Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Perfect Store: Inside eBay

Rate this book
When Pierre Omidyar launched a clunky website from a spare bedroom over Labor Day weekend of 1995, he wanted to see if he could use the Internet to create a perfect market. He never guessed his old-computer parts and Beanie Baby exchange would revolutionize the world of commerce.

Now, Adam Cohen, the only journalist ever to get full access to the company, tells the remarkable story of eBay's rise. He describes how eBay built the most passionate community ever to form in cyberspace and forged a business that triumphed over larger, better-funded rivals. And he explores the ever-widening array of enlistees in the eBay revolution, from a stay-at-home mom who had to rent a warehouse for her thriving business selling bubble-wrap on eBay to the young MBA who started eBay Motors (which within months of its launch was on track to sell $1 billion in cars a year), to collectors nervously bidding thousands of dollars on antique clothing-irons.

Adam Cohen's fascinating look inside eBay is essential reading for anyone trying to figure out what's next. If you want to truly understand the Internet economy, The Perfect Store is indispensable.

336 pages, Paperback

First published May 25, 2003

Loading interface...
Loading interface...

About the author

Adam Cohen

35 books118 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
148 (26%)
4 stars
228 (40%)
3 stars
159 (28%)
2 stars
23 (4%)
1 star
4 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 38 reviews
76 reviews3 followers
January 10, 2017
Educational read about the first few years of eBay but wish there was an update with later developments.
14 reviews
November 5, 2021
Decent history on the founding of eBay. But published in 2002 the story was just beginning. And the narrative is too focused on anecdotes about individual product categories.
479 reviews1 follower
December 16, 2018
Interesting book about the very beginnings of Ebay. I became a 'member' in about 2001. This book covers the years from about 1995-2001. I was hoping for more of the 'crazy stories' about how the site has been used in unexpected and amusing ways, but the story of how the ideas formed and were carried out is interesting too.
Profile Image for Wren.
212 reviews4 followers
July 8, 2022
Really great book about the founding of eBay and it’s early culture, I was a little out of by the fact that it is 20 years out of day being published way back in 2002, 5 years before the first iPhone! But surprisingly it does exactly what it set out to do. Chart eBay’s origins and culture through its early years and past the Dot.Com bubble burst and a great book for anyone who wants to know how it all started.

It is funny to see how somewhat arrogant the eBay team was towards the start of the new millennium, going so far as to say they were better than Amazon because focused only on one thing. Especially since it was doing just about everything that would rocket Amazon to biggest global retailer in the world and the second richest company in the world 😂

It’s also funny because they take shots at Amazon but failed to realise that before anyone sold anything on eBay it had to first be purchased and used for it then to even make its was onto eBay being sold as “secondhand” and who was the company that would soon be selling all those items to buyers? Amazon.

It amazes me how different the internet and internet based companies and their culture were back then compared to know. They talk about a lot of their problems and most of them stem from not “involving the community” which translates to not letting a bunch of middle aged people who use eBay and engage in their eBay message boards in on their decisions which staggers me!

Can you imagine Apple asking their sellers for permission before removing the headphone jack from the iPhone 7? Or Amazon asking the “community” if their next Prime deal is a good idea? Laughable 😂

EBay’s biggest problem wasn’t that it didn’t “involve the community” it was letting these people think they had any say whatsoever! It even went so far that the “community” felt outraged that they weren’t involved in the companies public IPO and allowed to buy early stocks! Just because you use eBay doesn’t mean you are a part of the company! I could not stop laughing reading how these idiots would get all up right because eBay changed something to their website but didn’t first post it on their community board 😂

As I said this was a great book while dated does everything it set out to do and it was very well written without feeling the need to stroke the egos of the company execs he interviewed.

My only gripe is that the chapters weren’t named so I had no idea what year or time period or what the next chapter was about until I was reading, a small thing but when your talking about a companies founding and history they really help, maybe the author should have posted it in his “community” message boards 😂

5/5 Stars would definitely read again ✌🏻🙌🏻🙏🏻
Profile Image for Nam KK.
102 reviews8 followers
February 13, 2021
The Perfect Store by Adam Cohen deserves a three plus stars, and an additional one for its beautifully written (and emotional) final chapter. The book chronicled ebaY's development, from a raw idea of "people are basically good" to the largest online auction website, that eventually made its founder(s) multi-billionaire(s). I love eBay and have approx. 500 stars on the website myself - at some point I was perhaps ebay addicted, but I only became a member in 2010, so it's great to learn about the company in details.

