Tamebay – Real Story about a Real Seller Who Found Life After eBay

TamebayIn my RSS feed I get a lot of eBay related information every day.

This morning, one particular article caught my attention...

Another one bites the dust

Author: Sue Bailey
Posted at: Friday, May 30th, 2008 at 11:34 am

Another one bites the dust is a real story about a real high volume seller shut down by eBay for a no real reason. Stuart tried to reason with eBay, Stuart travelled to Catalyst 2008 simply to speak face to face with someone from eBay.  Stuart got nowhere with eBay.

eBay does not want Stuart's over $60,000 in fees per year because eBay has its rules...  You see, a former partner of Stuarts did not pay his $250 ebay fee bill 2 years ago. Stuart paid the bill when he was made aware (it was an account Stuart has not used in 2 years).  In any case, after months of trying to reason, and while under a 12 month suspension, Stuart has found a new way of doing business.

Stuart does not rely on eBay any longer, he has found his way out of the darkness of eBay suspension and into the light of eCommerce sales.  Stuart sees a bright future ahead and he says he will never rely on eBay again completely as he had before. 

Good for Stuart!

Thanks to tamebay & Sue Bailey for bringing all of us this inspiring story today!

Review – eCommerce Summit ECMTA PeSA 2008 vs Catalyst Pinehurst 2008

The eCommerce Summit in New Orleans wrapped up the event today with a Habitat for Humanity volunteer workshop.

Habitat

More than 100 of the over 500 eCommerce Summit 2008 attendees and journalists who attended this year's 3 day long conference in New Orleans, dedicated time and elbow grease to help this worthy charity build homes for people in need in New Orleans. Final numbers have not been tabulated yet, but at last count the event raised over $80,000 for Habitat for Humanity.

eBay Donation Habitat

On the first night, Frontier Marketing (one of the main sponsors of this Summit) presented a check for over $30,000 to benefit Habitat for Humanity. Frontier requested $1.00 donations from each active customer and over 15,000 customers joined the cause. To make the gesture twice as impressive Frontier offered a dollar for dollar matching donation. Frontier, together with their customers raised over $30,000 to help Habitat. eBay surprised the crowd prior to Lorrie Norrington's keynote address with a $50,000 donation for Habitat in the name of all eBay sellers. In addition, Genco Marketplace donated many fine prizes for a silent auction benefitting Habitat as well.

ECommerce Summit

eCommerce Summit vs. Catalyst Pinehurst? Catalyst

Recently (yesterday while in the NOLA airport via a Twitter Tweet from a friend) I was asked to compare this year's Summit event with the recent Channel Advisor Catalyst conference held in Pinehurst, NC.

On the surface one could say two events do not match up - based on the premise that Catalyst is primarily sponsored & promoted by a single multichannel solutions provider and the eCommerce summit is sponsored by two connected trade organizations with additional corporate sponsorship from multiple solutions providers. There is an overlap of sponsorship for each event, yet each event had a different look and feel.

Some points of comparison are available to informed observers, I am sure many of my readers could easily chime in with comments regarding the differences, I met with many of them at both events.

The initial impression: Continue reading “Review – eCommerce Summit ECMTA PeSA 2008 vs Catalyst Pinehurst 2008” »

eBay Changes Story on Digital Download Situation – eBook Fraud or Feedback issue?

Stephanie Tilenius eBay GM

eBay Speaks & Answers Questions at Catalyst 2008

eBay's new North American General Manager is the very capable Stefanie Tilenius. Stephanie came back to eBay from PayPal, eBay's cash cow, and now finds herself in an unenviable position during this particularly tumultuous time of transition for eBay and its new management team & philosophy.

At Catalyst 2008 in Pinehurst, NC many questions were directed at Stephanie about the recent changes in fees, DSR's (especially DSR's) and other matters very near and dear to sellers' hearts.

It seemed as though the sellers (and customers of eBay) wanted to hear some sort of indication that eBay recognizes the role sellers play in the entire picture. eBay has an incredible system, but without the sellers' involvement, the system may not be so incredible anymore. Continue reading “eBay Changes Story on Digital Download Situation – eBook Fraud or Feedback issue?” »

Catalyst 2008 Wrap up – Part One – First 2 Days eCommerce, Social Networking, Scot Wingo eBay & More

Whew,

What a way to spend three days in North Carolina! Catalyst 2008 was a informational bonanza held at an unbelievably beautiful and historic resort. There was more to talk about than the accommodations or the hosts.  I have approximately 30 pages of handwritten notes compiled from the three days of sessions and meetings at Catalyst 2008.

I also had quite a flight delay due to weather last night so please excuse me if I do not get all my thoughts out in this one post.

Let's just summarize the Highlights and I will go into greater detail in future posts.

