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Should eBay's Meg Whitman resign?

Posted Jan 03 2008, 06:21 AM by Kim Peterson
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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 should have drop Whitman a long time ago.  It use to be a real auction powerhouse now, it's just a lame website.  Ebay has a tendency to "Indefinitely" suspending normal users claiming it's being fair to other users, while allowing scams like messages asking sellers to send their stuff to Nigeria and UK.  Tons of power sellers were forced to leave because Ebay can not tell whether complaints about a listing were true or completely false.  The fees just keeps on going up but there is barely any service at all.  It really isn't what it use to be anymore.  

If E-Bay continues to allow sellers to abuse buyers and continues to apply policies which are cleary are desgined to be anti buyer, they will fail.  Fed up with E-Bay!

PEG WHITMAN MAKES MORE MONEY THAN SHE CAN COUNT. THERE IS ONLY ONE PROBLEM, SHE MAKES IT OFF THE SMALL EBAYERS BACK.  IT HAS BEEN A CONSTANT RAISE IN PRICES TO LIST.

EXAMPLE  /  LISTING FEE, THUMBNAIL FEE, PAYPAL FEE, FINAL VALUE FEE, BOLD LETTERING, PICTURE FEE, PLUS ABOUT TEN MORE. SHE HAS TO GO.

Ebay has made philoshopical errors in dictatating the types of items it will permit to be sold.  One in particular, is the firearms issue, it is driving millions of Americans away.  Right or wrong once another site offers services they won't be back to Ebay.

The other issue is the costs, I recently sold a womens coat for $75 including shipping and handling.  Ebay billed me $17.46, I'm not going back.

  Ebay needs a major overhaul in regards to policies and customer service. They are "all-powerful" and don't mind letting you know that. Speaking as an 8-year ebay user, they've gotten PLENTY of my money through user fees and never once helped me sort out an issue regarding fraudulant sellers on their site, at least not in my favor. There are no definitive punitive actions taken against crooks who sell on ebay while they police honest sellers listings constantly looking for any "violations". They cancel your listings with no warning or without giving you the opportunity to correct something they deem to be a "violation". Their "investigators" are not knowledgable enough in the various items they must prove to be valid or invalid to be capable of passing such judgements, and they more often than not, get it wrong.

  I, like many ebay users I've known, are just waiting for a better option. The long-rumored Google and Amazon auction sites don't seem to be materializing but as soon as someone builds a more user-friendly auction site ebay will quickly fade, guaranteed.

I had so many bad experiences with ebay I would never buy their stock nor would I ever sell on their site again. Their partnership with Paypal has never guaranteed that you do not get ripped off of serious money. Not me but a friend of mine shipped a product that a bidder paid $2000 for. During shipping time the buyer cancelled the payment. She was out $2000. She did everything within proper time frames and never got her money back through Paypal.I lost small amounts compared with that but totally disliked my experiences at ebay. Never again. I also have a personal problem with a major CEO going out on the limb promoting candidates like Whitman has. Either do her job better as ebay's CEO or give it up and work for the Romney campaign full time. I believe ebay could grow in other directions.

I depend on ebay for part of my income... at 1st it was great... but then they bought up paypal and they keep raising their fees, making it harder to make a profit... they are getting greedy & need to stop or they are going to go down the tubes

I depend on ebay for part of my income... at 1st it was great... but then they bought up paypal and they keep raising their fees, making it harder to make a profit... they are getting greedy & need to stop or they are going to go down the tubes

I am glad to see the direct link between stock value and a CEO's continued employment . I suppose that every CEO of a publicly traded corporation with a lower stock value this year should be replaced . It would be nice if those who wrote about the stock market had some inkling of how the system works . The value of stocks are driven by " marketing the stock ", not by legitimate financial conditions on the ground .

If eBay can't make money now they never will on the auction side of the business. With eBay charging around 4% for their auction sales plus close to 4% on their PayPal transactions sellers will be forced out. I sell on eBay and find that through auctions the profit margins are small. Adding their listing fees to the equation sometimes it is hard to make money. Cut the pork and don't raise the fees or there could be an alternative for all of us.

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