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 neglus
 
posted on January 22, 2008 06:00:08 AM new
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120097256037505741.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

Oh boo-hoo.

EBay Inc. Chief Executive Meg Whitman is preparing to retire.

In the past few months, Ms. Whitman, who has led the San Jose, Calif., Internet auctioneer since March 1998, has been delegating more daily responsibilities to her lieutenants and is completing her succession planning, say people familiar with the matter. A decision about her departure could come within weeks, though the situation remains fluid, say these people.


John Donahoe, 47 years old, whom Ms. Whitman recruited in 2005 to become the president of eBay's auction business unit, has emerged as the leading candidate to succeed her, added these people. EBay is to report fourth-quarter earnings tomorrow.

EBay spokesman Hani Durzy declined to comment.

The departure of Ms. Whitman, 51, would mean the loss of one of Silicon Valley's highest-profile CEOs. Few executives who helped pioneer the commercialization of the Internet industry have remained on top for as long, except for some who can also claim founder titles, such as Amazon.com Inc. CEO Jeff Bezos and Yahoo Inc. CEO Jerry Yang.

Ms. Whitman's retirement would come at a critical point for eBay. The company's auction business, which allows individuals to buy and sell items online to the highest bidder or at a fixed price, accounts for more than two-thirds of eBay's nearly $6 billion in annual revenue but has experienced slowing growth rates for the past few years. Any efforts to reverse the slowdown could involve drastic changes that may be more palatable under a new CEO. EBay has already warned Wall Street in recent months that it may alter how it structures its fees for listing and selling items by collecting bigger fees once sales close.

Mr. Donahoe has been wrestling with how to reverse the auction business's declining momentum. Last year, he set into motion changes such as simplifying the auction Web site.

The auction business remains stagnant by some measures. EBay's third-quarter listings of auction items for sale, a key barometer of the auction unit's health, fell 3%.

The timing of Ms. Whitman's retirement is of her own choosing, say people familiar with the situation. Not long after she joined eBay, Ms. Whitman declared that no CEO should stay more than a decade in the same job because people need new challenges and organizations need fresh perspectives. While she has backed away from that comment in recent years, Ms. Whitman now appears to be making good on that early pledge as she approaches her 10-year anniversary as eBay CEO this March.

Under Ms. Whitman, eBay has become one of the Internet's most successful businesses by pioneering a way for strangers to trade with each other online. She led the company through its September 1998 initial public offering, and eBay has since delivered more than 40 consecutive quarters of sequential revenue growth. Profit has increased every year and the company now has 248 million registered users globally and 15,000 employees. Its $5.97 billion in revenue last year marked a big jump from revenue of $86 million in 1998.

EBay's stock has risen from $1.97 a share adjusted for splits and other changes on its first trading day to stand Friday at 4 p.m. in Nasdaq Stock Market composite at $28.33, up 21 cents. In late 2004, shares traded at more than $50 a share on an adjusted basis.

Ms. Whitman joined eBay in 1998 after stints at Hasbro Inc., Florists Transworld Delivery and Stride Rite Corp. At the time, the commercial Internet was just taking off. Consumers were discovering the Web. Founded in 1995 by entrepreneur Pierre Omidyar, eBay was a funky start-up that allowed individuals to sell collectibles, Beanie Babies and other items to the highest bidder in a virtual flea market. When Ms. Whitman joined, it employed 30 people.

EBay flourished for much of this decade as more households connected to the Internet. But concerns have mounted in the past few years as the company's revenue growth rate has slowed from triple-digit figures to about 30% a year. Last year its net income rose 4% to $1.13 billion.

To maintain momentum, eBay snapped up Web auction sites in India, China and elsewhere. It developed new offerings like classified listings. It also acquired other businesses such as online ticketing and Internet calling.

There were missteps: Last year, eBay took a $1.4 billion write-down for its purchase of Internet calling company Skype. And threats loom, such as Amazon's growing recruitment of many of eBay's top merchants. Some consumers say they no longer have the fascination for online auctions.

