Sex, Lies, & eBay
by: John Clark
I recently watched a movie called “Shattered Glass”.
It’s the true story of Steven Glass, a writer for “The
New Republic”, a very prestigious political magazine.
Steven was the subject of a scandal in 1998 when it was
discovered that most of the writing he had done for the
magazine was fabricated. A rising star, he wrote dozens
of high profile articles for a number of national
publications in which he made up some or all of the
facts.
Steven’s world came crashing down when publication of
the article “Hack Heaven” was exposed as fabricated by
Forbes magazine reporter Adam Penenberg. After creating
a shell website, a fake voicemail account, and
ficticious notes in order to fool fact checkers at the
Republic, he was subsequently fired.
Recently, Steven has written a biographical novel
called “The Fabulist” to give his individual spin and
excuses for having fooled his employers, friends, and
the public with his dream weaving. He’s done interviews
with 60 minutes among others. Today, he continues to
profit from his exploits.
To say that eBay has been, and is, a changing
landscape would be an incredible understatement. I’ve
been selling on eBay since the beginning in 1995. Early
on, I made a tech support call to eBay and from the
receptionist’s desk was connected to the “server room”.
The phone was answered by “Pierre” who I realized later
was the founder. Things have changed quite a bit since
then.
I spend most of my day on the internet. Selling
products. Writing books. Creating websites to produce
income. But by far the vast majority of my time is spent
doing research. Making attempts to gather information to
improve my current endeavors or to create new ones.
Wading through the vast wasteland of the internet today
while trying to create my own little oasis is harrowing.
When you mention the name “eBay” to someone it will
almost always invoke an opinion. You can ask my mother
and she’ll tell you all about it although she owns no
computer and has never surfed the internet a moment in
her life - it’s simply amazing. The one thing all the
opinions will contain is dollar signs. eBay means money.
For many people the prevailing idea is that at any point
they can quit their job and instantly make a living on
eBay. I don’t know how we got here but it’s one heck of
a marketing job.
Don’t get me wrong. If you want to clean out your
attic eBay’s the place. If you want to cruise a few
garage sales and make a “C” note or two, no prob. But if
you want an electric-bill-payin’, heath-insurance
providin’ full time job, you better stay at Wal-Mart.
Seeing “Shattered Glass” stuck an off-key chord with
me concerning the state of eBay today. I buy eight to
ten eBooks containing money-making subject matter every
month. I’ve got the $39.95 “Auctions For Income” sitting
on the shelf right here at arm’s reach. Just about every
book I buy has something in common with all the others.
They are yesterday’s ideas and information. Good ideas?
Yes. Ideas that work today? No.
People who are making big money on eBay don’t share
their ideas. Would you? They ride their horse into the
ground. Then they write an eBook telling people they’ll
cash in too for only $29.95. Problem is, when people
want to tell the truth, it’s a hard sell. eBay is sexy
and so are the stories that are told about it. It’s the
same reason most people by lottery tickets – the dream
of fortune and glory. It’s why people never stopped to
check the facts of Steven Glass’ stories. It was just
too much fun to dream in his world.
There’s money to be made on eBay – no doubt. There
are people making their living on ebay today – most
certainly. But the days of work-free quick fortunes are
over. And from this point forward, good old traditional
business principals are the rule of the day. Finding a
niche, working that niche, and looking for your next one
should be your daily practice. Do good business and
every now and then, hit a lick and be grateful.
Don’t believe lies just because they’re sexy. Leave
the pie in the sky.
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