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Etsy CEO Maria Thomas Talks ‘Shop’

Today Etsy published this very informative article by CEO Maria Thomas.

In it she shares her experiences meeting with a few Etsy Team members, introduces some new hires, addresses a few ongoing community concerns, and details some upcoming feature changes and upgrades.

Excerpt:

Search
One immediate and urgent project involves architecting substantial improvements to Etsy’s search function.  During the next week or two, you should see marked improvements in the speed at which Etsy’s search function returns search results  (note: this refers to the speed with which users received results to a given query).  Many of you and many inside Etsy want to improve search in other ways. That’s coming too, but I think speed trumps all, especially in the holiday season.

We also plan early in 2009 to begin to change the way Etsy’s site search actually works.  It was originally designed to return the most recently listed items first. As a result, Etsy understands that many of its sellers renew listings before their original expiration dates in order to push items closer to the top of search results for a particular query.  

I believe that Etsy must design its site search with buyers in mind. Its main purpose should be to help buyers find what they’re looking for. Returning items in reverse chronological order isn’t the best way to achieve that. At the same time, Etsy should provide sellers with various options to advertise and promote their merchandise to Etsy’s enthusiastic and growing buyer base. Redesigning the search function and creating new ways for sellers to advertise on Etsy are two important initiatives.

Find the complete article here and the companion forum discussion thread here.

Etsy will be down for scheduled maintenance Monday morning

Etsy will be migrating their database to new hardware on Monday morning October 27, 2008, which will result in Etsy being down from 3am until 6am (eastern US time).
The Storque will also have some scheduled downtime this coming Sunday, for one hour. 11 pm-midnight.
Source: This Storque article

Etsy’s CTO Chad Dickerson said:

I’m just completing my seventh week as CTO here at Etsy, and the Engineering Team here is continuing to work on the infrastructure for the site, including putting in some new systems and processes in place that will make Etsy more reliable both for the holidays and for the long haul. Next weekend, we will be migrating Etsy’s master database to better and faster hardware. Since the master database contains the most essential information used to run Etsy, the key functions of the site will be unavailable. We have scheduled this maintenance for 3am until 6am ET on Monday, October 27, 2008. We will have a page up noting that we are in maintenance mode, but you will be unable to use search, listings, checkout, Storque, forums, convos, or anything else you normally use at Etsy. Because this is a significant migration, we wanted to give you plenty of advance notice.

This weekend, we will be taking the Storque database down for maintenance from 11pm-midnight on Sunday, October 19, 2008. Storque will be unavailable during this time.

You might notice that the maintenance window for the master database is 3 hours, whereas the maintenance window for the much smaller conversations database on September 22 was much longer (approximately 11 hours). This is not a coincidence, but very intentional and the result of better planning and execution. Since September 22, we have begun putting a more thoughtful and intelligent design in place for our database systems with the specific goal of shortening maintenance windows and any downtime you will experience. As we continue to work on Etsy, we will do whatever we can to minimize the disruption for all of you.

For both of these maintenance windows, we will be posting updates to fix.etsy.com.

Thanks for your patience as we continue to work to make Etsy better!

This announcement was also made via email if you are subscribed to the news alert emails. You can sign up for those here.

New Roles at Etsy Inc.

marymary has started a Forum thread to discuss the Storque article on Rob Kalin’s changing role at the company, changing titles, and the hiring of a new Chief Technology Officer.

Dear Etsians,

Here are a couple important news items, one from Rob and one from Maria.

From Rob:

I am happy to announce that, with high hopes and expectations, Maria is now Etsy’s CEO. My new title at Etsy is Chief Creative Officer (CCO), a nice loose moniker that will allow me to focus on what I’m best at: product work and long-term, big-picture thinking.

I will also be spending time developing Etsy.org, a non-profit organization that will focus on the educational side of how to make a living making things. (Lots more details about this are coming soon. Right now, it’s in the planning stages.)

