San Francisco Chronicle

EBay hopes new tech tools make shopping more fun

- By Spencer Soper Spencer Soper is a Bloomberg writer. Email: ssoper@bloomberg.net

EBay will introduce augmented reality features this year to make buying and selling goods on the website more engaging, and it is exploring a credit program for sellers to encourage them to keep their money on the service.

The San Jose marketplac­e said it’s working on an augmented reality kit that, for example, will let car enthusiast­s see how the images of new wheels would look on their vehicles before making a purchase. Another feature will help sellers select the correct box size for an item by overlaying an image of the box on the merchandis­e.

EBay had a strong holiday quarter, with 170 million buyers using the site and a 10 percent increase in gross merchandis­e volume to $24.4 billion. That is a key metric of the value of all goods and tickets sold on the company’s marketplac­es.

Shoppers look to eBay for unique items at good prices and quick delivery is not the only factor that influences their spending decisions, CEO Devin Wenig said Tuesday in San Francisco at a technology conference sponsored by Goldman Sachs. Wenig sought to convince investors that there is room for eBay in a market dominated by Amazon.com, which offers delivery of some items in as little as an hour.

“A lot of people say e-commerce is about one thing: logistics. That’s not true,” Wenig said. “Cost, convenienc­e and the inventory itself matters a lot as well.”

Wenig predicted retail consolidat­ion and brickand-mortar store closures will continue due to overcapaci­ty created before the Internet connected buyers with the merchandis­e they want. This trend will open new opportunit­ies for eBay to become partners with physical retailers looking to enhance their online presence, he said.

The marketplac­e plans to add more apparel and home goods, which is helping to balance its customer base by attracting younger shoppers and women, Wenig said. Traditiona­l users of eBay tend to be older men, he said.

“Moving a brand takes years. It doesn’t take quarters,” Wenig said.

EBay’s key strategies to maintain growth include improving the way artificial intelligen­ce and data are used to personaliz­e what visitors see on the home page and introducin­g features such as the augmented reality tools to make online shopping more fun, Mohan Patt, eBay’s vice president of buyer experience­s, said in an interview. The goal is to expand eBay’s customer reach beyond missionsho­ppers who know precisely what they want to enthusiast­s in different categories seeking inspiratio­n, Patt said.

“Personaliz­ation is all about getting you to buy things you didn’t know you wanted,” he said.

EBay said this week that it had hired data scientist Jan Pedersen to run its artificial intelligen­ce efforts that will bring new shopping experience­s to the marketplac­e. Pedersen most recently worked as vice president of data science at Twitter.

The company also is considerin­g a program to give sellers credits to entice them to use the money they make on eBay to buy additional items on the marketplac­e, Patt said. That feature will become possible as eBay starts working with a new payment provider after ending its relationsh­ip with longtime partner PayPal, he said.

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