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Tag: eBay Now

  • eBay Now Same-Day Delivery Apps Are No More

    It’s been looking like eBay Now’s days were numbered for quite a while now. Now, the mobile apps for the e-commerce company’s same-day delivery service have gone M.I.A.

    VentureBeat reported all the way back in June that eBay Now could be on its way out. Last month, eBay held its Q3 earnings call, when eBay CEO John Donahoe made a comment indicating that the service wasn’t “essential” to is target customer base.

    Re/code then conducted an interview with him, proclaiming eBay Now to be “essentially dead’. Jason Del Rey shared some comments Donahoe made:

    “There’s no active plan to close it down,” he began. “But,” he added, “I think what you’re seeing is the shoppers that want same-day delivery tend to want it for consumables … groceries. That’s not really the sweet spot for eBay. Buy online and pick up in store — those are the kinds of things relevant to the eBay shopper.”

    At another point in the call, Donahoe referred to the service in the past tense as an “experiment” and pointed out that the company hasn’t expanded from four to 25 markets as it originally said it would by year’s end. He also noted that eBay customers seem to care more about being able to pick up an order for free than pay to have it delivered super quickly. Donahoe said the company’s partnership with United Kingdom retail chain Argos, which lets eBay shoppers order stuff online and pick it up at an Argos near them, will serve as a model for how eBay continues to try to help its shoppers get their orders quickly at no extra cost.

    Last week, Reuters reported that the company planned to “dismantle its standalone mobile app for its $5 same-day delivery service ‘eBay Now’ as soon as this week”.

    On Monday, TechCrunch pointed out that the app has gone missing from Apple’s App Store. It’s also gone from Google Play.

    It would appear that the service isn’t completely dead, however. According to TechCrunch, which spoke with an eBay spokesperson, it will be folded into eBay’s main apps and website.

    Even still, eBay Now as supposed to expand to 25 new markets, and from the sound of it, that’s no longer happening.

    The service appears to still be operational from the desktop.

    eBay Now was initially launched in beta in August, 2012.

    Image via eBay

  • Is eBay Trying To Be Something That It’s Not?

    Is eBay Trying To Be Something That It’s Not?

    This week, eBay announced the launch of some new personalization and curation features for the eBay Marketplace, and that it is expanding its efforts in local commerce, including the extension of its eBay Now delivery service into 25 new markets by the end of the year.

    Will these offerings keep sellers around and buyers interested in shopping with the ecommerce giant once simply known as an auction site? Share your thoughts on eBay’s current direction.

    It has been about a year since eBay unveiled its Pinterest-like feed design, which it rolled out to users in February. Now, eBay is continuing in the Pinterest/Etsy-esque direction, launching five new specific features: Collections, Curators, Follow, Profiles and eBay Today.

    Collections are described as groups of products that have ben handpicked by “expert curators, buyers and sellers.” Curators are “top trendsetters across a variety of interest areas, who create beautiful collections on eBy to help you easily connect you with items you’ll love.’

    At least they didn’t say “tastemakers.”

    eBay Collections

    The Follow feature lets eBay users personalize their feeds by following collections, curators or regular eBay users, as well as specific interests. The Profile is pretty basic. It applies to both buyers and sellers, and lets you share info about yourself, the collections you’ve created, your interests, and the people you follow.

    eBay Collections

    Finally, eBay Today is a new page aimed at helping users discover “the very best collections of items” on eBay, selected by the company’s Chief Curator and Editorial Director Michael Phillips Moskowitz.

    eBay Today

    eBay has 200 curators including: Alexandra Cousteau, Andrea Linett, Ashley Avignon, Benjamin Clymer, Billy Farrell, Brian Walton, Cecilia Dean , Chris Benz, Chrissie Miller, Darcy Miller, Eddie Borgo, Graham Hill, Janie Bryant, Jauretsi, Jen Atkin, Jeremiah Brent, Jon Rose, Justin Bell, Kelly Oxford, Lucy Sykes, Pharrell Williams, Richard Rawlings, Ryan Block, Solange Knowles, Tenzin Wild, Todd Selby, Veronica Belmont, and Zem Joaquin.

    eBay tells sellers, “This new experience puts great new tools in your hands for driving sales and developing loyal, repeat customers. You can use the new collections, following, and eBay profile to transform moments of inspiration into purchases of your great inventory. We’ll also be introducing new features and an exciting new look for your eBay Store. From bigger, bolder listing images to new ways to spotlight inventory and share on social media, subscribers will soon have even more tools available to them to turn browsers into buyers. All sellers will have this option by the end of January 2014! ”

    I have to say, the discussion out there around these features from what I seen has basically consisted of tumbleweeds. One reader, however (commenting on this very article) makes an interesting point, saying, “The new Follow/Social Trending features on eBay are the silliest and most useless things to happen to date. Stop trying to make the web site something that it is not. eBay does not equal Facebook, Twitter, etc.”

    Is eBay in fact trying to be something that it’s not? Must everything consist of social/follow features? Frankly, I personally don’t have a lot of use for them on a site like eBay, but perhaps a substantial amount of people do. It will be interesting to see how the enormous eBay community engages with these features over time. Will sellers really see a significant difference?

