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AMAZON-EBAY

Course: INFO 658, Fall 2008
School: VCU
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October NYT 12, 2008 Amid the Gloom, an E-Commerce War By BRAD STONE WHEN the e-commerce giant eBay emerged from the last recession seven years ago with an aura of invincibility, its chief executive, Meg Whitman, boasted that eBay is to some extent recession-proof. As the online auctioneers revenues and stock price kept climbing, one of its primary rivals, Amazon.com, just limped along. How times have changed....

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October NYT 12, 2008 Amid the Gloom, an E-Commerce War By BRAD STONE WHEN the e-commerce giant eBay emerged from the last recession seven years ago with an aura of invincibility, its chief executive, Meg Whitman, boasted that eBay is to some extent recession-proof. As the online auctioneers revenues and stock price kept climbing, one of its primary rivals, Amazon.com, just limped along. How times have changed. Ms. Whitman, now co-chair of Senator John McCains presidential campaign, retired from eBay earlier this year as the company struggled with stagnation. Amazon, meanwhile, has emerged as one of the most vibrant and reliable retailers in the country. And in an unmistakable sign that Internet companies are indeed exposed to the gathering economic storm stemming from the credit crisis, Ms. Whitmans successor, John J. Donahoe, laid off 10 percent of eBays 16,000 employees last Monday. Mr. Donahoe noted that eBay was already feeling the effects of the downturn. This looks like it is going to be a more typical economic cycle that impacts consumer spending, he said. We are not immune. That the economic crisis is washing up on Silicon Valleys shores shouldnt, perhaps, come as a surprise. Most tech companies are defenseless against waning advertising, business spending and consumer interest in big-ticket items like computers. Over the last three months, investors have punished tech companies like Google, Microsoft and Apple, extracting a fifth to a half of their market value. E-commerce, though, was once thought to be a refuge from economic storms. People who stay away from the mall might actually be more tempted to shop online and hunt for deals, or so the thinking went. But analysts are now revisiting that assumption. Many consumers, citing an uncertain economy, say they will clutch their wallets tightly this holiday season regardless of where they shop: 48 percent surveyed recently by eBillme, an online payment service, said they planned to delay purchases. Traditional, brick-and-mortar stores had wrenching, double-digit declines in September sales and are bracing for a bleak holiday season. No one is certain to what degree online retailers will feel that same pain, because digital vendors have never endured a deep, protracted economic slump before. We still feel pretty good about this year, but I worry about next year and beyond, said Brian J. Pitz, an analyst at Banc of America Securities. Are people going to spend when they cant get home equity lines of credit, a student loan or a car loan? For eBay and Amazon, the twin giants of e-commerce, the financial meltdown has arrived at a particularly crucial time. After years of claiming that their businesses were complementary, not competitive, the companies are now on a collision course. Amazon has accelerated its courtship of small online vendors, allowing them to sell on its site becoming more like eBay. And eBay, desperate to revive itself, has decided to emphasize traditional, fixed-price sales of both new and old merchandise becoming more like Amazon. AT stake is more than e-commerce bragging rights. On the Internet, size matters. Larger companies can collect more information about consumers, negotiate better deals with partners and use that leverage to expand their dominance (for example, Google versus Yahoo in search). This is a pivotal holiday season for eBay, said Jeffrey Lindsay, a senior analyst at Bernstein Research who has covered the Internet for a decade. What people fear is that Amazon is basically building a bigger sales base than eBay and will use that knowledge to sell people more and more of the things they want to buy online. Indeed, the balance of power in e-commerce seems to be shifting faster than anyone expected. Just three years ago, eBay had 30 percent more traffic than Amazon. Today, its total of 84.5 million active users is barely ahead of the 81 million active customer accounts that Amazon reported in June. Amazon has exceeded eBay in other measures as well. EBays market capitalization was three times Amazons in 2005, back when Wall Street loved the fact that it carried no inventory and generated huge profits. This year, eBays stock has lost over half its value and, in July, Amazons valuation surpassed eBays for the first time. In a series of interviews, Mr. Donahoe acknowledged that eBay, based in San Jose, Calif., didnt adapt fast enough to shifting e-commerce winds. He now embraces a turnaround mind-set and is refocusing its Web marketplace toward shoppers who dont want to waste time in online auctions. There are times when I wish we