Well, Yesterday’s announcement by eBay sounded great on the surface. They’ve introduced a test area called “The Garden” which will allow new concepts and improvements to be demonstrated to users who are invited to provide feedback. So far, so good.
Problem is, there is a history with eBay that many sellers are bitter about: something called “The Playground.” In addition to the playful reference to outside fun, both these test sites are similar in that they purport to request user feedback before changes are introduced on the site. Problem is, The Playground burned some bridges with eBay sellers. Sellers say that the site solicited input but then summarily ignored their suggestions.
There’s a fascinating conversation on Facebook now around the announcement on the eBay Fan Page – most of it negative with the one exception of my comment. I feel lonely, but justified. Here’s why.
eBay Needs to Listen; We Need to Speak
Let’s hope eBay listens this time. Both sellers and buyers have perspectives on the site that should help guide eBay in continually improving. I disagree with sellers who continually say they are the only parties who matter in eBay. Go to any eBay conference, as Debbie and I have done over the past five years, and you’ll hear sellers whining that eBay doesn’t care about them and makes changes simply to harm the seller’s interest. The problem with that approach is that, without satisfied buyers making up a healthy market, what’s the use of being a seller? What these sellers fail to acknowledge is that buyer experience is just as important as anything else eBay does.
Speak up! That’s my view. If we don’t we have no cause to blame eBay for not listening when they introduce changes that offend sellers. We, as sellers, can’t just whine, but we need to own the fact that eBay’s holistic health and vibrancy is not only about making sellers happy, but also about promoting a user-friendly experience for buyers.
Bottom Line: eBay needs to hear from buyers and sellers on any proposed changes, and they need to consider the suggestions of both sides of these transactions.