Nonetheless, eBay remains one of the Web's top destinations. Its success has made Ms. Whitman a billionaire, with her net worth recently estimated by Forbes at $1.4 billion.

Ms. Whitman has long planned for her eventual exit, say people familiar with the matter. She often rotated eBay executives into different operational roles as a way to groom potential successors and to give the board a slate of candidates from which to choose. One of her management tactics included issuing high-level directives, such as "globalize services," and then giving executives leeway to work out the details as a means of proving themselves, these people say.

In February 2005, Ms. Whitman recruited Mr. Donahoe to become president of eBay's auction-business unit, a newly created position. At the time, Mr. Donahoe was world-wide managing director of consulting firm Bain & Co. Ms. Whitman knew Mr. Donahoe from when the two had worked together at Bain years before.

In his departing email to friends and Bain colleagues, Mr. Donahoe wrote, "Meg Whitman was my 'first boss' at Bain and I am delighted to be working with her once again. I look forward to getting to know eBay's community, people and business."

A month later (March 2005), Ms. Whitman came close to leaving eBay when Walt Disney Co.'s board interviewed her to succeed then-CEO Michael Eisner. But she quickly withdrew her name from the running because she suspected the board was already set on then-Disney President Robert Iger, who later became Disney CEO. Ms. Whitman then publicly recommitted herself to eBay, though some employees and analysts often wondered for how long.

Meanwhile, Mr. Donahoe's role at eBay positioned him as a contender for the top job. He was put in charge of the auction business, the biggest and oldest part of the company. He also was ranked above two other veteran eBay executives, Bill Cobb and Matt Bannick, who had been considered possible successors. Mr. Donahoe reported directly to Ms. Whitman.

Ms. Whitman charged Mr. Donahoe with leading important company initiatives. He supervised internal discussions two years ago about how eBay should deal with the growing threat of Web-search giant Google Inc.

Jack Sheng, a top consumer-electronics seller on eBay, says Mr. Donahoe, a former Dartmouth College basketball player, is dogged about trying to understand sellers' problems. When Mr. Sheng met him in 2006, Mr. Donahoe grilled him incessantly, albeit politely, during a dinner for top eBay sellers. "He's a very concerned leader who cares about the details of what's going on at eBay," Mr. Sheng says.

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http://stores.ebay.com/Moody-Mommys-Marvelous-Postcards?refid=store
 
 deichen
 
posted on January 22, 2008 06:18:37 AM new
Wow, that makes my day!

Meg,
Don't let the door hit your *ss, on the way out.

 
 deur1
 
posted on January 22, 2008 06:48:00 AM new
One of her cloned puppets will replace her

 
 amber
 
posted on January 22, 2008 09:01:12 AM new
My mother used to use the phrase "Better the devil you know than the one you don't know". I just hope things don't get worse.

 
 kozersky
 
posted on January 22, 2008 09:06:47 AM new
Amber, I thought the same when I read the article.

Bill K-

Stamp Collector Forum
William J Kozersky Stamp Co.
 
 amber
 
posted on January 22, 2008 10:54:52 AM new
I should add that I certainly wasn't calling Meg a devil, it's just a phrase, often used to refer to political leaders.

 
 pmelcher
 
posted on January 22, 2008 11:16:56 AM new
I know what you mean, I was going to say a known evil is better than an unknown and I don't mean she is evil, just a known entity.

 
 tomwiii
 
posted on January 22, 2008 11:30:06 AM new
Gee, do ya think the timing has anything to do with feeBay's EARNINGS STATEMENT coming out tomorrow at closing bell?

Paranoid inquiring canine minds wanna know!

Twouldn't be a surprise that earnings TANKED...

Hopefully SATAN'S WENCH will take her imps, Chip & Chuck & Biff and all the other numbn*ts with ickey Republican-sounding names (Mitt? Ain't that "fish sperm?" or sumptin equally unmentionable?) with her back to the 7th level...