can close this store and just open a new store, but we cant, he said. We need to make bolder, more aggressive changes to the eBay ecosystem even if they are unpopular. Up in Seattle, meanwhile, Amazons chief executive, Jeffrey P. Bezos, says that after years of failed experimentation, third-party vendors the foundation on which eBay was built now account for about 29 percent of sales on Amazon. The company has endured and outlasted critics who long complained about its high fixed costs. Last year, it impressed investors with accelerating growth, and its stock price revisited the highs of the dotcom boom, before waning euphoria and market pessimism erased more than half of those gains this year. Mr. Bezos credits Amazons tolerance for risky, expensive bets like the Kindle electronic reading device. Our willingness to be misunderstood, our long-term orientation and our willingness to repeatedly fail are the three parts of our culture that make doing this kind of thing possible, he said. EBays recent problems have made Mr. Bezos and his team look like shrewd and patient stewards of the Amazon franchise. And Amazons second wind is making eBay look as if it has missed one of the greatest opportunities in the Internets short history. EBay could have closed the door to Amazon back when Amazon was mostly just a platform to sell books and music, said Scott Devitt, an analyst at Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, the investment bank. But what eBay did in those days was to take a very hands-off approach and let the marketplace control itself. And that ended up being the downfall of the business relative to others that have succeeded. OVER the summer of 2004, at the annual executive retreat that eBay insiders call Telluride, a product strategy team argued that eBay needed to break into the promising world of digital media. Pointing to the popularity of services like Napster and the new iTunes music store from Apple, the group predicted that media like books, music and movies would inevitably be distributed digitally, over the Web. EBay, they argued, needed to ride that wave. That insight which did catch on at Amazon and is now responsible for high-profile efforts like the Kindle and Amazons MP3 store and video-on-demand service went nowhere at eBay. Nobody really shut it down. The process shut it down, says a former eBay executive who was on the product strategy team but requested anonymity to avoid alienating former colleagues. The company was obsessed with making quarterly numbers. Whether passing on digital media was a mistake at eBay is still an open question. But the anecdote illustrates larger problems. More than a dozen current and former eBay executives, from all levels of management, say eBay routinely failed to reorient its core business. They say eBay avoided fiddling with its auction model because it was wary of disrupting a long-profitable equilibrium between buyers and sellers. EBay has known for years that some Web buyers were looking for a different experience. Surveys suggested that auction participants were alienated by untrustworthy sellers and hidden shipping fees, and increasingly preferred the certainty of instantly buying items at a fixed price. Although eBay executives recognized and routinely acknowledged the problem, they never took bold, direct steps to address it. In 2005, the company acquired Shopping.com, a comparative shopping site that catalogs products for sale elsewhere on the Web. But for years eBay did not promote the companys listings, primarily because its vocal community of sellers the ones paying fees to eBay protested whenever eBay sent buyers to other retailers. Josh Koppelman, who founded the e-commerce site Half.com and sold it to eBay in 2001, says that there was an understandable cultural reluctance inside eBay to alienate sellers. We got paid a fee to provide a service to a community, he said. Hurting members of that community was difficult. Instead of imposing critical fixes to its slowing model, eBay searched for high-growth businesses elsewhere, acquiring Skype, the online calling service; StubHub, the ticketing site; and a series of classified-advertising Web sites. The company did create a whole new site, called eBay Express, where it tried to satisfy buyer interest in a simpler shopping experience. EBay Express automatically amassed all the fixed-price, non-auction listings on eBay properties and presented them in an organized way with only one payment system, PayPal also owned by eBay. But in the two-year life of eBay Express, eBay never directed any meaningful traffic to it, fearing that it would interfere with the more profitable and popular auction-oriented site. The company shuttered eBay Express this year and has said it will move some of its innovative features to eBay.com. Contributing to intransigence, according to several former executives, were deep divisions and constant hand-wringing among its managers over the most fundamental question: What is eBay? One camp believed that eBay was a discount palace and that it had to continually offer deals to buyers in whatever shopping format they wanted. But another group, resistant to change even as late as last year