the list - a first for a long long time.  I hope Mark is ready to get drilled because a lot of the challenges eBay faces on the marketplace side are technology related (search, etc.).  Even with the speaker list, I believe they will still spend 50% of the day on PayPal given the foreshadowing.

Since PayPal went from a public company to part of eBay, many internal datapoints around PayPal have stopped being reported.  Analysts will be particularly interested in some extra data around:

  • Payment source - eBay used to report on this metric about a year after the acquisition, but then stopped reporting it.  I suspect they will revisit that decision today and we may get some insights here.  One interesting thing with the PayPal business model is that PayPal is incented to make it as hard as possible for consumers to use credit cards.  I've found that over the last year this has gotten near laughable with the PayPal interface where you have to go through about 6 screens to select credit card.  ”Are you sure?  Are  you sure you are sure?”.  As a refresher, there are three ways today buyers can 'fund' their PayPal purchases and one probably on the way:
    •  PayPal balance - Using their paypal 'bank' balance.  This is the most favorable to PayPal because they pay essentially zero for the transaction, thus it is all margin.
    • Bank transfer - In the payments world we call this an ACH.  This is the second most favorable because PayPal is charged on the order of $.10-$.50 for each transaction 
    • Credit card - This is the least favorable because PayPal has to pay 2-3% for the transaction and thus this has very little margin, and sometimes negative margin. 
    • BML - I suspect PayPal will add this shortly (I'm surprised it's taking so long actually - something that raises concern for me. I suspect they are struggling with what to do if the BML is not accepted and how to get folks back into the normal flow of things.
  • Fraud/risk - Another pressure point on PayPal margins is the amount of fraud that PayPal is exposed to.  There are a variety of metrics that eBay could expand on here.
  • Off-eBay aka merchant services - PayPal breaks out the TPV from on and off eBay, but they haven't given much more insights into the off-eBay business.  Given the tone of the BW article, I suspect they are going to really try and get everyone excited about this business.  In doing so, they may start to carve out some of the above data points (funding source, fraud, etc.) into the two buckets (on/off eBay). 
The focus on PayPal is a double-edged sword.  I do agree with eBay's view that it is possibly undervalued as it is growing at 14% y/y (Q4) so is one of the only areas in the company ahead of the ecommerce growth rate. However PayPal is only 25% of eBay revenues and an estimated 20% of eBay operating profit so PayPal isn't going to move the needle much in 09/10.

Does the focus on PayPal mean that eBay is essentially giving up on the core business and reconciling that given the decline there and growth in PayPal, that PayPal will be up in the 50% range by year's end?  Why isn't eBay ready to talk about changes to fix the marketplace?

Also, remember that 50% or so of PayPal's TPV is tied to eBay marketplace, so a flu in eBay is at least a cold on the PayPal side.  In fact, that 14% y/y growth would have been substantially higher if PayPal wasn't pulled down by the eBay exposure.

Finally, talking to analysts on the buy+sell side heading to the event, if eBay sweeps the marketplace problems under the rug and talks about how great PayPal and Skype are, they are going to be extremely disappointed that management is doing a bait and switch on them.

I'll be live blogging the event and tweeting on twitter any news worthy events so stay tuned.

Seekingalpha disclosure - I am long Amazon and Google

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eBay Analyst day is upon us.

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Big week for eBay next week - Investor/Analyst day on Wed. March 11th…

Big news eBay Strategies readers -  eBay is having a big investor/analyst day next week - Wednesday, March 11th that will be webcast.  Curiously, there's no information on the investor relations site about it yet (come on Mark!) but several analysts have put out notes mentioning it and eBay talked about it at the Goldman talk.

Putting that datapoint together with a couple of other 'hints' coming out of eBay:
So putting 2+2+2+1.5+3.14159265 together, my guess is that we'll either have a big announcement of changes on 3/11 or at least some more meaty signs of things to come.  If eBay does roll out changes at the meeting, it will be an notable change from last year's approach.  As previously mentioned, last year eBay rolled out the bulk of 08 changes to a room full of 300 or so top sellers. This year they previewed to some sellers in Long beach and then rolled them out to Wall St.

Many sellers I talk to believe that eBay doesn't really think of sellers as stakeholders in the business, and puts buyers and wall street at the front of the bus.  Some could take this change in audience and venue to roll out changes (if they do), as supporting the claim that sellers are low on the proverbial totem pole of stakeholders.

