… Ecommerce, Internet Security, Economics, and Entrepreneurship

Author: stevewoda Page 12 of 13

The eMarket for Lemons at The Wharton School

I had the opportunity to speak at The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania last week about an article that Dr. Eric Clemons recently authored for the Journal of Management Information Systems, "An Empirical Investigation of Third-Party Seller Rating Systems in E-Commerce: The Case of buySAFE".  My presentation was focused on marketplace economics and specifically about information asymmetry, signaling, the "Market for Lemons" concept, and buySAFE.  In addition, I was able to share a few thoughts about my entrepreneurial experience with buySAFE.

As always, I had a great time as the guest of Dr. Eric Clemons, and I enjoyed hearing the passionate questions, insights and feedback from the students.  One of the students posted an article about my visit on his blog, The Un-Wharton

Arthur Benjamin’s Mathemagic!

I have been sitting here this morning working on a financial model in Excel, and after completing one, particularly complex formula, I was reminded of a video I recently saw on the web.

Arthur Benjamin’s mathematics skills are absolutely amazing!  Check it out below…

If you want to learn to count like Arthur Benjamin, check out his academic homepage as well as his Mathemagics site.

Daily Roundup for 2008-02-04

  • The battle for supremacy in the Internet era is entering a tumultuous new phase. Microsoft Corp. placed a bold $44.6 billion bet that buying Yahoo Inc. can transform both companies’ flagging efforts to catch Google Inc. The software giant’s unsolicited offer for Yahoo represents a 62% premium over the Internet company’s recent share price and is a sign of Microsoft’s determination to narrow Google’s growing lead in the online advertising and Web search-engine wars.
  • Lots of people have ideas about the best way to reach influencers but Rick Bruner, Director of Research and Industry Relations for Doubleclick, gives three quick tips for how to reach the people who affect the thoughts of others.

Congratulations to buySAFE’s first intern, Mike Burke

Mike Burke was our first intern at buySAFE and ultimately, he joined our marketing team in 2004.  Mike was a valuable player on our team as he helped launch buySAFE Shopping – buySAFE’s all bonded, comparison shopping engine.  Just before Mike left, he did this Squidoo lens on buySAFE.

This year, Mike decided to go Rwanda with his girlfriend to work at a orphanage.  Personally, I was disappointed to lose Mike, but I also thought this was a terrific opportunity for adventure that he could not possibly pass it up.  If you are interested, you can read about Mike’s trip at Rwandan Journey.

I wanted to pass along my congratulations to Mike for successfully climbing Mount Kilimanjaro.  Nice job!

 

Building Buyer Trust to Increase Sales on eBay

If you are interested in maximizing your customer conversions on eBay, you should check out the eBay Workshop I did earlier this week on "Building Buyer Trust to Increase Sales".  Obviously, I talk a bit about buySAFE, but there are a number of other things that I recommend as well.  Give it a read when you get a few extra minutes.  Many of the concepts I shared can be leveraged on your eCommerce site as well.

If you are an online merchant and you aren’t focusing on maximizing buyer trust, you are leaving a lot of money on the table.  I refer to these lost dollars as the Trust Discount, and I detail the concept in my buySAFE white paper, "Turning the Risk Discount into a Trust Premium".

One last thought on the eBay Workshop, I want to thank Julie Milleson, buySAFE’s employee #3 and up-and-coming marketing guru, for all of her help.  She actually did most of the work to make the eBay Workshop successful.  Thank you Julie.

Related Posts:
"Tune in to buySAFE’s eBay Workshop tomorrow" – buySAFE blog

Rapleaf, Portable Reputation & Portable Trust

I had a very interesting conversation last week with a smart entrepreneur named Auren Hoffman in San Francisco. His company, RapLeaf, aims to enable portable reputation signals for people and merchants. I like almost everything I heard about what RapLeaf is trying to do, and I plan to keep close tabs on and cheer for their success.  I just signed up for Rapleaf, and you can see my Rapleaf reputation here…

swoda's Rapleaf Score

I love the idea of portable trust and reputation signals.  These two things are obviously related, but it is important to note that they are different.

