eBay: The First 10 Years
Yes, you read that correctly: ten years. eBay was created in
September 1995, by a man called Pierre Omidyar, who was living
in San Jose. He wanted his site – then called ‘AuctionWeb’
– to be an online marketplace, and wrote the first code
for it in one weekend. It was one of the first websites of its
kind in the world. The name ‘eBay’ comes from the
domain Omidyar used for his site. His company’s name was
Echo Bay, and the ‘eBay AuctionWeb’ was originally
just one part of Echo Bay’s website at ebay.com. The first
thing ever sold on the site was Omidyar’s broken laser
pointer, which he got $14 for.
The site quickly became massively popular, as sellers came to
list all sorts of odd things and buyers actually bought them.
Relying on trust seemed to work remarkably well, and meant that
the site could almost be left alone to run itself. The site
had been designed from the start to collect a small fee on each
sale, and it was this money that Omidyar used to pay for AuctionWeb’s
expansion. The fees quickly added up to more than his current
salary, and so he decided to quit his job and work on the site
full-time. It was at this point, in 1996, that he added the
feedback facilities, to let buyers and sellers rate each other
and make buying and selling safer.
In 1997, Omidyar changed AuctionWeb’s – and his
company’s – name to ‘eBay’, which is
what people had been calling the site for a long time. He began
to spend a lot of money on advertising, and had the eBay logo
designed. It was in this year that the one-millionth item was
sold (it was a toy version of Big Bird from Sesame Street).
Then, in 1998 – the peak of the dotcom boom – eBay
became big business, and the investment in Internet businesses
at the time allowed it to bring in senior managers and business
strategists, who took in public on the stock market. It started
to encourage people to sell more than just collectibles, and
quickly became a massive site where you could sell anything,
large or small. Unlike other sites, though, eBay survived the
end of the boom, and is still going strong today.
1999 saw eBay go worldwide, launching sites in the UK, Australia
and Germany. eBay bought half.com, an Amazon-like online retailer,
in the year 2000 – the same year it introduced Buy it
Now – and bought PayPal, an online payment service, in
2002.
Pierre Omidyar has now earned an estimated $3 billion from
eBay, and still serves as Chairman of the Board. Oddly enough,
he keeps a personal weblog at http://pierre.typepad.com. There
are now literally millions of items bought and sold every day
on eBay, all over the world. For every $100 spent online worldwide,
it is estimated that $14 is spent on eBay – that’s
a lot of laser pointers.
Now that you know the history of eBay, perhaps you’d
like to know how it could work for you? Read the next article.
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