Highlights:

Day One

  • Meeting Joe Schaefer and the people from Jellyfish.com (a Microsoft acquisition) on the ride to Pinehurst from the Raleigh-Durham International Airport on a shuttle provided by PayPal.  Jellyfish is a new way to use pay per action advertising and I think anyone interested should check them out. Nice people too!
  • Keynote Speech - Chris Imegima - Nike - Seeing the magical ethos of Nike and how they can use the significant power of branding and celebrity to push forward innovation in marketing and design was a pleasure. Hearing all of the self promotion marketing speak was less than impressive, as I have already stated. Nike is a wonderful brand and I am certain everyone in the room (which was also filled with wonderful brands) could have learned something from Nike; I am just not sure we were privy to any actionable information or could apply what Nike is doing to any other brand or eCommerce operation. Afterall, is Catalyst not an eCommerce event?

Day 2

  • Scot Wingo - Keynote of Day 2 - ChannelAdvisor Update - Scot obviously has a handle on the pulse of eCommerce. His presentation on day 2 was more than about the status of ChannelAdvisor; the presentation covered almost ever aspect of online sales and eCommerce, trends, predictions, profits and possibilities. This was a no-holes-barred review of the year past and the future for not only ChannelAdvisor and their clients, but for the industry as a whole. Main points included:
    • Shopping via search is 41% of gross while direct to site is down to 20% and dropping.
    • People find products through search.
    • Amazon is increasing sales
    • Yahoo is increasing in search,
    • eBay's decline has leveled out.
    • Comscore Q 107 is showing a slowing of eCommerce trends, yet ChannelAdvisor clients has seen a 19% increase year to year.
    • Scot Wingo sees plenty of growth for multi-channel merchants - "Don't listen to pundits"
    • eBay only sellers - "Missing out on 75% of the pie"
    • Google = 60% Market share in USA / 80% Rest of the World - Search is very important as is long tail and Google checkout showing a bump in click through rate.
    • Older Comparison Shopping Engines declining in traffic & importance while new CSE 2.0 sites like Jellyfish, Ciao & Pronto are growing fast.
    • eBay - GMV growth slowed to 8% vs 20%, active users NOT growing, fixed price is growing and top buyer issue is shipping. eBay growth is slower than eCommerce and changes are bountiful.
    • Amazon - Growth is faster than eCommerce, Amazon Prime is primary factor and Amazon.com growth is up 40 - 50% year to year.
    • Major Announcement - Buy.com and CA form partnership - No integration fees for CA customers with full access to 11 million Buy.com customers.

As you can gather, Scot's speech held a great deal of information and for a non-shorthand note taker, I think I gathered most of the important points here. There were more, to be sure, but overall I think the tone was positive and factual, not self-promoting...a real refreshing change from standard CEO type presentations. Scot seems more the analyst type than a self promoter - he shows the facts and follows the information. This may be why his CA products are so well received. With the data ChannelAdvisor includes in their products, it is hard to argue with the value.

  • eBay - See my last post about eBay's presentation with PayPal - I will write more about some of the details from this presentation in a detailed post on another day. The highlights were few and far between but not all was lost. I will keep you posted.
  • Social Networking - a panel discussion including representatives from Buy.com, Canvas on Demand and Abe's Books. In summary, my impression from this discussion was that the panelists had not seen a significant bump from social networking marketing. The general consensus seemed to be to not invest a great deal of time or money into social networking unless you have a clear plan and see real benefits. Some social networking efforts have paid off, especially opening up your eCommerce website to the use of customer generated reviews. Reviews drive sales and create dynamic fresh content for SEO. Another point: If you plan on populating sites like Digg, Stumble Upon or Twitter with your own content, be transparent. Do not submit content without a clear understanding for the reader regarding your association with the product. Finding conversations about your niche and joining is a recommended practice.
  • Life Cycle Model Small Business Infant to IR500 - Scot Wingo moderated a discussion including several merchants who started with very modest beginnings and have grown online businesses into major brands.

"eBay is a Firehose." said Bill Frische of Dyscern. "No channel provides more traffic."

The consistent message from this panel is all of these sellers continue to use eBay, even when the other channels and their own websites provide a great deal of revenue. eBay is still a great place to find traffic and new customers. You must know what sells where and how and never keep stock longer than 28 days; older stock is sold on eBay. All of these sellers sell internationally.  With the dollar what it is, you must sell globally.

Best Investment - "Make your own website." - Jacob North SophiaStyle.com

"EBay is training wheels for eCommerce" - Scot Wingo

Worst Investment - Shopping.com (Source asked to not be quoted)

Overall this was a very informative panel discussion by sellers who have been there and done that.

In my next post, I will get into detail regarding the rest of Day 2 and the insights provided by Mr. Vince Monical of Google, plus the very interesting 10 person focus panel of local Internet shoppers from the surrounding Pinehurst community in our next post. Day 3 was very interesting with a "Pimp My Site" demonstration put on by fellow eBay stores designers Debbie Levitt, Andrew Main and Jeff Dyksen and it ended with a great presentation as the final Keynote with Ben Ling of Facebook.

Also look for a more in depth article on our sister blog Allbusinessauctions about the creative ways companies like 3balls.com and Fleegolf have used the power of trade ins and trade up merchandise to build a business based upon eBay and eCommerce. Coming Soon.