when eBay was clearly losing ground, believed that the brand was tied up in the excitement of auctions. Emphasizing traditional shopping destroyed what made eBay special, they argued. Today online shopping is mainstream, but its also becoming boring, Bill Cobb, then the president of eBay North America, wrote in a June 2007 blog entry that typified this thinking. Were investing in the quintessential eBay experience of buying and selling person to person in an auction format. Ms. Whitman seemed to moderate this constant debate while never actually settling it. At times, she also seemed unwilling to leave auctions behind. In an interview last week, while on a break from traveling with the Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin, Ms. Whitman said it was hard for her to reflect on these kinds of divisions within the company, or on missed opportunities. There was no shortage of realistic looks in the mirror, where we asked ourselves if we were doing the best job that we could do, she said. She also addressed another notion raised by former eBayers, who say executives were dismissive of Amazon but focused obsessively on Google, the search leader whose tentative moves into e-commerce were viewed inside eBay as acts of aggression. Google is a disruptive competitor. not Its a marketplace and its not a retailer but has a different way of marrying buyers and sellers, she said. I dont think you can overstate any competitive threats. But paranoia about Google, these former executives say, fueled strategic missteps like the Skype acquisition, which Google had also pursued. Ms. Whitman and other eBay managers spent considerable energy trying to integrate Skype, and last year eBay wrote down $1.4 billion of the $3.1 billion acquisition. As eBay obsessed about Google, the online retailer from Seattle was encroaching on its turf. CONVERSATIONS with Jeff Bezos of Amazon inevitably provoke two kinds of outbursts. One is that famous, barking laugh that punctuates even seemingly mundane sentences. The other is his paean to the wisdom of long-term thinking. We are willing to plant seeds that take five to seven years to grow into reasonable things, he said in an interview. You cant do big, clean-sheet invention unless you are willing to invest for long periods of time. Mr. Bezos has delivered these kinds of odes to patience and risk tolerance for nearly a decade. The companys appetite for enduring short-term pain for long-term gain is clearest when comparing it with its rival, eBay. While eBay was buying into classified advertising, online payments and Internet telephony, Amazon spent hundreds of millions of dollars building its brand as a trusted retailer hiring customer service representatives and returning money to customers when transactions went awry. As eBay took a pass on digital media, Amazon dove in and frustrated investors for years with margins that were diminished by a bulky R.& D. budget but produced promising businesses like the MP3 store. Compensation at the two companies also reflects core differences. Amazon evaluates its executives annually and gives performance-based stock grants. Until this year, when Mr. Donahoe became chief executive, eBay gave cash and stock bonuses based on quarterly performance, rewarding managers for meeting Wall Streets short-term expectations. Similarly, Amazons push to recruit the small sellers who orbited eBay was marked, at first, by patience and often-embarrassing experimentation. In 1999, five years after Mr. Bezos first plunged his stake into the ground as an online bookseller, Amazon invaded eBays territory, introducing Amazon Auctions and a way for retailers to set up stores on the site, called zShops. The efforts tanked. The problem then was that nobody came, Mr. Bezos said. Actually, sellers came, but the customers didnt care and didnt shop there. Amazon tried to promote this siloed merchandise on its site by linking to it on its more popular product pages. These so-called smart links were hotly controversial inside Amazon and became the subject of a rivalry between its retail and technology groups. Fearful that sending visitors to other pages would cut into their sales, retailing executives at Amazon took to removing them from the page at every opportunity, according to one senior Amazon executive who was there at the time. SEVERAL years ago, the company introduced Amazon Marketplace, laying the groundwork for its current path by listing new and used items from third-party sellers alongside its own merchandise. If Amazon didnt stock a particular item, or if independent sellers could offer better prices, they would become the featured retailer on the page. Amazon settled internal tensions by giving its retail managers credit for any products sold on their pages, even by third-party sellers. But Mr. Bezos says the arrangement still produces anxiety. Put yourself in place of our retail buyers, he said. You just purchased 10,000 units of a particular digital camera and you are told, if any third party anywhere in the world can offer a better price, we are going to give them the buy box and you are going to get stuck with the inventory. That causes some angst. Over the last five years, Amazon