China's Largest Auction Site Taobao.com posts 41% rise in value of trading
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10-13-2005, 02:43 PM,
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China's Largest Auction Site Taobao.com posts 41% rise in value of trading
Quote:TAOBAO.COM, a Hangzhou-based free online auction Website, said yesterday trading value on its Website jumped 41 percent quarter-on-quarter from July to September, surpassing rival eBay China. full article: http://www.shanghaidaily.com/art/2005/10...rading.htm |
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10-14-2005, 04:17 PM,
Post: #2
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Sore Loser eBay Falls Further Behind Alibaba's Taobao in China
Another Alibaba/Taobao story. Alibaba is now claiming a 60% market share in China. After eBay Eachnet fell behind Taobao earlier this year eBay stopped providing the press with break outs of its China numbers . eBay is now saying that it shouldn't be compared to Taobao because Taobao is free which somehow to eBay makes it "not a comparable site". Ummm, free or not, Taobao is still a C2C auction site just like eBay Eachnet and it is beating the pants off eBay.
Quote:The claim by Taobao.com was said to be "meaningless" by its largest competitor eBay EachNet, the main eBay subsidiary in China. "The performance data of Taobao.com and ours is not comparable," said Liu Wei, Senior PR Manager with eBay EachNet. "As the service that Taobao.com provides is free, it is not possible to estimate their exact trade volume or determine whether the price offered is reasonable or not." The funny thing is, until eBay fell behind Taobao earlier this year, it used every opportunity it could to "publicize the performance data of eBay EachNet" and "compare with others on such self-claimed data" http://www.interfax.cn/showfeature.asp?aid=6465&slug=INTERNET-E-COMMERCE-TAOBAO-EBAY-EACHNET |
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10-20-2005, 07:48 AM,
(This post was last modified: 10-20-2005, 08:28 AM by mandy.)
Post: #3
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Rivals Taobao, eBay clash on whether free is best
article on eBay-Taobao rivalry:
Quote:The two leading Chinese Internet auction sites escalated a bitter war of words on Wednesday by arguing the superiority of their respective strategies for conducting online auctions. full article: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051020/wr_n...tions_dc_1 The Taobao press release that sparked today's war of words: Quote:Alibaba.com announced today that its Taobao.com Chinese-language consumer auction site will remain free for buyers and sellers for three more years, until at least October, 2008. In addition, Alibaba.com will invest US $120 million to further grow Taobao.com's trusted e-commerce marketplace with the goal of creating one million jobs for entrepreneurs in China. full press release: http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/051019/nyw164.html?.v=31 eBay press release in response to Alibaba/Taobao: Quote:eBay today issued the following statement regarding Taobao's pricing challenge: full press release: http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/051019/196179.html?.v=1 see also this story from today on eBay China's site: "eBay China auction Site Offers Human Babies For Sale": http://community.tuliptools.com/index.ph...897.0.html related topic on Taobao's parent Alibaba: " E-commerce key to China Web growth: Interview w/Alibaba's Jack Ma ": http://community.tuliptools.com/index.ph...900.0.html |
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10-20-2005, 05:47 PM,
Post: #4
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Rivals Taobao, eBay clash on whether free is best
Quote:"Free" is not a business model. It speaks volumes about the strength of eBay's business in China that Taobao today announced that it is unable to charge for its products for the next three years. Are the people who run eBay 2 years old? Their retaliatory rebuttal is humorous, but that statement doesn't bear any resemblance to (the) reality (of what Taobao said). Question for eBay: If free is not a business model then what does that say about Skype and Meg's prediction yesterday that it and all other Internet phone companies in the not too distant future will offer free calling? Is there a difference between a business model that includes consumers receiving free VOIP calling and a "not a business model" that includes consumers receiving free auction listings? Oops, off topic. :twistedevil: China: TenCent's user base is several times larger than the combined user base of eBay Eachnet and Alibaba Taobao. My prediction: within a year of the planned opening of TenCent's auction site later this year both Taobao and eBay will be eating dust, with eBay in 3rd place. |
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