November 9, 1999 12:55 PM PST

eBay spends to eliminate lengthy outages

Related Stories

eBay knocked out by more tech problems

November 1, 1999

eBay suffers another outage

August 9, 1999

Outages plague eBay again

June 29, 1999
eBay is about to flip the switch on a new backup system that should eliminate lengthy site outages--and not a moment too soon for customers and investors.

Within the next few weeks, the leading auction site will complete the installation of a "parallel recovery system" that will limit outages to less than 75 minutes, according to spokesman Kevin Pursglove.

The timing is crucial for eBay, which has recently suffered a series of outages. As with most e-commerce companies, the holidays provide an important--if not necessary--bump in revenues.

Last year, for example, a big jump in auction activity in the December quarter lifted eBay revenues 642 percent compared with the previous year.

But eBay also suffered a series of outages during the period last year. Several outages also have taken place in recent weeks, just as the holiday shopping season gets underway.

eBay has steadily increased the amount of money it is throwing at the outage problem. Although this spending hurt profits in the third quarter, the company risked losing much more if it had ignored the problem.

eBay's gross margin fell to 70.8 percent in the third quarter and has been on the decline since the first quarter when it posted margins of 81.4 percent. The company, however, said it expects margins to bounce back to the mid-80 percent range by next year, as it curtails spending on improving the technology that runs its site.

eBay's new backup system will get its site running within 15 to 75 minutes of an outage, said Pursglove, who would not disclose the cost of the system. The company currently has a backup system that is designed to kick in two to four hours after the site goes down.

Despite the drag on eBay's earnings, Tim Albright, an analyst with Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette, said the company's strategy makes sense, and he expects the margins to "snap back" next year.

eBay
at a glance

HQ: San Jose, California  
CEO: Margaret Whitman  
Employees: 138  
Annual sales: $47.4 million (1998)  
Annual income: $2.4 million (1998)  
52-week high: 234.00  
52-week low: 28.17  
Market cap: $17.3 billion

More:
eBay quotes
eBay news

Source: Bloomberg

eBay spent $8.8 million on engineering investments to improve its site performance in the third quarter and $10 million in the previous quarter. Pursglove said those investments were far more costly than what the company incurred in the first quarter.

The increased spending follows a major outage in June that lasted about 22 hours. That outage sent its stock in a tailspin. The company lost nearly 26 percent of its value in five days, and the outage cost it upward of $5 million in revenues in the second quarter.

Since then, the company has been hit with a string of smaller outages, the most recent occurring last Tuesday. In total, the outages lasted four hours and spanned three days.

Not just a customer relations nightmare, analysts have been quick to factor in the hit to the bottom line.

"When they had the June outage, I reduced our third- and fourth-quarter numbers significantly," said Derek Brown, an analyst with Volpe Brown Whelan. "I changed our third quarter [earnings per share] to 1 cent from 6 cents and the fourth quarter to 2 cents from 7 cents. This decision was largely related to the amount they would be spending for their infrastructure costs."

And does Pursglove believe Wall Street has taken a hard line with the company's backup system expenditures?

"If you look at the criticism we had in the second quarter, it was that we weren't spending enough in that area," Pursglove said. "We try to make stability and scalability our top priorities. If we do right by our users, Wall Street and analysts will do right by eBay."

Brown, meanwhile, said the revenue loss during an outage is not as great of a concern as the potential for eBay's customers to flock to competitors, such as Amazon or Yahoo.

Pursglove, however, noted that the company has not seen any evidence of large numbers of customers abandoning its site because of the outages. The company's membership and sales continue to grow, he said.

Although eBay's gross merchandise sales remained flat in the third quarter despite a rise in new members, analysts say that new members to any e-commerce site tend to be slow to purchase compared with frequent visitors.

Meanwhile, Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette's Albright believes it will take several all-day outages to send eBay's customers away.

"You'd have to have a massive and ongoing problem like June-type outages every couple of weeks," Albright said. "eBay is addressing the issue, and they should have their new backup system going any day now."

He added that investors should be more concerned with the results of eBay's recently announced deal with AOL to cobrand four Web sites, which will combine eBay's auction with the navigational aids found on AOL. Also worth noting are the company's efforts to expand overseas, he said.

"The next leg of growth could come from these local roll outs and their international expansion," Albright said.

Despite reports that emerged after the June outage that the problem lied with Sun Microsystems' servers, Pursglove said eBay and Sun were a little premature in their assessment, and that the cause was much more complex.

Sun is expected to remain a seller to the company, he said. "We're happy with Sun and will continue to work with them. But as we expand, we will always keep our options open."

Pursglove noted that it is difficult for eBay to find one vendor that can provide end-to-end solutions for eBay's complex system.

Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right
  • News - Business Tech

    Samsung contemplating SanDisk acquisition

    South Korean consumer electronics giant is considering a buyout of the chipmaker to reduce its NAND flash memory costs, according to PaidContent.

  • Gallery

    Photos: Ron Paul's RNC alternative

    As the Republican convention took place just miles away, a crowd rallied for the former presidential candidate and his message of limited government, ensured civil liberties, lower taxes, and peace.

  • News - Apple

    iPhone to ingest EA's 'Spore Origins'

    The game that lets players design creatures and see them through a digital evolution is coming to Apple's iPhone and iPod Touch.

  • Beyond Binary

    Memo: Windows chief on new ads

    Windows business unit head Bill Veghte send a memo to troops late Thursday promising that the debut Seinfeld/Bill Gates ad was just an "icebreaker."

  • Video

    YouTube plays party politics

    During the presidential campaigning four years ago, YouTube didn't even exist. Now it's a tool candidates must master to get their message across. CNET's Kara Tsuboi stops by the YouTube upload booths at the Democratic and Republican conventions to find out why Google's video site has such a big presence in Denver and St. Paul, Minn.

  • News - Wireless

    Nokia market share to take a hit

    The No.1 mobile handset maker in the world says a weakening global economy and price cuts from competitors will affect its market share standing for the third quarter.

  • Video

    Political party playlists

    We know the Democrats and Republicans are split over policy issues, but does their musical taste fall down party lines too? And what kind of gadgets did they bring to the conventions to listen to their music? CNET reporter Kara Tsuboi finds out.

  • News - Politics and Law

    Video: Republican convention, day 4 recap

    John McCain offers his vision of what the country can expect if he and running mate Sarah Palin are sworn into office in January.

  • News - Cutting Edge

    Execs predict next Google-like tech

    On eve of company's 10-year anniversary, researchers and business pundits speculate about what technologies might someday have as much impact as Google.

  • Gallery

    Photos: The brains behind Google Chrome

    Here's a look at some of the engineers and executives who took the stage at the company's headquarters as they unveiled the new browser.

  • Gadgettes, the blog

    Gadgettes 105: The Sing, Sing a Song Episode

    We have music on the brain in today's episode of Gadgettes. Don't worry, we won't destroy your ear drums with ear-piercing renditions of your least favorite '80s tunes. Instead, we'll soften the blow with a slew of musical gadgets and accessories.

  • Green Tech

    Green news harvest: Stolen solar panels, hydrogen at home

    Tata to bring small, all-electric car to Norway next year; a banner years for wind power; a home hydrogen-filling station; comparing the presidential candidates on plug-in cars; a microbial fuel cell for developing world; tips on greening your PC.