GRAND OPENING of RALPHIE'S EMPORIUM of EARTHLY DELIGHTS~All Vd'ers get 50% DISCOUNT!(except electronics)

[ edited by tomwiii on Jan 22, 2008 11:31 AM ]
 
 merrie
 
posted on January 22, 2008 04:04:19 PM new
tomwiii: OT, I went to your store. I think you spelled eclectic wrong (just thought it was sort of funny since you sell dictionaries ). Also, when I went to the contact page to let you know, I noticed you did not include the state in your address. I assume (I know, I know) that it is FL, but there might be another Jacksonville somewhere......

Just thought you would want to know, not busting by any means.

 
 zippy2dah
 
posted on January 22, 2008 06:02:31 PM new
Sorry! I posted to the way wrong thread.
[ edited by zippy2dah on Jan 22, 2008 06:03 PM ]
 
 sthoemke
 
posted on January 22, 2008 07:11:59 PM new
No, she will stick around just to exercise the stock options she get every year.

Besides, who would replace her? the guy from the old Star Trek TV shows?

 
 capolady
 
posted on January 23, 2008 12:02:45 PM new
I just love the way they say they may be "changing the structure" of ebay fees.

Translated: Sellers - we're going to take another shot to the head!!!!
 
 cashinyourcloset
 
posted on January 23, 2008 01:56:29 PM new
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- EBay announced Wednesday that, as expected, CEO Meg Whitman will be stepping down on March 31st.

The company also reported fourth-quarter results that exceeded Wall Street's estimates but eBay issued disappointing guidance for the first quarter and all of 2008. The stock fell 7 percent after-hours on the news.

Whitman's decision to step down was expected. This March will mark her ten-year anniversary at eBay (EBAY, Fortune 500), and she has said that a CEO should not stay in his or her post longer than ten years.

"Meg's passion for all things eBay changed the world," said Pierre Omidyar, Founder of eBay and Chairman of the Board. "With humor, smarts and unflappable determination, Meg took a small, barely known online auction site and helped it become an integral part of our lives. We're all enormously grateful that Meg dedicated herself to stewarding eBay through its 10 most formative years."

Whitman will be replaced by John Donahoe. Donahoe is EBay's President of Marketplaces, a division of the company that accounts for more than 70 percent of its global revenues. Donahoe came to eBay in February 2005 from Bain & Company, where he served as worldwide managing director.

Separately, the online auctioneer reported that profit rose 53 percent in the fourth quarter due to strong PayPal, StubHub, and Skype growth.

Revenue rose 27 percent to $2.18 billion, up from $1.72 billion in the same period last year, beating Wall Street's expectations of $2.14 billion.

EBay said that net income rose to $531 million, or 39 cents a share, in the fourth quarter. Excluding certain one-time charges, profits rose to $611 million, or 45 cents a share, beating analysts' consensus estimates of 41 cents per share.

But the company issued sales and profit guidance for the first quarter that was lower than what Wall Street was expecting. The company also issued sales guidance for all of 2008 that was below analysts' consensus estimates. To top of page

 
 tomwiii
 
posted on January 23, 2008 02:04:01 PM new
"Separately, the online auctioneer reported that profit rose 53 percent in the fourth quarter due to strong PayPal, StubHub, and Skype growth"

"and Skype growth?"

Oh! Methinks MamaMeg's nose is growing, and growing...







GRAND OPENING of RALPHIE'S EMPORIUM of EARTHLY DELIGHTS~All Vd'ers get 50% DISCOUNT!(except electronics)
 
 neglus
 
posted on January 23, 2008 02:15:34 PM new
Looks like Billy-boy is leaving too:
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/080123/20080123006177.html?.v=1
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http://stores.ebay.com/Moody-Mommys-Marvelous-Postcards?refid=store
 
 
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