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How do you get into the door at eBay? One way to do so is through Erik Stuart,
director of corporate strategy at eBay, whose job is to vet startups
and propose which ones should be ideal candidates for mergers and
acquisitions or business development deals. He initiated and championed eBay’s acquisition of StumbleUpon.
Who better then to be our guest evaluating Wigix, a startup trying to advance the marketplace model by applying a stock-market approach to transactions. Wigix was considered a top eBay alternative by Internet.com.
Essentially, Wigix allows people to put up bids and asks, just like investors do for stocks. Instead of an
auction-style model, like eBay’s, Wigix’s model is a price-matching one. CEO and co-founder James Chong told me the stock-exchange model helps create more liquidity in the marketplace that eBay doesn’t provide. That’s because Wigix is targeting “passive sellers” who aren’t in the market to sell their wares just yet, but may be interested in listing the millions of accumulated goods stored or forgotten in their dresser drawers or storage boxes. (See my earlier write-up and interview Chong.)
So, could this approach to marketplace transactions be of interest to eBay?
Stuart joined Ezra Roizen, digital media investment banker and Vator Box regular, to discuss this question and to evaluate Wigix.
Here are some of the observations made, and advice offered:
– Creating a marketplace is a non-trivial undertaking. There are a lot of challenges in driving up a significant volume of transactions. It’s difficult to get the vibrancy on the buyer and seller side
– The pitch could improve, according to Stuart. The presenter – James Chong – took too long to describe the essence of the company, which is that the community helps to build the catalog. See his pitch here
– The site needs a lot more activity and volume. It appears to be lacking buyers and sellers as the spreads for products are pretty wide
– Wigix is at the intersection of marketplaces and commoditized products that’s uniquely suited to not succeed
– Wigix wants to aggregate the long tail of products, which marketplaces are good at assembling. But these commoditized one-off products need a lot of volume in a regular marketplace, and likely even more in a stock-exchange model. The volume doesn’t appear to be evident at Wigix
– The type of products that could work on a stock exchange
are popular items, like a Harry Potter book, an iPod or a car. But
these are also products that work much better in a retail environment