I’ve been filling many roles since Etsy began, all of them new to me in some way. It’s been an incredible and exhausting education, much of it public. Watching Maria, with her experience and expertise, has enabled me to make this decision. I’m excited to get back to what I enjoy most, and maybe even work less than seven days a week for the first time in a long time.

From Maria:

I am thrilled to announce that Chad Dickerson will join Etsy in Brooklyn as Chief Technology Officer on September 1, 2008. As Etsy’s CTO, Chad will be the company’s top technology executive and will join Rob, me and the Etsy team in helping to shape Etsy’s strategic direction, development, and future growth. Chad will manage our entire technical organization, including application development, network infrastructure and quality assurance. He will report to me.

In my recent “Long View” article, I spoke about seeking “a few talented, experienced people to join Etsy and help us more quickly and successfully do things we’ve never done before, while continuing to celebrate Etsy’s creative, quirky and independent culture.” Chad is the first of these few folks. He’s an experienced leader of technical teams and a home brewer!

Chad joins us from Yahoo! where he has spent the last three years leading technical teams in innovative product development. He is currently Senior Director for Yahoo!’s Brickhouse & Advanced Products team, a group outside of Yahoo’s! corporate structure designed to be more nimble and customer-focused. In this role Chad heads up a cross-functional team of over 30 engineers, designers, and product managers who incubate and launch Web-based, high availability, consumer-facing products.

Before Yahoo!, Chad was CTO at InfoWorld/Media Group IDG for five years and before that, CTO at Salon.com for three years. In both CTO roles, Chad was the senior executive responsible for technology strategy and execution.

Chad started his Web career as an Internet Developer and Gopher Administrator at “The News & Observer” ( http://www.newsobserver.com/ ) in Raleigh, NC. He is a Tar Heel native, and his parents will be very pleased to have him back on the east Coast.

Read more about Chad at his blog: http://www.chaddickerson.com/

Please join us in welcoming Chad to Etsy.

The Long View: Rob and Maria

Etsy founder Rob Kalin and new Etsy COO Maria Thomas have posted the following article on The Storque. (The first part is by Rob, the second part by Maria.)

Hello out there,

Etsy just turned three, and we’re at a turning point. Some people reading this have been part of our community for all three of those years, and many are just arriving. This letter is the perspective of someone who’s been here for the full three years.

Etsy needs to change. Some of what worked for us two or three years ago doesn’t work now, and we need to shift how we do things. This seems obvious, but it’s easy to overlook that you can’t get to where we are now without the past three years.

Etsy up till now

In January of 2006. Etsy Inc. was just four people: myself, Chris, Haim and Jared. We were working for free, working day and night all the time, and there were about a hundred new forum posts each day. Etsy has changed since then: we’re now a company with 63 employees, a community that has seen 1,000,000 registrations in over a one hundred  countries, and now there are 15,000 new forum posts every day.

Looking at changes in numbers is easy. How can I articulate the other changes?

I remember when Etsy reached 10 employees: it was the first big shift in our work flow. When you’re starting a company, you do what works. It’s tautological: how do you know what works? It works. This meant working seven days a week, around the clock. It meant skipping out on rent, foregoing regular meals, not seeing family or friends. (There’s a reason that small groups of people are able to launch things that large companies can’t.)

Once we hit 20 employees, we created teams inside the company. (These teams have evolved over time, but they still exist, and it’s how we group employees on our About page.) At the next stage of growth, as each team grew, we needed team leads, and a shared space to keep track of what everyone was working on (we chose to use a wiki with a ticketing system).

When you have teams inside a company, you have to be careful that silos don’t develop. People tend to work heads down on what their immediate tasks are. When you have team leads, you need to setup a reporting structure. As new employees come on, they are oriented inside the company. This may all sound obvious, but when you’re in the trenches at a startup, without someone who has done this before, you learn as you go. We have certainly done a fair share of what Oscar Wilde would call “conducting our education in public.”

