eBay To Offer Sellers AdCommerce To Promote Their Own Listings?????
What is eBay Thinking?
Today eBay announced their newly planned eBay AdCommerce program for German and US sites. Their plan as outlined in the announcement will allow eBay sellers the opportunity to bid on the reported 4 billion keywords in their database. Based on how MUCH sellers are willing to pay per click will determine whether your ad will appear at the bottom of the search page.
eBay Has Been Selling Advertising For Years
eBay has been selling advertising on search pages for years. This has caused significant concern amongst sellers for the entire time. Now eBay is apparently telling sellers that paying for listings is not enough to get attention to their listings. Now in order to be visible eBay wants sellers to pay more money to attract more buyers. According to the announcement from Caroline Malifaud of eBay’s advertising team, these ads will be text type with a small logo and can only link to specific items or eBay Stores. Here is the link to the AdCommerce Info Page.
Why would eBay sell advertising to 3rd party companies linking to competing websites drawing buyers away from sellers listing and not allow sellers to create ad campaigns to their own websites? It would seem that eBay’s links policy is for everybody else but eBay itself.
Brain Drain Continues! Is It Time To Punch Out At eBay?
Just The Latest Loss
Eric Shoup is just the latest manager that we are aware of who has “punched out” from eBay in the past 8 months. As has been well chronicled by Scott Pooler of TradingAssistantJournal.com, Scot Wingo CEO of Channeladvisor.com and Randy Smythe of MyBlogUtopia.com among many others, it appears that there is significant change taking place at eBay. Scott Pooler wrote a blog regarding eBay’s loss of talent and his latest post today which asks the question
Is the management team forcing new and untested technical challenges down the throats of the engineers just to make changes in a panic?
On my ebay & Beyond: Basics to Business blog today I wrote about the 28 % internal approval rating of John Donahoe CEO of eBay. I have to question whether the number of managers “punching out” of eBay is directly connected to the concern over the rapid and drastic changes ebay is undertaking or if this is just normal attrition that occurs after a change at the top?
Based on the number of employees changing jobs and the rumored impending layoffs at eBay coupled with the significant drop in eBay stock, I feel the answer is clear. Staff, users and investors are not pleased with the the direction the company is taking.
What do you think?
eBay Rumored Ready To Cut 10% of Workforce
In an article published last week in Barrons Weekly based on a report from Wedge Partners, Reuters today published a very short article on the rumors. 10% of eBay’s worldwide staffing would peg the number of layoffs at approximately 1500 staffers. eBay has not responded to requests for comment on this report.
With eBay stock reaching a 52 week low of 22.16 which is also a 5 year low, and ending the trading day Friday at 22.55 the company has lost just over 40% of it’s value in the past year.
Analysts are describing seller unrest and poor returns on eBay’s purchase of Skype along with the declining US economy and strengthening of the dollar as possible reasons of this decline.
Seller unrest has risen drastically since January when incoming CEO John Donahoe referred to the seller concerns and complaints to announced site changes as “noise”. eBay has made significant changes to it’s pricing structure including negotiating formerly unheard of reduced or free listing fees and reduced Final Value Fees for large volume sellers, restrictions on payment methods disallowing payments on the site by check, money order or cash, and placing limits on shipping fees sellers can charge in certain categories. Last week eBay announced more changes to the site including changes to the search engine on the site and changes to the Items pages that have sellers scrambling to ensure their listings can be seen by buyers which has increased seller concerns. Sellers cite bugs in the eBay Best Match search engine and concerns that the planned look to the items pages will be glitch ridden and confuse and frustrate buyers.
Sellers Moving to Other Venues
Thousands of posts on blogs and even the eBay Discussion Boards seem to indicate that ecommerce sellers who once believed that eBay was THE place to market are now looking at other venues such as Amazon, Overstock, Bidtopia, eCrater and Etsy and many others. In addition many sellers are ramping up their own websites as marketing venues. Unfortunately especially now as sellers and shoppers get ready for the very busy Q4 shopping season, many of the sites sellers are moving to with the exception of Amazon simply do not have the buying traffic coming to the sites.
Bidtopia CIO Paul St. James on ebay & Beyond Radio Today
Paul St. James CIO of Bidtopia will be our guest this morning on ebay & Beyond: Basics To Business. Join us at 10 AM ET from our website streaming live on the internet.
Best Match Is The Small eBay Sellers Demise
eBay’s Best Match Favors Fixed Price Sales
eBay has for some time been making concerted efforts to wean it’s sellers away from auction format sales even though continual denials come from company officials. From John Donahoe to Lorrie Norrington to head cheerleader and eBay Ambassador Jim “Uncle Griff” Griffith all say that there will always be auctions on the site. The small seller is the thing that make eBay unique is what they say. One only has to look at the number of Fixed Price (FP) or Buy It Now (BIN) listings on the site to see that these make up the vast majority of the items listed on the site. This in my mind is due to the effectiveness of instant gratification for buyers who do not want to wait for auctions to end or lose out at the very last second by snipers. This is a valid point and I agree to some extent.
However this situation is percipitated by eBay’s refusal to institute the automatic extension of auctions that receive bids in the last minutes. Live auctions do not end until the bidding stops, other online auction sites extend auctions that recieve last minute bids to give bidders an opportunity to act so as not to be outbid. But this is another issue.
The point of this article is to point out that small sellers who sell unique items really will have a very small chance of success with the new Best Match search criteria.
Best Match Is NOT Simple
Just when eBay sellers thought that maybe, just maybe they had a handle on the way eBay was going to be using Best Match to sort listings, reality sets in. According to a post on the eBay Developers website there is really no way small sellers can determine what will be used in the Best Match algorhythm. In the article eBay clearly states the factors used in the search criteria are NOT LIMITED TO those listed. eBay is very practiced in the things they do say but more importantly what they don’t say!
Recent Sales
Recent sales of identical items by the same seller will be used in the Best Match for FP sales. What this means is that if you as a seller bring on a new product line, you will not be ranked high in search regardless of your price, feedback or DSR’s until you sell some of these items. eBay’s rationale is that “a recent purchase from a buyer is a great way to measure satisfaction”. Ok, I as a seller will simply put a few items up at a slightly lower price to draw attention to my items, sell some, then increase the price to my normal selling price and I will be advantaged in search.
Not so fast! eBay says that one of the other criteria is that the prices must be the same. So this strategy will not work.
Sellers Really Don’t Know
There are certainly many more factors that go into Best Match, including what category you list in, time ending your feedback and DSR’s etc. Sellers will know what categories will have different criteria for BM but since eBay does not give out propriatary info on the search algorhythms sellers will not know all the information they need. At least not the small sellers. Big Box sellers will know. Software developers will know, but the little guy won’t.
In my opinion eBay has made it impossible for the small seller to compete and that is the reason for the continuing decrease in growth and eventually it will be nothing more than Wal-Mart.