In any case, I recommend sellers keep a close eye on this one along with the rest of the stake holders because I don't think eBay would do an all day event like this (first in 3yrs+) and not have something to say.

What's coming?
In his Goldman talk, John Donahoe mentioned they aren't changing fees (up or down was the implication) this year (not his exact words, lots of wiggle room in there as it's not clear if he was talking about all fees,fixed-price only, us only, etc.) so I'd take that with a grain of salt. 

I have no other predictions for what's coming, so it's going to be interesting.  Hopefully eBay will announce some things that get them down the path of our proposed eBay 2.0 strategy.  I did hear from a couple of eBay shareholders that had private meetings at Goldman that big changes are a foot and they were 'encouraged' to attend the investor day.

We have you covered!
We'll have full coverage of the event here at eBay Strategies and are bookending it with two events:
  • Tues., March 10 - 2pm ET I'm doing a live radio show with John Lawson @ Colderice - John is an eBay blogger and social guru as well as a top eBay seller (and ChannelAdvisor customer I'm happy to fully disclose). Sign up should be available here soon.
  • Wed., March 11 - Will be live-blogging the event.  They haven't officially published the times yet, but I suspect it will be 9-2ish PT.  Listen to the webcast and join in on the conversation here.  I'll also be tweeting anything earth shattering.
  • Thurs., March 12 - 11am ET Citigroup Wall St. call -  I'll be chatting with top internet analyst, Mark Mahaney in more detail about Amazon's seller business and we'll also cover any news coming out of eBay's analyst day.  I believe this is for Wall-st types only, those interested can contact Mark for details.  For non-Wall st types, I'll post some highlights here later in the day.

Finally, Mahaney published a '10 things we want to know from eBay analyst day' list (which is ironic because he looks like Conan O'brien, but does a Letterman top 10 list?)  That I thought was a good summary of what Wall St'ers will be asking the company and will be relevent for everyone in the eBay ecosystem to listen for on Wednesday:

  1. What steps can eBay take to improve the Marketplace Buyer experience?;
  2. What steps can eBay take to improve the Marketplace Seller experience?;
  3. Is the Auction format an anchor around eBay's Marketplace growth?; (**I have argued that eBay has accelerated the decline of this format)
  4. Which International markets are showing the most potential and which the most risk?; 
  5. What are the new growth strategies for PayPal; 
  6. What are the anticipated synergies between PayPal and BillMeLater?; 
  7. What are the marching orders for Skype, given the lack of synergies with eBay or PayPal; (**Sell it! - auction it on ebay ;-) )
  8. What are the long-term growth opportunities for the Marketing Services segment;  (**ads on ebay - just say no)
  9. Are there material new cost savings opportunities for eBay or does the revenue mix shift away from the high margin Marketplace segment make long-term operating margin declines inevitable for eBay?;
  10. What are eBay's options with its $3.2B in cash?   

SeekingAlpha Disclosure - I am long Amazon and Google

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Big week for eBay next week - Investor/Analyst day on Wed. March 11th…

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eBay talk at Goldman - quick notes/observations

Yesterday in SFO, eBay's CEO, John Donahoe (JD) and Bob Swan (SWAN), CFO, presented to the lunch-time audience at the annual Goldman Sachs Technology and Internet Conference in what Goldman calls a 'fireside chat' format.  These are my notes.  It was largely Q+A - with the early Q's coming from analyst James Mitchell and also from the audience.

Summary
There are some interesting tidbits in here to think about: 
  • It was crystal clear that eBay is distancing itself from auctions as quickly as possible and even the marketplace to some extent.
  • Feels like they would sell Skype if the right buyer came along
  • Paypal has room for 20% more on-eBay penetration
  • They are feeling really good about BML (BillMeLater)
  • They view that they've made big transitions in marketplace biz last year (I disagree on this one as you've seen in the past series)
  • eBay is married to the advertising business (high margin crack) and I suspect we'll see lots more banner ads and sponsored listings in 09 (check out UK for what that looks/feels like). 
  • They downplayed the risk from the search companies getting into the eBay biz by saying buyers don't want to click on URLs.  Guess they haven't seen Google Product Search lately. 
  • 15% of eBay is cross border trade (CBT) (new datapoint I haven't heard, not clear what period of time was discussed or any trend).
  • They talked about local more than I have heard before (in context of classifieds)  - mentioned that it's growing 50% y/y.
JD started with their top priorities and a little bit of background, citing that many people don't know all about the eBay of today and think of it as more of an auction company.

