Ten-year eBay CEO rumored to be eyeing retirement soon

By Jacqueline Emigh | Published January 22, 2008, 4:15 PM

Is Meg Whitman preparing to leave the top spot of the highly successful auction site? People close to the situation think that the corporate leader, mentor, and self-made billionaire is now ready to open eBay's doors to some fresh new ideas.

With Web mega-auction site eBay about to announce quarterly earnings tomorrow, rumors are afoot that the company's long-time CEO, Meg Whitman, will soon retire from the job she assumed back in 1998, when the then-start-up employed merely 29 people and operated only in the US.

At the time, eBay served as an e-commerce center only for collectible items, according to Whitman. In fact, Beanie Babies-branded stuffed animals were among the early eBay's hottest sellers.

This was a fact that we rarely shared with investors," Whitman joked, during a 2006 talk at Stanford University Business School, which is now viewable, appropriately enough, by following a video link posted at the bottom of a press release on Stanford's Web site.

EBay CEO Meg Whitman"Over the next ten years, though, Whitman steered eBay through choppy and highly competitive waters while it moved toward becoming the huge corporation it is today, employing 11,000 employees worldwide.

With the release today of a Wall Street Journal report predicting Whitman's imminent retirement, critics are charging that she made some mistakes along the way -- that eBay's acquisition of PayPal came too late, that its more recent Skype buyout has done little for the company, and that eBay needs to somehow transform into a more secure environment, with greater harmony between buyers and sellers.

While her management track record might not be perfect, there are few CEOs of major companies in the online industry that have managed to hang in for as long as Whitman has done -- a fact that also holds true for many e-businesses.

In talking about her own "lessons learned" to the Stanford University students, Whitman delivered a snapsot of what she views as some of her wisest decisions.

The first one, accomplished right away, was to expand beyond the highly limited market of Beanie Babies and other collectibles.

Then, in 1998, Whtiman heeded advice to "go early if you're going to go global." After the acquisition of a company that soon became eBay Germany, Whitman oversaw eBay's expansion into 200 countries worldwide.

She's also broken ground in many other new areas over the years, displaying strong leadership with solid elements of mentoring to others. Whitman attended Princeton University during the mid-1970s, at a time not long after Ivy League and other previously all male colleges first started opening their doors to women.

Displaying an early interest in business management, she was a member of the student organization Business Today. She then went on to receive an MBA from the prestigious Harvard Business School in 1979.

Before arriving at eBay, Whitman rose progressively higher on traditional corporate ladders through a series of stepping stone management jobs at Procter & Gamble, Bain & Company, Walt Disney Company, Stride Rite Corp., FTD; and Hasbro Inc.

With her own net worth through eBay's success now estimated at $1.4 billion, Whitman has reportedly donated more than $30 million to her alma mater, Princeton, paving the way for construction of the university's Whitman College.

While at eBay, she has reportedly often rotated other executives through various operational functions, apparently with an eye to seeing how well each of them might perform as her successor.

Whitman has often been quoted as saying, soon after she first set foot at eBay, that nobody should stay in a CEO position for more than 10 years, in order to allow for the entrance of new ideas. Now people close to the situation think Whitman is about ready to follow through on her own recommendation.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

When Whitman leave, and replaced her with a MBA, the site/company will go down the toilet. eBay is always charge too much. When replace with a hot shot MBA, layoff to cut cost, and increase fee to drive revenue, which will drive customers away.

Score: 0

|

First Heath Ledger dies and now this. Man, a dark day indeed.

Score: 0

|

I glanced at the title and thought it said "Ten-year old eBay CEO". Sadly I wasn't that surprised.

Score: 0

|

whitman looks like a cypto joo... that high forehead and the idea that she heads a auction site that is loaded with scammers that sell items they don't actually have..

Score: 0

|

Ebay stinks. You get charged for every little thing when you sell, and when you buy its tough to decipher the scams from the legit items.

Score: 0

|

PDC 2009: What have we learned this week?

There was the freebie that no one will forget, the heebie-jeebies courtesy of Scott Guthrie, and a teensy bit clearer picture of how this cloud thingie should work.

Live report: Will Google Chrome OS change Linux?

The mysteries of just what Chrome OS is, and how much of an operating system it truly is, may be resolved today.

PDC 2009: Microsoft cares about Web browser performance

The effort to give users of the world's dominant Web browser the impression of quality, is a personal one for the man who leads that battle.

Nokia re-affirms its commitment to Symbian, sort of

Maemo won't necessarily be replacing Symbian in the Nokia N-Series, but that's definitely a place where it will be found.

E-book readers will be in short supply this holiday season

E-readers are hot this year, and a lot of compelling new products have been released, but are there enough electrophoretic displays to go around?

Sony looks to finally open a single storefront for downloads

Sony has had many different download portals for movies, music, e-books, and games, and now it's looking to make a single shop for all of it.

Tuning out the tablet: Time to give the endless speculation a rest

Wide Angle Zoom: Wishing and hoping and thinking and praying....won't put an iTablet on the market.

Five improvements for IT managers in 2010

If businesses are to improve their efficiency for next year, they need to stop and reassess the basic tenets of their job.

AOL's spinoff from Time Warner to shed 2,500 jobs

As AOL moves toward become an independent company again, it will cut nearly a third of its workforce.

Gartner: SMS-based money transfer will be bigger than mobile browsing, search

Gartner issues its predictions for the 10 things our phones will be doing in 2012.

Don't forget to upgrade to Firefox 3.6 beta 3 today

Mozilla has released the latest beta its Firefox 3.6 browser software, just over one week after beta 2.