I found it quite fascinating how eBay succeeded in fending off competitors, both upstarts and much larger and threatening ones such as AOL, and Yahoo!. It is interesting to know that at the peak of the dotcom bubble, Yahoo! and eBay were in talks of an M&A. The market cap of Yahoo! was three times larger than eBay then - and after the burst, Yahoo! lost 95% of its market cap, while eBay only lost 50% of its valuation. The business model of eBay was so much more sustainable, with strong cash flow and super high gross margin - it was profitable since month one. Yahoo!, not quite. The Yahoo! as we knew it, well... And the rest was history.

I think that a reader with his/her interest in strategy would find the book interesting. It didn't focus on the financials of eBay though - I know that the company was financially sound, that it put its VC money into a bank for it didn't need it, but nothing much else.

It was sad to read in final chapters when founder(s) left the company after a transition period after its IPO, and that the company became just another corporation, ie. driven by bottom line (maximizing its shareholders value, or simply put, being corporate greedy, etc.)

A good read.
124 reviews
December 23, 2021
Good information on reselling items on eBay, Amazon, etsy, etc. It's an easy quick read. Great tips and hints. Keep in mind you are not going to get rich quick reselling. It takes work and time. What is hot and selling today may be dead tomorrow. What was selling a year ago for $1000 may be selling now for $10. I bought some items based on suggestions in the book of what is hot and didn't sell a one of them. I've bought some items that the books said not to buy, and then sold them and made some decent money on them.

You don't need to read every book on reselling. Read a few and take what is useful to you. Read them all and you will see MANY similarities in their information. You can still get something out of them, but don't feel the need to read all of them.
Profile Image for Rogue Reader.
2,076 reviews9 followers
July 24, 2022
Love these business biographies written at the apogee of fame, market dominance and consumer acceptance. Cohen covers the background and details of individuals, places and economic moves leading up to the IPO and beyond to about 2001. Reflects well on Omidyar and Meg Whitman who continued his equitable approach to the market, balancing the needs of sellers and buyers. I can't imagine the treachery of those open communications and community expectations - shared governance it wasn't but boy they did their best. Perhaps most interesting is the perception of and defense against competitors and the development of new markets like eBay Auto. I wonder whether eBay's time has come and gone or whether it is just another market cycle.
131 reviews6 followers
November 8, 2020
Overall, I liked the book. It intertwines eBay's story with stories of eBay users and community members. At first, this was exciting and interesting, but by midway through the book I found myself bored and skipping those sections (of which there are a lot). I wish the book was written a few years later as it was published prior to the PayPal acquisition. That being said I would rate the business portion a 5 star (some things are simply incredibly like employee #2 was hired solely to open up the mail containing the checks). I would rate the user/community vignette's a 2 star as there were too many, too detailed, and some simply uninteresting.
Profile Image for KVG.
73 reviews1,296 followers
November 15, 2020
Eh. A fine history of a startup with interesting anecdotes. If you’d read this around time of release it’d have been rife with lessons on network effects, matching it’l markets, and aggregation theory - common concepts now. A good refresher. I get the book was also about eBay’s community but the anecdotes of members, especially in the last third, got really dull and distracting. The good ones would reground in lessons of business and growth. The bad ones would distract - and the saturation of bad ones increased near the end.
Profile Image for Ritwik Manan.
30 reviews5 followers
October 30, 2019
Definitely an enjoyable read if you're looking at a book focused on the early years of the eCommerce giant.
I like the narrative style jumping between company focused story and seller/community stories. However, it gets tiring by the end. It does well to show the founding values for the companies that I think have endured over the decades. However, I would have liked a bit more macro-view of the time with the dot-com rise and bubble burst
Profile Image for Jon..
11 reviews
October 3, 2020
Fantastic hisyory

This book is beautifully written. The stories it tells are engaging and hard to put down. As a fan of the company, it was interesting to see the bigger picture.
51 reviews
September 1, 2022
Interesting. From the origin to how it evolved and stories about seller/buyer influence.
5 reviews1 follower
June 2, 2009
I became an active eBay.com user in mid-1998, about three years after Pierre Omidyar launched it. This book was certainly interesting to me in filling in what I missed and also jogging my memory on quite a few incidents I witnessed as a user.

This biography of a business attempts to tell the history of the first seven years of eBay.com. Of course tracking a business that grows from seven to over 15,000 employees in a few short years is a massive undertaking. Author Adam Cohen does a fairly good job of breaking it all down. He focuses on key personal and major events of the company and tries his best to lay it out chronologically. The twelve chapters all contain a number of articles pertaining to that time period, with certain important company characters we return to more than others.