He mentioned that they have four businesses in the portfolio and threw in some tidbits about each that are largely review:
  • eBay - Auction only represents 25-35% of entire business today (50% of marketplace, 25-35% of entire portfolio to clarify)
    • Laid foundation for turning around in 08 
    • Heavy lifting left to be done in 09 
  • Paypal - 33% of revenue , half of which is off-eBay
    • Off-eBay- $1B business - grew at 50% off eBay 
    • BML coming soon 
  • Marketing services/alternative formats (classifieds, stubhub) - $1B business
  • Skype 
This is a strong portfolio, we will strengthen this year.

Q: Does Skype fit?
A: It's a great standalone business.  When we bought it we thought there were synergies, we were wrong, there aren't.  BUT it's a great business, accelerating metrics - users up 70% in Q4, increasing margins, great management team.  We'll continue to do what it takes to grow the Skype business.

Q: Will you sell skype?
A: As I said, it's a great stand-alone business, that doesn't distract us.  We'll pursue whatever path that allows us to realize the maximum value for shareholders from Skype.
Q: What initiatives are generating the best results? seller-facing of buyer-facing?
A: In a marketplace you have both.  WE MUST IMPROVE TRUST ON EBAY- I'm tired of the user experience being suboptimal,  We are going to continue to improve search.  We have a marketplace now with both auctions and fixed-price.  We're going to do more around category shopping experiences.

Q: On coupons - do you worry that you've trained the consumer to wait for coupons?  With MS funding a big chunk, will you need to take out that slack on the eBay P+L
A: I want to characterize our couponing into two buckets:
  1. We are focusing more and more on how to drive greater share of wallet in current user base - coupons went to existing users, to try and reactivate, move into other categories, increase frequency.  Tracking short and medium term impact.
  2. In Q4, it was a free-for-all.  We realized that offline retailers were going to be discounting and our small sellers couldn't compete.  We spent $100m on these kinds of coupons and marketing to help our sellers compete in a brutal holiday season.   

Q: Your coupon spend varies a lot intra quarter - what's up with that?!

A: Q4 was unique.  Typically in Q3, it will be driven by buyer-lifecycle.  We have data to now do couponing when it makes sense.
Q: The macro shift from TV to couponing - is that temporary while you fix the site or permanent?
A: Not saying we won't use TV ever again, but our highest short-term growth opportunity is to grow wallet with existing buyers.  Those things will also help attract new buyers so we're really focus on it - trust, ease of use, etc.

(SWAN) - I'll add that more of our marketing is going to expanding buying vs. attracting new users. (JD) so we're reallocating marketing dollars to 
Q: You send out surveys to your sellers, we read them - one thing that you sent out was around eBay offering fulfillment.  Are you going there?
A: (Joking) - since the day I joined eBay, my biggest desire is to have more bricks and mortars.  In this environment, that is a HUGE disadvantage.  What we WILL do is provide tools and incentives for our sellers to provide great shipping.
(SWAN) - To the extent we can, how can we leverage the collective horsepower of $60B goods going through systems.  

Q: If you look at the buyer mix, I assume there are more casual vs. regular.  Is there a risk to eBay that power-buyers move to a service like Prime?
A: Powerbuyers look at the total cost. They aren't fooled by free shipping, they look at total cost.  At eBay we went from 2% free shipping to 34% by encouraging our sellers to offer free shipping.  The casual buyer is more likely to be fooled by free shipping.

Q: PayPal - Rapid growth, some slow-down on ebay marketplace TPV, how do you think about how deep you can go 'on-eBay' and 'off-eBay', funding mix, etc.
A: Last year PayPal grew 9% penetration on eBay.  We think there's another 15-20% penetration potential.  Off-eBay it's really experiencing explosive growth around the world.  Becoming THE way to enable all ecommerce payments.

(SWAN) Funding mix - profitability is driven by:
  1. take rate
  2. cost of transaction
  3. manage fraud loss.
Despite all the growth, margins haven't changed much.  Lots of options for consumers to fund transaction at low cost. BML is great for that.  Fraud loss - how do we get smarter, use data, etc.  We've made huge progress here and reinvesting it into programs to encourage buyers to shop online.