We consider buySAFE a portable trust signal for online merchants. Our objective is to become the world’s leading eCommerce Trust & Safety company by making every online transaction trusted, reliable and risk-free.  So far, so good.  Today, you can find the buySAFE Seal on millions of Internet and eBay listings each and every day. At buySAFE, we enable merchants to leverage our powerful trust signal and bond guarantees across all of their eCommerce sales channels including eBay, Overstock.com Auctions, TIAS, and most recently, their web storefronts.

Howitworks_wide_1

buySAFE’s trust signal is very black and white. You are either bonded or not. As a buyer, you are either going to enter into a risk-free transaction with a Bonded Seller, or you are going to enter into an uncertain transaction with a non-bonded seller.  Regardless of your feedback rating, the equation is still the same…risk-free or uncertainty! It is really that simple. Please check out these two stories on some of eBay’s former top feedback rating sellers to understand my point…GlacierBayDVD & Sell2All.

buySAFE believes that “no risk” is the only viable, future option for eCommerce. Buyers don’t want “a little bit less risk” or “substantially less risk”….. As the eCommerce markets mature, “no risk” is the only real option that merchants will be able to offer consumers if they want to attract and convert sales. buySAFE obviously believes that certainty is a powerful concept in signaling and that it is the missing piece in ecommerce transactions with unknown entities (I will be posting a lot in the future on the economic concepts that folks must understand in order to optimize their sales online).

Having said all of that, it is not an easy feat to become a Bonded Seller. You have to be a professional seller with a good reputation, previous sales experience, minimum sales volumes, and adequate financial stability in order to be a Bonded Seller.

What I like about RapLeaf is that it signals to buyers that the individual/merchant has a history of transacting fairly.  It is essentially a portable reputation signal that individuals/merchants can leverage on all of their online sales channels.  Rapleaf doesn’t ensure that you won’t have a bad experience, but it is a nice reputation signal for those individuals/merchants that cannot qualify to be Bonded Sellers.  That really is a huge benefit for online shoppers.  Frankly, I believe there will be lots of Bonded Sellers that will enjoy the extra benefit of a portable reputation whether that comes from RapLeaf or eBay or whoever.

Obviously, buySAFE doesn’t enable individuals to rate each other, and buySAFE has chosen to not to do this for a number of reasons. First, we started buySAFE on eBay, and eBay is very protective of its turf including its feedback rating system.  Obviously, the feedback system is critical to eBay’s success thus far, but that doesn’t mean it is the optimal system.  I don’t believe it is, and I will be talking more about this in future posts.

One last thought… Scot Wingo did a very nice job touching on portable reputation signals back in March.  He is a very smart guy, and his post is very insightful on this subject.  I do not agree with all of his thoughts, but his insights are very important nevertheless.  Most specifically, I disagree with Scot’s thesis that Google might be in the ideal position to provide a portable trust or reputation signal.  I believe buySAFE is in a far better position to provide the ideal portable trust signal for shoppers and merchants, and I hope to prove that to you over the coming weeks and months.

Google is an unbelievable company (I own its stock), but it is not an objective third party.  Payment providers and marketplaces, by definition, have to be buyer biased in order to create adequate buyer demand.  It is impossible for these firms to be effective “trust brokers” if they have any bias towards either party.  Google is now both a payments company (Google Checkout) and a marketplace (Google Base, AdSense, etc..).  By law, buySAFE has to be a discerning, objective mediator because we are regulated by the state insurance regulators in all 50 states.  We are required to protect buyers, but we are also required to protect the interests of sellers from bad buyers.  Google cannot and will not do that for merchants, and so, it can’t provide the optimal portable trust or reputation signal.  eBay and PayPal are obviously hampered by the same challenges.

Of course, they could always use a simple merchant rating system, but again, merchant rating systems are extremely imperfect signals, and the merchant ratings are not backed up by foolproof guarantees of seller performance.  Coincindentally, Ina Steiner of AuctionBytes wrote on the subject of Google’s Rating System this morning.

We will be talking a lot about eBay, Google, the economic concepts of signaling, and online trust & safety over the coming months, and I hope this is helpful for you.  Again, I am excited about Rapleaf, and I am cheering for their success.  I am not sure what they will be able to do with their business model, but I definitely see the value they can provide online shoppers.  Good luck Auren!

The Trusted Merchant Gallery on the Overstock.com Shopping Site

This week, Overstock.com introduced a Trusted Merchant Gallery on the Overstock.com® Shopping Site. As you may know, all of Overstock.com’s Trusted Merchants are buySAFE Bonded Sellers, so obviously we are excited about this new improvement to Overstock.com’s site.

