Saturday, December 18, 2004

EBay

Ebay has been the undisputed leader of all the survived the dot-com boom. It is a compnay that has single handedly changed the landscape of the marketplace for so many industries. In fact, I recently finished reading The Perfect Store: Inside EBay by Adam Cohen. It really was an interesting read and a valuable insight into Ebay's "community". In the book Cohen argues that Ebay's greatest asset is it's community. He also talks about Ebays "feedback system" or what is more generically known as a reputation system as a way for the Ebay community to self-police itself (for the most part at least).

Inspired by the book, I decided to give Ebay a new spin. And so recently I pulled out some old items which I wasn't using any more and mostly as an experiment proceeded to sell them on EBay. I also purchaed several items on Ebay and found some good deals and had an overall positive experience. However, in my non-scientific re-evaluation of Ebay, I also uncovered some peeves which I felt compelled to share:

1) Site Design and Usability: For a site that does so much in revenue, it is my personal opinion, that Ebay's site and usability leave a lot to be desired. I have actually heard talks from usablty folks at Ebay when they have come and presented at Stanford and they do a very good job of explaining why making changes to Ebay's interface has a very high switching cost for the company and for its community. The old dogs and the Ebay addicts have learnt how the site works and making any changes is akin to playing with fire, for fear of inflaming the community opinion or breaking the various screen-scrapers that are out there working trolling the ebay pages.

However, though that is formidable problem, I do feel that there are things that Ebay can do in order to make changes and yet potentially maintain backwar compatibility for a period of time and then phasing out old systems through a retirement program. A classic example that illustrates my point is EBay's Chat. I feel that given my background in the area I'm somewhat qualified to pick a fight on this. The technology that Ebay is using for it's chat system is so 1994-1995. There have been so many advances since then, but Ebay's system seems to be caught in its own little world where time stands still.

2) The interface for posting items for sale -- and the overall presentation of the items on the website can use a huge facelift. There is no reason that a seller should need to add a counter, or the fact that the counter should be a gif image -- again technology reminescent of a decade ago. The overall experience of posting an item for selling and that of actually browsing and biding can be improved so much by making little changes and most of all embracing new technology.

3) Auctions can get pretty fancy. But on Ebay, you cannot extend an auction into overtime. This is what encourages sniping. In my opinion sniping goes agaist the very fabric of the principles EBay's founders claimed to found the company on. If the objective is to create the most efficint marketplace, by allowing sniping (I'm not saying it should be stopped altogether, but that there should at least be the option for sellers to do an auto-extend on auctions till such time thre has been no more biding for a certain delta of time) then the market is not efficint any more. Some sellers are not getting the optimal value (and in fact it is so surprising that Ebay doesn't do this because it should imply a significant increase in the value of the transaction and hence and increae int he revenue for EBay) and som buyers are losing auctions because they weren't allowed to bid further even though they may be willing to do so.

4) My final and most crucial gripe is how EBay's feedback system is flawed and is prone to feedbac which is quid-pro-quo. I recently engaged in a transaction on EBay in which the seller did not ship the items in a timely manner. My attempts to contact the seller initially went unheard. I did eventually receive the product, but a couple of weeks late which in turn had an impact on the schedule I was attempting to meet for a research project. Consequntly, I made the decision to leave negative feedback for the seller, but with the appropriate comment that it was for poor communication and late shipment. The seller in return left negative feedback for me and thereafter, promptly submitting a request for mutual withdrawal. So by now the flaw should be aparent - If one side had a negative experience, but the other party upheld it's part of the bargain (in my case paying as soon as the auction ended) that feedback doesn't often come out in the system because both parties know that a negative feedback will probably result in a retaliatory negative feedback. This form of feedback-blackmail as I like to call it, results in a back-scratching quid-pro-quo which undermines the integrity of a reputation system. As I explained to the seller in my transaction, I will not succumb to such arm-twisting and withdrawing an honest and factual negativ feedback simply in response to a negative feedback would be a disservice to the EBay community.

What Ebay has going fo it is critical mass, however, if such little issues are not addresed over time (and a decade is a long time) then slowly the rust catches up with the tanker and it start to take on water...

Thoughts?

6 Comments:

  • At 8:06 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    I have to agree. Occasional Buyers have little incentive to leave any feedback at all except for the occasional negative. Once a Buyer leaves positive feedback they loose all of their leverage and are at the mercy of the Seller. It becomes a game of Rock, Paper, Scissors only the Buyer is forced to go first. Neutral feedback for the Seller simply results in a negative for the Buyer so the Seller can get it removed. This leaves the occasional Buyer who already has a good rating only one strategy: Never leave any feedback, even if they have a really good transaction. That way they can leave negative feedback in the future if necessary. Like the EBay forums are so fond of saying, feedback is optional.

     
  • At 8:38 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    I bought an item on ebay. I payed on time and the package was received on time. When the time came for the feedback, the seller says "Positive feedback will be left for those who leave us positive feedback". By the way his id is diget604 and email is gordonman604@shaw.ca . I actually wanted to leave a positive feedback but hell no, he is a blackmailer who thinks he can get away with blackmailing. He should be put in online prison. Infact I will leave him negative feedback.

     
  • At 9:33 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    when a seller has received payment (cash in pocket) he/she should be obligated to leave feedback. Retalitory feedback pratices should be banned on ebay.

     
  • At 12:23 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

     
  • At 7:54 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    I have experienced the same thing with eBay. These days, a "neutral" warning is closer to a "negative". I left two negatives recently when I purchased two camera lenses from the same seller that were in poorer condition then listed. The seller didn't respond to my email and I waited too long to file anything with eBay or PayPal.

    So what does the seller do when he gets two neutrals? Gives me a neutral of course. There is a strong incentive to not leave negative feedback if one plans on selling items on eBay (or even bidding on some sellers items) as negative feedback is not examined closely. Not only is it a poor system in that regard but it is also very hard to find the negative feedback in the system by design.

    eBay is flawed. They have the market but if they continue in the current direction eventually competition will eclipse them. It will take a long time because there are only players in a few niche markets that eBay refuses to serve (and most of those sites are even worse then eBay).

     
  • At 7:57 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    Whoops, I left the seller two neutrals -- not two negatives.

     

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