Q: BML is great for the consumer, but eBay has to provide it off the balance sheet, to what extent do you worry about that fact slowing the growth?
A: (SWAN) It helps to have a great balance sheet with strong cash flow.  So BML gives us a unique ability to leverage that.   JD jokes - if that fails, we could always go get TARP money.  I'm kind of joking, but we have an interesting way to offer credit in real-time.  We are not near needing TARP, but we have a lot of potential in this business.  We both feel better about this business than the day we bought it.

Q: Do you worry that BML hasn't been through a downturn that it will assess what the bad-debt levels will be?
A: (SWAN) The team's ability and algorithms have demonstrated the ability to manage credit more effective than anyone else.  Credit is granted on transaction by transaction basis.

Q: If I were an investor new to eBay - I might come away with the impression that you have protected margin in the core business vs. growth.
A: Our focus is in driving value - improving competitive position and growing.  That's not at odds with reducing costs.  Examples: BML will impact PayPal's margin, will bring it down, but it's the right investment to make.  Skype we made a tradeoff in ubiquity and margin.  In core eBay we've funded the investments through efficiencies.  Going forward we'll do what it takes to improve competitive position.

Q: Out of the three businesses - it feels like you have prioritized growth in paypal/skype vs. cash in marketplaces.
A: No, I was clear when I took over that marketplaces needed to make some fundamental changes to improve it's position.  That's what we did last year.  Some would say, you should have gone further.  Our community said, 'you're going to fast'. We'll continue to be aggressive.  

(SWAN) this is a business that's doubled size, cashflow in last three years and yet is more diverse.  We've done this with advertising that is very high margin and helps buyers find things when we don't have the selection they are looking for.

Q: It would be nice to bring that European cash back and do a share buyback.
A: (SWAN) we have a little over $3b in cash, but it all sits off-shore.  We spent $1.6b to strengthen our businesses.  We bought back $2.2b of stock last year.  You can expect that kind of activity from us going forward too.
(JD) no repatriation coming.

Q: (audience) You did buybacks when stock was at $50 - it wasn't very effective with stock under $12.  Skype - when do you really fish or cut bait on this?
A: (JD) Skype biz is getting stronger. We'll maximize its success and value.  No hurry to do anything other than grow.
(SWAN - joking) Thanks for reminding us that we overpaid in the buyback (laughter).

Q: (audience) The next speaker is Microsoft - how do you think eBay survives being usurped from a Google, Microsoft, Y! brand - how can eBay survive with these bigger companies?
A: When we look at the market we see several thing son the 'net:

1. Finding things on the net - microsoft, google investing here.
2. Buying things - search is a bad way to buy things, doesn't give you a great experience.  We see online/ecommerce moving to the offline model.  If you think about wal-mart, they are largest in world and only have 4% share.  So we don't see ecommerce being winner take all.  We will be a winner.
3. Pay - payments will go the way of offline - with only a few networks.  PayPal
4. Entertain - we don't play here.
5. Communicate - Skype is a player, not sure how this plays out, but we have a bet here.

Q: Feels like search+buying are blurring
A: Our job is to make it more fun to shop and have a great buyer experience.  With our unique formats, we have shopping experiences that aren't replicated in search. Buyers don't want to click on a bunch of URLs to search.

Q: When do you think your search engine will be at the level that sellers could list near infinite inventory?
A: We laid important foundation in 08 with Finding 2.0+BestMatch.  Even more importantly we reduced insertion fees on fp30 in-essence down to zero, or minimal.  So now sellers can very cost effectively load ALL of their inventory.  In fact our selection is way up.   We just enabled search to be sorted by popularity.  We'll get better and better at using data to factor in which items to put at the top of results.

Q: Is being close to zero optimal vs. zero?

A: A little bit of skin in the game from a seller is very important to drive quality listings.

Q: Are we at the end point of that, or is the end-point zero, vary by category+country or ?
A: It won't go up, but there's nothing planned this year on this front.

Q: Analyst day is March 11th, should I still come?
A: Yes!

Q: China strategy, will Alibaba compete with you elsewhere - say Japan?
A: Our China strategy is to JV with Tom Online. CBT (cross border trade) from China is exploding, slowing down a little bit now, but Paypal is on-fire.  Jack Ma has done a great job in China, can't speculate on their plans outside of China.  We have the best CBT model around thanks to Paypal and eBay.  15% of eBay is CBT (new metric for me)

Q: (audience) What about local?
A: Online classifieds are growing aggressively.  We own 28% of craigslist in the US. Outside the US we are the leading classifieds player in several countries. Saw 50% growth in the business.  We'll focus a lot more attention on the area of local - natural extension of online.

