Pop quiz: Name the high-tech company that got its start in someone’s
living room, grew from zero revenue to a multibillion dollar
corporation in less than a decade, and pioneered the model for an
entire industry to follow. If you’re thinking that the companies that
fit this description make a list that is a mile long, you’re right. But
in this case, we’re talking about eBay.
EBay is one of the biggestWeb success stories in the history of,
well, the World Wide Web. But sooner or later, every high-growth
company hits a speed bump and experiences growing pains. After
amazing growth for its first 15 years, eBay has hit that speed
bump. Current CEO John Donahoe is faced with the difficult challenge
of putting eBay back on the superhighway to prosperity.
EBay started in 1995 as an auction house. Unlike most dotcoms,
eBay was based on a model that produced profits, not just
revenue. Whenever a user posted an item for auction, eBay collected
a fee. The more products that went up for auction, the
more money eBay made. EBay has tinkered with its fee structure
over the years. But the basic idea has remained the same. The
online auction formula took off like wildfire, and eBay dominated
the industry. EBay’s revenue, stock price, profits, and number of
employees soared. By the year 2000, eBay was the number one
e-commerce site in the world by sales revenue.