Sponsored by Job CentralRSS

ebay has a problem- and so might we all….

Thu, Nov 15, 2007

Articles

I have a several obscure interests (sailboats, old Japanese cars, optics), and I am an avid ebay user. Over the years, I have used it for many business items as well, especially stuff like software, consumables, and office materials.

I believe that ebay has had a large and growing impact on our economy in at least two important but not talked about areas; the need to produce fewer items and the establishment of predictable values for large numbers of objects, both mass-produced and artwork.

From snowblowers to trumpets, manufacturers have less demand because idle objects can now find their way to new owners with low costs and risks throughout the transaction.

If you want to know what something is worth, there is a good chance ebay can tell you quickly, with real-time information on arms-length sales.

One famous way that ebay has been a leader is through it’s feedback system, which along with buyer and payment protection programs, reduces transaction risk. By publishing ratings from buyers and sellers, ebay has established one of the most widely used credit rating systems in the world.

There is no doubt that good feedback will increase your profits as a seller.

But a certain irrational human tendency creates a problem for users with perfect feedback records- that being our habit over overvaluing perfection. It’s my feeling that a 100% record, especially with a high number of transactions, will yield significantly higher sale prices than a 99.5% record.

That factor creates an asymmetrical situation between a user with a 100% record and one without one. And the problem is that the person with a perfect record can’t afford to provoke a negative rating as retaliation for placing one on a bad seller or buyer. In effect, to protect that 100%, you can’t leave bad feedback.

Ebay could do something along the lines of not allowing a negative against any 100% record of more than 50 transactions without human review, but justice costs money. The biggest transaction I have made on ebay was buying a used Benz diesel. The car was 8 years old, 25K miles, creampuff. It was Honda money but rolls like green money. It’s the color of money. I did not know what I was getting until it rolled off the truck. The seller had 300 car sales, with 100% feedback. Would I have bought with 98% feedback?

Maybe not.

There may be a lesson here about recruiting, but also about political power and social control. If we overvalue the unblemished, we greatly enhance the power of those who can create so-called blemishes to control us. In a just society, that first blemish after a number of years should require extra careful process- be it a ticket on your driving record, a bad relationship with credit cards, criminalized political protest, or becoming a casualty in the so called war on (some drugs used by some classes of people some of the time).

I also find that as I get older, imperfection becomes more dimensioned, and illusions of perfection about anything recede.





Cheezhead's FREE Insider E-Mail (Get the Stuff Regular Readers Don't)



Job Search

 Ex : sales, "software engineer"   Location(s) Ex : Dallas,TX or 75219 or TX
 


Other Posts



This post was written by:

Marty Snyder - who has written 10 posts on Cheezhead.

Martin Snyder is currently president of Main Sequence Technologies, an Ohio solutions company that serves thousands of staffing pros worldwide, providing on-demand or licensed software and related services for recruitment wherever and however organizations are built, most often under the flagship brand of PCRecruiter. Main Sequence is led by a team including Martin’s brother Michael Snyder (CIO), along with Bill Kubicek (VP Marketing) and Gretchen Kubicek (CFO). PCRecruiter is notable for being widely used among both third-party and corporate staffing groups, and offering unusual versatility in both deployment and functionality. Prior to his tenure at Main Sequence, Martin co-founded Treadware Corporation, a logistics software firm. In the early 1990’s, he provided LAN/WAN consulting and implementation services in Northeast Ohio. Mr. Snyder attended the University of Akron. Married with two young children, Martin is a member of the Mentor Harbor Yachting Club and an avid sailboat racer. His other interests include cosmology, aerospace, and world history during the thirty seconds between hitting the bed and falling asleep.

Contact the author

Leave a Reply