Q: Do you see the GMV split between auction/fp moving to overwhelmingly fp?
A: As you said, consumers are driving how they want to buy.  The fact we are 50/50 is what consumer drove.  We held it back up until last year.  In order to have best marketplace, we need multi-formats.  What we're seeing more and more is Local.  Our approach is to try and expand the number of formats to give buyers and sellers greatest choice.  The choice will be driven by buyers and sellers.   This is a big change from what was an auction business to a multi-format marketplace.
SeekingAlpha Disclosure: I am long Google and Amazon

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eBay talk at Goldman - quick notes/observations

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eBay / Microsoft Live Cashback is back!?

Several readers noticed that it appears that the Microsoft Live cashback program is back.  This program was introduced in June of last year and then ramped up significantly during the holiday sales season. Since about December 18th, it's been dormant.  Last year the program started around 10% and then at it's peak ramped as high as 30%.  This caused a veritable feeding frenzy in Q4 with buyers going crazy for the program and we saw material usage of the program in the period from Black Friday through December 18th.

I checked and today it appears like they definitely have turned the program back on at the 8% level. 

Here's a screen shot from today - 2/27/09 that shows a Nintendo wii ad with the 8% offer from eBay (paypal and other restrictions apply as before):

Live_cashback_09

What does this mean for you?
This has several implications:
  • Implication for sellers: If you had some Live instructions in your listings you took out, you should re-add those.  At ChannelAdvisor we created a template with detailed instructions that you are free to leverage in your listings.  The template is here.
  • Implication for buyers: Time to get re-educated on the various rules and ways the system works.  Personally when buying, I like to 
  • Implication for Wall St:  I've talked to many analysts that follow eBay that were concerned that there would be a y/y situation created by the boost eBay enjoyed from the cashback relationship.  Since it looks like the program is back, even if it is at a lower level, that could be viewed as a net positive.  
While 8% isn't as good as 20-30%, in this environment everything helps so personally as a buyer, I know I'll take a look at using the program where it makes sense.

SeekingAlpha disclosure - I am long google and amazon

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eBay / Microsoft Live Cashback is back!?

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Episode IIIA - eBay and the CEF

This is Episode 3A in a 4 part series.  Here is the outline for the series:

Episode I - Q408 in-depth analysis - available here with Q+A covered in an addendum (IA) (link)
Episode II - Introducing the ChannelAdvisor Ecommerce Framework (CEF) (link)
Episode III - eBay, Amazon and the CEF (you are here - I have split it into to parts A (ebay) and B (amazon) )
Episode IV - How to fix eBay (coming soon)

It is strongly encouraged that you read them in order as they assume the reader has been following along as they build on each other.

In the last episode we took a break from anything specifically dealing with eBay and Amazon to look at a general framework for evaluating any ecommerce site.  We looked at a couple of interesting examples - Zappos that focuses on selection and ease of use and Ideeli which focuses on value at the exclusion of selection.  In this episode, we'll use that framework to evaluate what's going on at eBay and Amazon to cause the near 50% growth rate benefit Amazon is enjoying over eBay.  Finally, in the next and final episode, we'll look at some suggestions for eBay to get back into the fight.

The CEF looks at ecommerce through five pillars:

1. Selection
2. Value
3. Ease of use
4. Trust
5. Merchandising

eBay and the CEF
One of eBay's biggest challenges to this day is that they do not think like a retailer.  In other words, they don't look at elements like the CEF as a retailer would.  In the early days when competition was slow to move, this didn't matter, but today it clearly does as the challenges the company faces illustrate.  That being said, in eBay's Q408 presentation to shareholders, they offered the following slide that shows they are starting to catch on, but as we'll illustrate later that they are substantially missing the mark on each of these.

Episode3_img1

We'll reference this graphic a good bit in the CEF review of eBay and it shows a very interesting window into how eBay is thinking and the challenges they will continue to face with that mindset.

1. Selection - Declining since 2006.

In February 2006, eBay made the fateful decision, seemingly without any forethought, analysis or testing to introduce what is commonly known as SIF in core. What they did is took Store Inventory Format (SIF or store listings as we call them) and put them right into the core search engine.  Thus, a seller paying $2 for an auction listing had the same exposure as a seller that paid back in that time .05 or less for a store listing.  You can imagine what happened - sellers left the auction format and bulked up on store listings.  By March, eBay turned this off, but they had started in motion a severe debalancing of the marketplace that their subsequent actions to rectify actually amplified to the downside as far as selection is involved.