Cohen deals not only with the employees but also with the eBay community. One of the more shocking revelations concerned an active forum member with the account name "Pongo." I remember Pongo but never in my wildest dreams would have guessed what was going on with her in her personal life. He also interviews the first seller to reach 10,000 feedback as well as a few anonymous users who have their own opinions of eBay's worth (or worthlessness).

It is also interesting to read this 2002 book in 2009 for the promises broken. The author states that Half.com was shut down by eBay. After the book was published eBay found that the Half.com community would not let it go and it still exists as a separate site today. He also talks about how the community disapproved of eBay selling advertising and also giving special preference to large corporate sellers, and how eBay decided to back off those ventures. Here in 2009 eBay is full of advertising and Buy.com and other corporate sellers are indeed being pushed in front of regular sellers.

I was expecting to read about the first eBay Live! convention but I guess that was in 2002, after the book was finished.

I recommend this book to fans or users of eBay.com. This book is a great refresher course of past history and an insight to where many of its traditions began.
Profile Image for Jeff Brateman.
355 reviews1 follower
June 5, 2012
This was an insightful, but dated, look into how ebay got started, through 2001. Some of the inside stories were comical, others were boring, but most of them had little cohesion with other stories in the same chapter. I had a hard time keeping up with timeline of events, as the author did not seem to place importance on keeping a story in one piece. In fact, you could call this book a collection of story snippets, mashed together in a loosely coupled fashion.

This was handed to me on my first day at PayPal (an ebay company), and two years later, will be put back into the closet to be sold at a later date, possibly on ebay. Actually, I need to give this book to my mom for the small stories about people making more money selling antiques on ebay than at consignment shops. All she needs to do is hire some immigrant labor, coast, and watch the money flow right in.
Profile Image for Mia.
393 reviews22 followers
January 24, 2010
Really interesting. I don't know anything about the history of the internet, and my only experience with eBay is as a buyer, but Cohen's fast-paced, timeline approach to the company's growth and development makes the story a veritable page-turner. The only problem is that it ends several years ago, and I'd like to hear his take on the dead zone that eBay is these days, at least for folks like me, shopping for vintage fish tank decor!
149 reviews22 followers
October 1, 2012
One ofg the best IT biographies I've ever read.

This takes you back to the extreme beginings of eBay, & walks you thruogh their unique model/philosophy that led to their first hire simply someone to open the thousands of envelopes coming in with cash &/or cheques in them

A delightful look back at when the internet was more about community & peple than spam.

Profile Image for ♡ Sassy ~ Amy ♡.
939 reviews87 followers
October 7, 2010
This book is really for people who wanted to have 100's of items in their store at once. Today it is no longer.... ebay has phased out the stores. It's a good book for hints to get your own creativity running, but... thats it.
Profile Image for Vivek.
29 reviews48 followers
September 25, 2012
Read to know how Pierre created a wonderful virtual marketplace.The book will explain you how the "Network effect" plays an important role in a competition! ==>> Google+ lost to facebook because of it!
Profile Image for Matt.
297 reviews12 followers
February 11, 2015
Interesting story of improbable start-up success. It's written in Newsweek-level English, and the conclusions undoubtedly would have been a bit less optimistic if it had been written in 2005, 2010, or even now in 2015 as opposed to in 2001. Still, it's a fun story.
Profile Image for Angela Sun.
34 reviews
February 16, 2014
Well written account of eBay's history and evolution. Cohen's in depth journalistic writing puts you on the ground with eBay. I initially thought reading this in 2014 would be pretty dated, but it gave a fascinating history of one of the most successful online marketplaces in Internet history.
Profile Image for Alvina.
14 reviews101 followers
July 7, 2007
Man, if only I had been in on the ground floor...
32 reviews11 followers
February 5, 2008
If you're interested in EBay, you should read this. It has an interesting history as a company, and explains why the operate the way they do.
Profile Image for Bill Seitz.
Author 1 book10 followers
January 29, 2009
A bit out-dated now. And not terribly insightful. But a decent compendium of tidbits.
Profile Image for Rishi.
1 review3 followers
March 4, 2009
Great account of the history and people behind eBay, how it started, growing pains etc. It combines the usual stories with some rare insights and inside stories about the rapid growth of the company
Profile Image for Phil Simon.
Author 28 books100 followers
January 24, 2010
Great account of the rise of the Internet garage sale. Also, this is no puff piece. Good overall reporting.
Profile Image for Lara.
37 reviews
April 25, 2011
Interesting history of how ebay got its start and revolutionized ecommerce.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 38 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.