meg-whitman

Hooters moving in across the street from eBay HQ

Jordan Golson · 01/09/08 06:00PM

We got a tip that the San Jose location of Spoons, a favored happy-hour spot across the street from eBay's headquarters, was getting purchased by Hooters. An eBayer attending CES acknowledged this last night, but wouldn't confirm the other half of the tip: that eBay CEO Meg Whitman had gone to the city council, asking them to stop the sale. She must not like hot wings. Fortunately for eBay's owl-eyed employees, the changeover seems to be going on despite any of Whitman's efforts. (Photo by PunkJr)

Owen Thomas · 10/18/07 02:23PM

eBay is experimenting with cutting fees to list items for sale, a marked change from its history of price hikes. "We've not ever really decreased price, and it is possible that by decreasing price, we actually increase the revenues and vibrancy of this market in such a way that this price decrease is self-liquidating," said CEO Meg Whitman. Translation: The competitive threat from Amazon.com and Google is increasing. [AuctionBytes]

Microsoft, eBay chiefs have nothing to say

Owen Thomas · 10/18/07 12:00PM

WEB 2.0 SUMMIT — Special correspondent Paul Boutin is reporting by text message, which is fitting, since apparently this morning's keynotes from Microsoft's Steve Ballmer and eBay's Meg Whitman can easily be condensed into a Twitter. Or less. Conference organizer Tim O'Reilly, in fact, has all the good lines. O'Reilly to Whitman: "You become what you disrupt." He means, Boutin texts, that eBay is now the old guard waiting to be Napstered. That's also evident in a following exchange, where O'Reilly points out that you can't Skype people by clicking from a Facebook page or using an email address. Whitman's only response is that it's easy to look up people in Skype's directory. Meg, it's time you had a chat with Mark.

Jajah adds to eBay's click-to-call nightmare

Jordan Golson · 10/04/07 12:56PM

We'd hardly blame Meg Whitman if, after this week, she decided to hang up on the phone business altogether. On Monday eBay said they were taking a $1.4 billion charge related to their acquisition of VOIP startup Skype. On Tuesday, we noted that one of Whitman's major goals in buying Skype, bolstering its auction business in China, where rivals were using click-to-call features on their auctions to close sales, has turned into a complete failure. And then, yesterday, things somehow managed to get worse.

China is where Skype really failed eBay

Owen Thomas · 10/02/07 01:27PM

In Kara Swisher's otherwise excellent analysis on AllThingsD of the Skype writeoff's effect on Facebook, there's a string of nonsense that desperately bears correction. Swisher ramblingly suggests that eBay bought Skype for some kind of ability to target ads and premium offerings to the VOIP service's users. Nonsense. It's well-documented that eBay CEO Meg Whitman got the idea on a trip to China, where she saw that users of rival auction sites were using VOIP calls and instant messaging to close sales — a useful feature in a country still getting used to conducting business electronically, rather than face to face. Adding Skype to eBay's auctions in China, she hoped, would boost its market share. No such luck.

Jeff Bezos's plan to shiv Meg Whitman

Owen Thomas · 08/03/07 01:49PM

Amazon.com has, as expected, revealed the details of its new payment service in a lengthy, meandering blog post. Don't bother reading it: The geeks in Seattle take forever to get to the very sharp point. The short version? Jeff Bezos is planning to plunge a long knife right into the heart of eBay CEO Meg Whitman's most important growth business, PayPal. Here's the secret of how the eBay-owned payments service mints money — and how Amazon.com's founder is crafting a boldly savage plan to gut it.

eBay and Google, the codependent couple who love to hate

Tim Faulkner · 07/19/07 05:26PM

In yesterday's earnings call, eBay CEO Meg Whitman's comments on her company's relationship with Google sound like every codependent couple we know: They'll last forever, sparring all the while, or end disastrously. In the meantime, each partner will use every opportunity to chew your ear off about the other partner, hoping to gain leverage over the other in their petty, public battles. And if things get ugly? They'll just pretend they don't even exist:

Only half our users hate us!

Owen Thomas · 07/06/07 07:20PM

Poor, deluded Meg Whitman. The eBay CEO is so out of touch with her customers' discontent that she brags to Bloomberg News about this fact: Less than half of the users of PayPal, eBay's online-checkout service, think it's "good." Granted, Google Checkout, the search engine's rival payment product, comes off less well. But Whitman should be distraught, not gleeful, at such low customer-satisfaction scores.

Megan McCarthy · 06/11/07 11:43AM

What do you get for your hard work as a Valley executive? Loads of perks, and the Mercury News sifted through SEC filings to find the details. Top recipient was Larry Ellison, who received $1.8M from Oracle to beef up his home security. Also of note: eBay spent $774K on Meg Whitman's travel and another $231K to cover the travel taxes. [Mercury News]

What Did McCain Google?

confonz · 05/04/07 08:00PM

CONFONZ — Waaaaaaaaaaaay down at the bottom of a San jose Mercury news story on from Tuesday mentioned that Wonkette's favorite Walnuts! candidate, John McCain is visiting Google today. A shiny new dime to the first person to point us at the photos. A shiny new quarter to the first person to paste up some McCain search queries! After the jump, we lead you on with a photo of Mitt Romney, Steve Jurvetson, of Draper Fisher Jurvetson, and Meg Whitman of EBay.

The Tech Moguls Who Pay Republicans

Nick Douglas · 01/04/07 09:47PM

NICK DOUGLAS — There are plenty of reasons for Silicon Valley to lean left. Silicon Valley is just south of San Francisco, home of liberal Congresswoman Nancy "Palomino" Pelosi. Techies are young, idealistic, and progressive. Their votes and their money end up with the Democrats.