It's my belief that the SIF in core event, even today, has dramatically lowered the selection on eBay to the point that the site is no longer competitive.  As we'll explore in the next episode, subsequent policies (such as the DSR system) rolled out in 2008 have accelerated the decline as an unintended consequence.

Prior to 2/06, the eBay marketplace was 'working' pretty well.  Prices on auctions were a little on the high side, but manageable and the balance between auction listings (high insertion, lower fvf and store/fp listings - low insertion, higher fvf) was beneficial to buyers.  If you were looking for something commonly available (ipod), you found a LOT of options to buy at different value/service points.  If you were looking for something 'long-tail' (a back to the future II DVD), you found that too as sellers were able to list literally millions of items in the $.02 

Media sellers are a group I'm very familiar with and I believe they are eBay's canary in the coal mine primarily for selection, but also for value and other elements.  Most media sellers operate in a long-tail world where selection is king to drive margins and repeat business.  Since 2006 and the subsequent hikes in the store listing format, media sellers have been leaving the platform at an alarming rate and thus taking millions of items with them.

Where did they go?  Many have a happy new home at Amazon, but just as many have setup shop online and are doing very well with their own websites, leveraged with smart SEO, comparison shopping and search.

Here you have a category that with a < $20 ASP should be a slam-dunk for eBay, that is in shambles.  This category is essential because it is the single best way to activate a new buyer on a 'safe' transaction.  After dabbling in media, buyer s then move on to higher ticket items once they get the feel of eBay.

If sellers can't survive and thrive in that category, then sellers in categories like shoes, auto parts, etc. will go down the same path, not far behind media sellers.

On last concerning trend I've noticed on selection is due to the unintended impact on cross border trade (CBT in eBay-speak) that the DSR (detailed seller rating) system has caused.  The short version of the story is that in order for sellers to maintain their DSRs, many sellers have stopped selling internationally.  Personally, I've always found interesting hard to find items from international sellers.  That inventory is now noticeably gone from the US site and folks in the UK report the same.  The DSR impact on CBT is another contributor to the decline in selection.

Since 2006, I have been saying that eBay has chopped off their long tail, and I believe that is still the case, and if anything, it is worsening.

Listings are not selection
Before putting eBay through the rest of the CEF framework, I wanted to make an important distinction.  If you look back at the Q408 graphic, you will see that counter to what I'm saying here, eBay believes selection is dramatically increasing (first chart on the left - 'new listings in millions'.  In the chart you see the listings on eBay go from 550m to over 750m.  eBay is totally off on this metric as each popular or relatively common product on eBay has been flooded with listings since the 2008 price changes, yet the long tail is not flushing out as it was prior to 2006.  Here's a great example - as I write this there are 4506 Nintendo Wii systems available on eBay.  so that is a 5000:1 listing:sku ratio.  This is an extreme example, but if you take the 750m listings, if they all had that ratio, you would be 150,000 actual products.  Also, on eBay there is no facility for listing products with size and color differences together.  Thus a shoe or shirt SKU on any other ecommerce site that would be 1 sku mushrooms into as many as 50-75 'listings'.

Why doesn't eBay report on the number of products or SKUs available?  Well  I don't think they a) think that way and b) even know.  I can guarantee you Amazon knows exactly how many SKUs are available on any given day, in every category.

2. Value - declining

Since 2006, eBay has considerably raised fees, sellers have reflected the fees in their product prices and thus value on eBay has declined as item prices have increased.  Also as other channels have opened for sellers, sellers have realized that eBay is one of their most expensive channels and have started to raise prices accordingly.

In 2008, this has gotten even worse as eBay has become obsessed with free shipping.  Certainly free shipping seems like it would decrease the price of goods and thus increase the value of goods on the site, right?  Here's where unintended consequences have hit eBay again.  Let me illustrate with an example.

Let's say it's 2007 and you have an item that is $50 and your cost on shipping is $5.  You may mark up the shipping for a little margin - maybe it becomes $8 - total price $58.  Your margin is let's say $5 on the core price and $1 on the shipping for a total of $6.  Your eBay fees for this item (assuming 100% sell) is $3.07 for FVF plus $1 for insertion or $4.07.