The Trusted Merchant Gallery will provide Trusted Merchants with access to a new – and huge – group of shoppers. Trusted Merchant listings will be visible in the search results at Overstock.com’s main shopping site. Early traffic and sales results have exceeded expectations!

According to Overstock.com, the New Trusted Merchant Gallery:

  • Spotlights Trusted Merchant’s listings ONLY
  • Provides exposure to over 10 million shoppers per month
  • Delivers highly qualified shoppers who have already begun to search for products

You can view the Trusted Merchant Gallery in action. You will see the gallery at the end of the search results. In the past, when Trusted Merchants / Bonded Sellers have been included in the search results, we have seen dramatic increases in sales volume, and I expect we will see the same thing with this new feature. I will be watching the results quite carefully, and I will plan to follow-up with another post that gives more details on the data as it becomes available.

Technorati: Bonded Sellers, buySAFE, eCommerce, Overstock.com, Safety, Trust, Trust and safety, Trusted Merchants

Del.icio.us: Bonded Sellers, buySAFE, eCommerce, Overstock.com, Safety, Trust, Trust and safety, Trusted Merchants

Google: Bonded Sellers, buySAFE, eCommerce, Overstock.com, Safety, Trust, Trust and safety, Trusted Merchants

Wikipedia: Bonded Sellers, buySAFE, eCommerce, Overstock.com, Safety, Trust, Trust and safety, Trusted Merchants

eBay Express goes live

eBay finally launched eBay Express last night. It is clean and simple. I like it much better than the old eBay because the search process seems so easy.

Having said that, the proof will be in the pudding.  We will be watching this very closely, and I will be getting feedback from buySAFE’s customers over the coming week and months.

Google announces launch of Google Romance

Google has done it again. I always enjoy their annual April Fool’s jokes, and this one is pretty creative.

This year, Google announced the launch of Google Romance. The Solumate Search and Contextual Dating options sound impressive. 🙂

Anyone remember Google Gulp in 2005?

In 2004, Google began hiring for lunar engineers for the Google Copernicus Center.

In 2002, Google announced the real secret behind their fabulous search technology, Google PigeonRank.

In 2000, launched the Google MentalPlex.

They sure do have fun over there. A belated April Fool’s Day to all.

How Do Successful People Get That Way?

My undergraduate alma mater, Florida Southern College, had its annual homecoming this past weekend, and unfortunately, I wasn’t able to make it back for the event. However, it did get me thinking about my college experience and what I learned during my four years in Lakeland, Florida.

I think about one of my former professors often. Jeff Wiley taught finance, but the greatest gift he gave me had little to do with finance. One day in class in 1989, Col. Wiley decided to talk about how to be successful. He wanted to share his thoughts about how we would ultimately achieve success beyond the grounds of FSC. He gave each of us a brief handout that provided his view of how to be successful in life, and I thought I would share it with you.

How Do Successful People Get That Way?
1) They have plenty of drive.
2) They accept responsibility cheerfully.
3) They know that success is never an accident.
4) They know that the customer is their real "boss".
5) They look, listen, and learn.
6) They find out if they’re not sure.
7) They set an example to others.
8) They know that the next field only looks greener.
9) They welcome new ideas.
10) They profit by their mistakes.
11) They speak clearly and convincingly.
12) They don’t expect all the credit.
13) They cooperate.
14) They realize that their future is their own responsibility.
15) They think things through…first.
16) They believe that good manners are good business.
17) They know the world does not owe them a living.
18) They are willing to go that "extra mile".
19) They are careful about their finances.
20) They set a goal for themselves.
21) They realize that everything worth having has a price tag.
22) They keep physically and mentally fit.
23) They earnestly want to succeed.
24) They know the value of enthusiasm.
25) They make others feel important.
26) They try to help the "boss".
27) They never "pass the buck".
28) They control their temper.
29) They consider work a privilege, not a chore.
30) They are their own severest critic.
31) They’ve learned that easy does it.
32) They try to cut expenses.
33) They never forget!

Obviously, as flawed humans, none of us will ever be able to live up to all of these ideal attributes. However, Col. Wiley’s advice on how to be a successful person is inspirational to me, and I hope you enjoy it as well. Have a nice weekend!

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