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FutureShop

How the new Auction Culture Will Revolutionize How We Buy, Sell, and Get Things We Really Want

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A bold forecast of how the coming auction culture revolution will radically transform what, how, and why we buy.
Visionary entrepreneur Daniel Nissanoff breaks the news that the eBay auction phenomenon is about to explode in a big new way, revolutionizing how all consumers–not just eBay mavens–do their shopping, not only online but offline as well. The big payoff of this revolution will be that consumers will be able to “trade up” by embracing a new norm of temporary ownership. We will be able to buy more of the things we really want, because we’ll also be regularly selling off the things we no longer want or need. We’ll be transformed from an “accumulation nation” into an “auction culture.” Welcome to a world where Manolo Blahnik shoes, a Louis Vuitton handbag, a set of Callaway golf clubs, or a Bugaboo baby stroller will actually be smart buys, not indulgences.
Even as the auction culture offers consumers and entrepreneurs a wealth of new opportunities, it will also pose serious challenges for retailers and brand managers. Nissanoff analyzes those challenges and presents an ingenious set of strategies companies can employ to turn the auction culture to their advantage.
As Nissanoff writes, “Temporary ownership means just saying no to second-best and letting yourself reach for the things that will thrill you over and over again–guilt-free.” Listeners, start your auctions.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      The author says that buying new and holding 'til death will be practices of the past as more people use online auctions to sell what they don't need to a limitless market. With built-in feedback on the seller's reputation and easy tabulation of consumer reactions, Web auctions are more efficient than buying from a retail store. While selling unwanted goods goes against our primitive hoarding nature, and there's a stigma to buying used products, the new trend opens up a huge array of unconventional sellers and markets. Helped by John H. Mayer's savvy reading, this analysis with its integrity and vision provides a riveting glimpse into what the author says is the most important innovation since personal computers. T.W. (c) AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 2, 2006
      In his attempt to take eBay into the realm of social theory, Nissanoff leans heavily on "temporary ownership," an endless cycle of consumption where each purchase is looked at not as an acquisition, but as a stopgap that will be auctioned off after its utility has been extracted, and the next bigger and better thing will be partially bankrolled with the proceeds won (at auction, naturally) from the last. It's sort of "One man's trash is another man's treasure," but substitute "used designer briefcase" for "trash." Nissanoff stresses buyers only purchase things that really excite them and carry a high resale value (big ticket swag from Chanel, Fendi, Rolex, Hermes and the like). "The money you recoup when you turn in your expensive stroller, for example, can be put into a new bike for your child." The book, however, ignores a large segment of society: poor and lower middle class people, many of whom don't have computers or the means to buy a $4,600 watch. Similarly, Nissanoff's model assumes people will want to spend the time and energy tracking auctions, bidding, hawking their own stuff and making endless trips to the post office to send off their used handbags. Though it has an exciting promise-people buy newer, bigger, better, shinier possessions all the time, so why not put them to work?-Nissanoff's theory is directed at too narrow a range of consumers to carry a revolutionary consumption wallop.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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