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By Forrester Research
Special to CNET News.com November 22, 2002, 11:40AM PT By Carrie A. Johnson, Senior Analyst As the poster child for profitable pure-play Internet companies, eBay seems invincible. But chinks in its armor do exist: eBay could face tough times as it juggles a changing value proposition, risky enterprise seller efforts and ongoing fraud issues. With online auction sales among U.S. consumers expected to reach $54.3 billion in five years, and eBay's share projected to be 85 percent to 90 percent of that, the company seems on a course to dominate online auction sales. But it's not easy being at the top, because as a market leader, eBay must constantly manage delicate balancing acts to retain its leadership. If we were CEO Meg Whitman, we'd worry about three things, which individually could cause headaches but collectively could change eBay's profits trajectory. Value proposition. eBay's value has always been having millions of items at low prices, and those low prices are a primary reason it has attracted so many consumers. But because far more consumers bid on items than sell items, this value proposition is in jeopardy. How? If eBay can't convert more of its bidders to sellers, buyers will outnumber sellers even more dramatically, and prices will inevitably go up. Value-oriented shoppers will then go to Amazon.com or Walmart.com for low prices, and only buyers interested in hard-to-find knickknacks will keep shopping at eBay. Our advice to eBay: Stop jacking up listing and selling fees that scare away existing sellers, and use TV ads to tout the virtues of buying and selling through eBay to convert bidders to sellers, thereby preserving the buyer-seller balance. Enterprise sellers. eBay recognizes that to attract more mainstream consumers, it has to bring in the big guns--brand-name retailers and manufacturers like Home Depot and IBM that bring more legitimacy to the marketplace. But this strategy could hurt eBay in two ways. First, efforts like its partnership with Accenture, which has yet to announce a retail client, could fail miserably, as large retailers remain skittish about the marketplace. Second, if too many enterprise sellers successfully hawk goods at eBay, lower prices and brand advantages will anger eBay's smaller merchants. If enough top sellers, who still account for 90 percent of eBay's sales, join forces,
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Dear All I learned it the hard way, buttom line is: e-bay DO NOT CARE ABOUT ME AND YOU LITTLE CUSTOMER'S. THEY HAVE NO TIME, AS THEY ARE THE BIG
E-BAY and I am the small little customer. I promise that I will never give them more penny of my money and I will do my best to worn every body.