Should eBay's Meg Whitman resign? - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

Should eBay's Meg Whitman resign?

Posted Jan 03 2008, 06:21 AM by Kim Peterson
Rating:
Filed under: ,

There's been some talk lately about whether eBay CEO Meg Whitman should resign. EBay would be invigorated if she did. Recently, she's been criticized for signing on as the financial co-chair of Mitt Romney's presidential campaign. Whitman met Romney years ago when she consulted for his private equity firm.

At BloggingStocks, Gary Sattler thinks that Whitman might request a paid leave of absence from eBay to work on the Romney campaign. I really doubt that. It's ludicrous to think that a CEO of a major public company would do such a thing. If Whitman indeed asks for time off to campaign, eBay shareholders have every right to be angry.

Putting politics aside, is it time for Whitman to step down? If you're an eBay shareholder, you might think so. The stock was abysmal in 2006 and continued to disappointment in 2007, staying mostly in the $30-$35 range when companies like Amazon saw shares go through the roof. (Ebay closed yesterday at $32.49.)

Ebay has seen huge growth and international expansion during Whitman's 10-year tenure as CEO. The company is in nearly 40 markets, and has about 250 million registered users. Ebay says it has 100 million listings on its site at any given time, with 6 million added each day. 

The company is undoubtedly an auction powerhouse. The problem is that it has remained just that, despite numerous attempts to expand to new areas. Perhaps the biggest black mark on Whitman's time at eBay is the $2.6 billion acquisition of Internet calling company Skype in 2005. What an expensive mistake. Skype never meshed with eBay and should be spun off as soon as possible. 

Ebay is trying other things, like introducing its own "Neighborhoods" social networking service, but so far that doesn't seem to have taken off either. (Check out eBay's sad, sad iPod neighborhood).

Let's return to Amazon for a minute. The two companies are being compared more often lately, fairly or not. Amazon has surged where eBay has failed, and it's become the go-to site for product research and exploration. You can sell used items on Amazon as well. There is growing dissatisfaction from eBay sellers who don't like the site's increasing fees and restrictive policies. What's to stop a mass exodus to Amazon?

Finally, let's look at some quick revenue and profit numbers at eBay. For the first three quarters of 2007, eBay has pulled in some serious sales. Its cumulative revenue over that time is about $5.5 billion. That's up from $4.2 billion for the same period in 2006. Quarterly profit is approaching $400 million, up from $250 million in each of the first two quarters of 2006.

My take: EBay has some serious problems, including an increasingly angry user base. The company has made mistakes and needs to clean up its own house before expanding further. Whitman has done a good job shoring up sales and steering the company's expansion. She doesn't have to resign, and eBay would probably plod along just fine. But if eBay ever wanted to grow up, to move beyond auctions into a meaningful and powerful consumer experience, it must drop Whitman for a more suitable visionary.
Comments

 

Ebay fees are higher? Are you smoking on a crack pipe?  Every time I list items on Amazon I end up paying higher fees and lose money. For example, an item I listed on Amazon, for $29.15 netted me $26.00 -- A $3.15 loss.  Not alot, but still a loss, none the less. Over the last two weeks I have made a decent amount in sales, but factor in the fees charged, I ending up losing more money with Amazon than Ebay. Amazon charged me 23% of my total sales in fees, while Ebay charged me just under 15%. And who are(and where are) these angry ebay users?  I hear more complaints about Amazon's and their high fees, than I do about Ebay. Amazon is too busy trying to be like Ebay, and everyone is screaming that Ebay should be more like Amazon. Will you so called experts quit trying to make apple pie out of bananas.

I've  been an eBay memeber practically since the site was launched and over the years, it has become a complete joke.  Feeback, what feedback.  It's worthless information. There is no policy in place to protect buyers or sellers and it seems that they are only interested in $$.  Recently, I bought and paid for an item in November with the intention of giving it as a Christmas gift.  Never received it in time and I have no recourse.  Yeah, I could send it back but the seller wants me to absorb the shipping cost.  eBay has never or will ever act on something like this since they consider themselves nothing more than a medium.  They take no responsibility whatsoever and it's every member for themselves.  It's almost pointless for them to exist under the current operating policies.  Whitman should get canned for ignoring all the real  problems created over the years.  Seems she can only think about shareholder return and lining her pockets.  

Ebay is in institution.  Who would have ever thought.................

www.rockandrollcollection.com

Hi, I'm a current seller for ebay. I have seen no problems at all and now I have my own consignment store where people here in denver can bring their stuff to sell on ebay. I dont know what happen to you all personally but you need to come back to ebay and be part of it. thanks!

I've been a seller/buyer on eBay since '95. Their focus, like so many other big corporations, is profit, profit, and profit. Stock value MUST increase at all costs. (Kinda like Home Depot, etc.) When you drive a company full-speed constantly, the wheels will eventually come off. That will happen one of these days. Higher seller fees and lower customer service will be their downfall. Too bad.....

eBay has become the worst of what it originally stood for. Like a gigantic, global garage sale, it was a great place to find used treasures. Now, it's money, money, money. Sellers can do no wrong in eBay's view and buyers are a pesky annoyance. Look at the ridiculous fees charged by sellers for shipping a 2 ounce object. $20, $30, or more on shipping and handling. Worse, they don't offer an easy solution to block problem sellers but "problem" buyers can get dinged all sorts of ways: negative feedback if you complain (regardless of the fact you paid immediately and cooperated fully with all terms and conditions) about junk you received and a buyer can be immediately blocked from buying again. The site's a mess and I hate shopping there.

I have used ebay for several years, have over 100 purchases, and have never been ripped off. I only buy from people with very clean records 99%+ customer satisfaction, and also over 100 positive feedbacks.

I found it is a safe place to shop, if you are particular in who you deal with. Sometimes that means cautiously passing up a deal.

Ebay is very good at what it does - an online auction house, the best so far. Why change ? They obviously know the business and have a great business model. They do not need to "grow up" beyond auctions rather they should concentrate on consolidating thier business model such that its core users do not feel abused by the manipulation of postage and listing fees. A more aggressive approach to online fraud would also enhance ebays image. Big corporations will make mistakes especially when they experience the kind of rapid, once in a lifetime growth that ebay has experienced so no surprise there. Instead I commend ebay and amazon for riding out the tech boom bust.

Ebay used to be a good deal, not it's grown into a bad deal...

I think E-Bay has become way too commercial and the fees have skyrocketed I cant understand the point of having people watch your product and being able to bid at the very last minute seems to limit the true spirit of the bidding and barter process which I fully believe let the man whom really wants it bid on it right away and if there is mre than one bidder let the game begin!! The current watching process does not really allow for the bid process to flourish the way it should under natural conditions and I believe actually penalizes the seller even further than the higher fees by restricting a true free for all auction atmosphere E-Bay needs to rethink thier process before they have a mass defection

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):