Now it's 2008.  eBay 'turns' the search engine, DSRs and other 'dials' to 'advantage' you to have free shipping or not sell anything as you are either a) invisible to shoppers or b) kicked off the site or c) both a+b.

So you implement free shipping, but want to keep your margin of $6.  You can't price the item at $58 because now your eBay fees go up as they effectively include S+H. Now your eBay fees are $2 for insertion and $3.35 for FVF or $5.35 vs. the $4.07 you paid before the wonders of free shipping.  At this point, you may be saying, “Scot this doesn't matter, it's $1.28 - so what?” well, this is effectively a 31.4% fee increase to the seller.  Here's where it hits the Value pillar of the CEF. As a seller you want to keep your $6 margin, so you raise your price $1.28 right?  Nope, you can't because everything you add to the price, eBay takes their FVF of at about a 10% clip, so to get to the $6 point, you have to 'gross up' to more like the $60 mark.

Now your eBay fees have gone up 31%, your price has gone up effectively 3.5%, and in today's competitive market that will chop your conversions dramatically.

My point is many of these policies make sense on the surface, but if you scratch just a little bit below you will see that they negatively impact things like value on the site.

The bottom line is that today in early 2009 as eBay faces unprecedented competition, I believe most of eBay's prices are a good 5-10% higher than anywhere on the internet due to their near obsessive push into free shipping (passing the cost to the seller, who passes to the buyer) as well as due to the very high direct and indirect costs for selling on the site.  Several stock analysts have 

If you look back at the first graphic, you'll see that eBay defines value as the '% of listings with free shipping'.  This is really scary as not only does it have little to no relevance to value (prices), the metric has gone from 5% to 25% - or a 5X increase on free shipping, which I believe is actually a negative that implies there is a 5X growth in overpriced products on the site.  A 'real' value metric would be 'SKus we have the lowest price on'. Like selection, this is a metric I don't think eBay understands or tracks appropriately.

3. Ease of use - declining

I could spend pages and pages talking about how eBay continues to be too hard to use.  Many of the changes made of the last year have intended to improve the ease of use, but similar to DSR, free shipping, etc. have actually made things worse.   Anyone who has shopped at eBay is pretty familiar with how hard the site is to use, so here is a brief summary along the different subsystems we introduced with the CEF.

  • On-site search (eBay calls it Finding) - In the last year, eBay has rolled out Finding 2.0 with BestMatch that is pretty universally considered a step back.  BestMatch now mixes auction and fixed price listings into a hodge podge of items that makes it hard to find things.  Additionally, eBay has started putting copious sponsored listings above the search page navigation as shown here. 

Episode3_search1

In the above example, I did a search for golf clubs, and here you see five very large and highly relevant sponsored listings for timeshares, the Thunder Gun, an mp3 player, some foreclosed real estate and last but not least the Cellerciser.  After these value-add advertisements, I can then scroll waaaaay down and figure out how to get to page 2 of my golf clubs.  How many people do you think have the patience to go to page 2?

Finding 2's implementation of featured also 'locks' featured items on the screen, so even if you select 'show me the products from most to least expensive, you get some really messed up results like this:

Episode3_search2

Notice how the prices go down from $5k to $40, and then back up to $100k right after the $40.  Can you imagine using a search engine like google and having it not show you the results in the order you asked for?

I could go on and on here, but you get the picture - eBay's finding system is very very broken right now and is going backwards instead of forewords.  Ok, one more.  Let's say you ask eBay to sort things by “Least to most expensive.” and the 'store discoverability' kicks in where they show you store listings after core.  The store listings flip to be most to least expensive.  Here's an example:

Episode3_search3

In the above undoctored screen shot, as a buyer, I specifically wanted to see lowest to highest, which eBay does for core, then when the store listings come up, it inverts to highest to lowest or maybe it's BestMatch - heck I can't even tell it's so chaotic.

  • Cart - eBay unfortunately doesn't have a cart. eBay Express had a good start on a multi-seller cart that I think was a good direction, but eBay put a bullet in that.
  • Checkout system - One of the downsides of Paypal and its virtual monopoly on eBay is in order to buy anything on eBay, buyers effectively have to double register - once for eBay and once for Paypal.  If you don't remember how challenging and confusing this is, you should try it as a new buyer sometime.  Can you imagine going to retailerX.com and having to register once to buy something and then a second time to pay?

eBay's checkout system is so limited that most large sellers can not grow due to its restrictions and thus third parties such as ChannelAdvisor augment the checkout by an open platform (this is actually smart and eBay needs to do more of this as it allows third parties to innovate around the platform) called checkout redirect.