has lowered hurdles for independent vendors to sell on its site and recruited new groups of merchants as it has expanded into other countries and product categories automotive parts in 2006 and office supplies this year, for example. Amazon executives say they dont specifically pursue top eBay sellers, but some merchants suggest otherwise. David Duong, founder of Shoe Metro, a Web retailer based in San Diego, says Amazon representatives called him shortly after Amazon.com introduced a shoe category in 2005 and asked him to begin selling on the site. I guess they found us on eBay, he said. We were actually going to talk to them, but they beat us to the punch. Lately, small merchants and their trade organizations say, the outreach has become even more direct. The Professional EBay Sellers Alliance said that Amazon recently offered to waive some fees for the 800 members of the group, an organization of eBay power sellers, to woo them to its platform. Because Amazon also sells many of the same products as its merchants, executives at eBay predict that competitive tensions will emerge as the Amazon Marketplace grows. Maybe so. Its happened before. Amazon once ran the Web operations of large traditional retailers like Borders, Circuit City and Toys R Us. One by one, those retailers concluded that outsourcing such a crucial feature of 21st-century retailing to a competitor was a bad idea. But some of its newer deals with sellers indicate that Amazon is finding ways around those tensions, at least with small merchants. Andrew and Deb Mowery of Fort Collins, Colo., who started selling home, garden and pet supplies on eBay in 1999, now make 60 percent of their sales on Amazon and about 20 percent on eBay. In addition to listing items for sale on the Amazon Marketplace, they are also a wholesale supplier to Amazon, providing it with products like heated pet beds. Mr. Mowery is essentially competing with himself, but the arrangement works. If they run out, Ive got their back, he said. If I run out, theyve got my back. Amazon wants to forge these kinds of close ties with other small sellers. A program called Fulfillment by Amazon, introduced in 2006, allows retailers to store their inventory in Amazons warehouses. When someone buys an item from that seller, Amazon ships it out of its warehouse in an Amazon box. Integrating small merchants into its operations also allows Amazon to learn more about whom it can trust to sell on its site. Compared with eBay, the company says it exerts a far greater measure of control over its marketplace, calling certain vendors featured sellers and vetting others in product categories that are sensitive to fraud. At the end of the day, we be...

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Colorado - V - 2000
APPENDIX 1 DESIGN GUIDELINES FOR CONSTRUCTION SITES AND TEMPORARY FACILITIES The Main Campus of the University of Colorado at Boulder has a deserved national reputation for cohesive appearance in architecture and marvelous setting against a backdrop
Colorado - V - 1999
SECTION 02950 TREES, PLANTS AND GROUND COVERS PART 1 - GENERAL 1.1 SUMMARY: A. Section Includes: 1. 2. 3. 4. B. Trees. Plants and shrubs. Ground covers. Non-plant materials required to complete installation of planting.Related Sections: 1. 2. 3. 4.
Colorado - V - 1998
SECTION 05400 COLD FORMED METAL FRAMING PART 1 - GENERAL 1.1 SUMMARY: A. Section Includes: 1. 2. 3. B. Load-bearing and non-load-bearing metal stud wall framing. Anchorage, bridging and bracing. Metal joint framing with anchorage and bridging.Relat
Colorado - V - 1998
SECTION 03100 CONCRETE FORMWORK PART 1 - GENERAL 1.1 SUMMARY: A. Section Includes: 1. 2. B. Formwork for cast-in-place concrete. Form accessories.Related Sections: 1. 2. 3. Section 03200 - Concrete Reinforcement. Section 03300 - Cast-in-Place Concr
Colorado - V - 1998
APPENDIX 9 CLASSROOM GUIDELINES Guidelines are necessary to communicate media requirements to administrators, architects, and contractors, but each classroom requires individual interpretation and exceptions. The emphasis is on easy to use hardware,
Colorado - V - 2000
APPENDIX 9 CLASSROOM GUIDELINES Guidelines are necessary to communicate media requirements to administrators, architects, and contractors, but each classroom requires individual interpretation and exceptions. The emphasis is on easy to use hardware,
Colorado - V - 1998
SECTION 02930 BLUEGRASS SEEDING PART 1 - GENERAL 1.1 DESCRIPTION A. Provide seeded lawns as shown and specified. Renovated lawn area refer to existing lawn areas disturbed by construction. 1. 2. 3. B. Soil Preparation Seeding lawns, athletic fields,
Colorado - V - 1998
SECTION 07530 SINGLE PLY MEMBRANE ROOFING PART 1 - GENERAL 1.1 SUMMARY: A. Section Includes: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. B. DESIGNER NOTE: SPECIFIC APPROVAL MUST BE OBTAINED FROM UCB STAFF PRIOR TO SPECIFYING THIS ROOFING SYSTEMRoofing membrane. Roof insu
Colorado - V - 1998
SECTION 11610 LABORATORY FUME HOODS PART 1 - GENERAL 1.1 SUMMARY: A. Section Includes: 1. Laboratory fume hoods, support cabinets and related service fixtures. WITH ALL LABORATORY EQUIPMENT: -FUME HOODS -BIO-SAFETY CABS -CAGE/RACK WASHERS, BOTTLE FIL