    The local stuff, on the other hand, may just turn out to be huge for businesses and consumers alike. We’re talking rapid delivery of products, and it’s only the very early days of this roll-out.

    eBay Now was first introduced a year ago. It lets shoppers have products from local stores delivered to them in an hour or less. As mentioned, it’s expanding into 25 new markets. It goes live in Chicago on Tuesday, and then in Dallas later this year. This will be followed by unspecified international markets, including London early next year.

    eBay Now

    eBay also plans to offer eBay Now same-day delivery for local goods on eBay.com in cities that have the service. eBay will also release scheduled delivery for eBay Now so that customers can buy something and pick an appropriate time to have it delivered to them.

    In addition to that, eBay is letting shoppers order online and pick up products at local stores. This particular feature is live immediately for Toys ‘R’ Us and Best Buy, and will be for other retailers in the near future.

    Finally, the company announced that it has acquired Shutl, a marketplace that utilizes a network of couriers to deliver local goods on the same day. The pick-up should help eBay its expansion efforts for eBay Now.

    “The world is changing, with the lines between online and offline commerce blurring and the expectations of buyers and sellers rising rapidly,” said Devin Wenig, president of eBay Marketplaces. “With eBay’s latest steps, we are bringing together the best of what people need from a shopping experience – speed and convenience – with things people love about shopping, like discovery and inspiration.”

    “eBay is a technology company; we understand that retailers, brands and sellers of all sizes need a new set of solutions to deliver the kinds of experiences consumers expect in today’s environment,” he said. “We’re making fundamental changes to our business that put us in a position to be the right partner for merchants and the best place for people to shop – anytime, anywhere and on any device.”

    Are you an eBay seller? We’d love to hear your reaction to eBay’s announcements. If you’re not a seller, do any of the announcements make you want to reconsider? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Image: BusinessWire

  • eBay Launches eBay Now For The Desktop

    eBay Launches eBay Now For The Desktop

    eBay announced today that its local shopping service eBay Now, previously only available in mobile app form, is now launching on the desktop.

    The service lets customers look at products from stores, place an order online, and then have the items delivered to a specified location. eBay says this usually happens within the hour.

    Until now, eBay Now has only been available in San Francisco, New York and San Jose, but it’s expanding into the Bay Area Peninsula, Brooklyn and Queens today, and Chicago and Dallas later this summer. If the service proves to be successful, there’s no reason not to assume they won’t continue to expand into more regions.

    “We are using our mobile leadership to lead in multi-screen,” says Dane Glasgow, VP, Local and Mobile at eBay. “We want to make every screen shoppable, and eBay Now is the latest example of how we’re bringing that to life.”

    According to Glasgow, over half of eBay Now’s orders are made between 9AM and 5PM. In other words, the work day. The company cites research from Forrester indicating that 90% of all shopping is still done in physical stores. Maybe eBay can still change that yet.

    Among the stores taking part in eBay Now are: Target, Best Buy, Auto Zone, Office Depot, Macy’s, Toys ‘R’ Us/Babies ‘R’ Us, Walgreens, GNC, Guitar Center, Urban Outfitters, Radioshack and Home Depot.

  • eBay Reportedly Testing New Offline Selling Options

    eBay Reportedly Testing New Offline Selling Options

    Last year, eBay began testing a same-day shipping service called eBay Now in San Francisco. Merchants in the test group were able to offer the service to customers for $5.

    eBay reportedly also has some other interesting options in pilot phase. All Things D’s Tricia Duryee spoke with several eBay execs about a handful of tests the company is running including eBay Now.

    One of the tests lets would be sellers have eBay employees come to their homes to pick up items and deliver them to “experts” who will then attempt to sell the items for a 25% cut of the selling price. Duryee’s report shows a picture of an eBay van (complete with new logo) that says “Selling Assistant” and “We pick up. Your stuff sells. You get paid.”

    The third test reportedly lets sellers drop off clothes and electronics at mall kiosks.

    eBay says it needs to “innovate at a quicker pace,” and that it “can’t get complacent” in the space, and one trend in online shopping, interestingly, is moving to more offline options.

    For example, Amazon is offering lockers in some places, where consumers can pick up their orders at nearby stores. Likewise, Google recently acquired BufferBox, a provider of similar lockers.

  • eBay Now Lets Users Get Items Within An Hour

    eBay Now Lets Users Get Items Within An Hour

    eBay is testing a new same-day shipping service called eBay Now in San Francisco. Presumably, if successful, it will expand to more areas.

    Merchants in the test group (which includes Postmates, TaskRabbit and Uber) can reportedly offer the service to customers for $5.

    Owen Thomas at Business Insider has a step-by-step look at how it works, after making a purchase and accepting a delivery. According to Thomas, the service functions as an “on-demand delivery service,” which “picks up goods from local stores,” and delivers them to your door in about in about an hour. The couriers, he says, call themselves “shoppers”.

    A really good point is brought up in that step-by-step slideshow: “The hour-long delivery window makes a lot of impulse buys possible.”

    The whole thing brings something of an instant-gratification factor to e-commerce. Historically, when people have shopped online, they’ve had to wait to get their products. This really does bring more of an offline shopping element to the table. Imagine if they added a mobile fitting room service, allowing you to try on clothes before purchasing.

    According to TechCrunch, users can use the eBay Now option with any store on the company’s Milo platform.

    Users can simply pay with their credit cards or PayPal accounts.

    You can sign up for the beta here, if you live in the area.