  • Order tracking - eBay has an exclusive deal with UPS and thus only UPS items can be tracked 'on-site'.  Thus most sellers avoid this system and implement their own order tracking outside of eBay.
  • Returns processing - eBay just asks that seller list a return policy and does not provide any common area or process for buyers to process returns.  Both eBay and Paypal do have various systems for disputing a transaction which are complex for both the buyer and seller.
4. Trust - eBay - declining

In 2008, eBay implemented the much maligned DSR system along with several major changes to the rickety feedback system.  I've been very vocal on the DSR system's numerous flaws, so won't go into it in detail here.  Suffice it to say that the DSR system is driving sellers to free shipping which destroys the value part of the CEF equation on eBay
  • Increasing the customer support costs on eBay which were already higher than anywhere else
  • Driving lots of great sellers out of business
  • Slightly increasing the quality of sellers.
I'll offer an alternative to both DSRs and the trust issue in the next episode, but basically DSRs have caused much more harm than good and eBay still hasn't addressed the basic trust issues.

The first figure shows that eBay has gone from 5% of GMV from 4.8+ sellers to today's 30%.  The bulk of the sellers that achieve that level of DSRs will have had to turn off CBT as well as implement free shipping, thus while eBay may have improved the trust some, they have done it at the expense of two very important pillars of the CEF (value and selection).

Here's a summary of trust problems on eBay:

  • It's hard to understand if you are a buyer, how and how much are you protect.  The protection comes from Paypal, what's that mean when you buy on eBay? 
  • Who do you call if you've been ripped off?
  • Which emails from eBay are valid, which ones are phishing (yellow button)
  • eBay allows anyone to register and re-register - thus bad buyers AND sellers are never really kicked off the site
  • eBay to this day has the worst password authentication, testing and resetting of any site dealing with money that I'm familiar with.  Yes, you can have your userID as your password.  Thus account takeovers on the site are still rampant.
In the CEF episode, we talked about other indirect elements that can erode trust.  I believe that eBay's trust problem is contributed to by irrelevant advertising, too much emailing and shenanigans that sellers employ within the grey areas of the site.

In conclusion, eBay still has a huge trust problem and isn't moving fast enough to fix it. In fact many of the changes they are making in this area have negative unintended consequences.  Buyers are confused about the relationship of eBay/Paypal and how it relates to trust as well.

5. Merchandising - eBay - never has left the starting blocks

eBay knows a lot about its users - what they search, buy, etc., but for some unknown reason, eBay has never been able to leverage that data to do effective merchandising.  eBay's merchandising is so off the mark that it's probably best if it was turned off IMO.

Here are some (painful) examples.  In my personal eBay account, I largely buy star wars collectibles.  Whenever I login, eBay forces me through a 'message from eBay' with their first merchandising, illustrated here:

Episode3_merch1

It's odd enough that they push me through this 1990's style interstitial page, but I've found the items that are recommended here are never, ever relevant to anything I am either looking for or have ever purchased.
Now as I go to the homepage, I am presented with these sections:

  • Cool stuff for you - seemingly random, I have no interest in these items.
  • My ebay at a glance - this is the only thing useful here, but it's stuff I've added to my watch list, so eBay isn't really predicting what I want, I've already told it.
  • Want great buys? - doesn't seem relevant to anything I've ever bought or searched
  • More fun finds - also not relevant or helpful
  • Shop your favorite categories  -  a long list of categories that doesn't seem to be organized for me at all.
  • From our sellers - this is always the best to look at, there is the wackiest, most random stuff you will ever find here.  

Here are examples from the site today of some of these sections:

Episode3_merch5
Episode3_merch4
Bottom line - here's a site where I have 300+ transactions and the best they can do is show me stuff i've added to my watch list that is relevant.  eBay clearly isn't thinking about how to put relevant products in front of me based on my purchase history and based on the advertising, my search terms either.

Conclusion

The CEF has given us a framework for evaluating ecommerce sites and also helps illustrate the areas eBay is losing ground in as the rest of the ecommerce world moves forward.  If eBay is the laggard in the market, then Amazon is the clear leader.  In the next post (3B), we'll see how they do in each of the five categories.
SeekingAlpha disclosure - I am long Google and Amazon.

Read more from the original source:
Episode IIIA - eBay and the CEF

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