Alongside the company growing, the community grew. This was wonderful to watch, and it added to our responsibilities: the more people using our service, the more ideas for how to improve it. This is the beauty of the Web; it’s a permanent focus group. The tough part is meeting everyone’s expectations, and that will always require attention.

What will change?

Etsy Inc. has new leadership. I have been working with Maria Thomas since she joined Etsy six weeks ago. We’ve been taking a clear look at what works and what doesn’t work right now, and planning what we need to move forward. Maria brings heaps of experience with her, and her arrival marks a change in how Etsy is run as a company.

Her arrival also marks a change in my own role at Etsy. I am 28 years old. Before Etsy, I worked many jobs: cashier at a Marshalls department store, stock boy at a camera shop, freelance carpenter, lowest rung on the ladder at a demolition company, minimum wage floor help at the Strand book store (saving up to go back to college), amanuensis for an eighty-year-old philosopher from Vienna.

All of these jobs prepared me for being an entrepreneur and starting a company. Maria has the skills and experience required to lead Etsy though the upcoming years, and that is what she’s here to do.

Right now we’re focused on getting the right people and the right process inside Etsy.  We can’t make specific promises regarding when and what we will build – but I promise that your requests and suggestions and complaints and kudos have been heard.  The proof will, of course, be in the pudding, and rather than offer any more promises, we want to let the results of our organizational and structural changes manifest themselves in the most important real result: a great product, a great seller experience, a great buyer experience, and great customer support.

______________________________________________________________________

Dear Etsians,

A little over a month ago, after a year of watching and exploring, I joined Etsy to help lead the company. During that year I watched Etsy grow and its community evolve both as a marketplace for handmade items and as an intimate and sophisticated gathering place for people to connect, share ideas, learn, and experience joy in purposeful living.

I became an Etsy member in early 2007.  My Etsy username is “Pesmou,” which is Greek for “Tell Me.” I originally chose Pesmou because, as a Greek-American, it’s an easy word for me to remember. It now seems like a very fitting user name: I want the Etsy community to tell me what they want and need and how we can do better. In fact, I’ve spent most of my first month reading Forum posts and emails from Etsy members. But, I am getting ahead of myself.

My first Etsy purchase was a sterling silver Star of David pendant. I bought it as a Bat Mitzva gift for my college roommate’s daughter. I later learned that the maker is Etsy’s own in-house lawyer, Sarah Feingold!

That first purchase got me hooked. It was fun to browse Etsy’s pages and admire the high quality handmade items described so passionately by their makers. I experienced the joy of discovery and the satisfaction of offering a truly personal gift while also supporting someone’s craft.  Over the next few months, I found myself visiting the Etsy site not only to buy beautiful things but also to participate in the burgeoning community and to read the engaging, creative content in the Storque blog.

Over the course of a year, I had the opportunity to on several occasions visit Etsy’s offices in Brooklyn, NY and get to know a few Etsians, including co-founder Rob Kalin. I was inspired by Rob’s vision of a global marketplace full of handmade items, stories, sights and sounds.

I also began to understand the challenges presented by trying to advance the young company beyond its start-up phase. It takes time, focus and investment to build a lasting and profitable company.

What do I bring with me to Etsy? Nearly ten years of experience operating consumer-oriented Web-based businesses at Amazon.com and NPR.org.  I have learned that building a great company requires more than just a great idea. It requires an organization that knows what it wants to achieve, and is staffed properly to reach those goals.  It requires a relentless, detailed focus on execution informed by constantly listening to customers.

My current goals at Etsy are:

* People: seek deeper experience to lead Etsy through things we’ve never done before.
* Process: create a disciplined approach to planning and execution.
* Product: build the best marketplace for connecting makers and buyers.

Above all, my goal is to get things done. This ranges from improving the user experience on Etsy, to communicating more consistently, to adding more sophisticated analytical tools so that we can measure our performance.

First, I am listening: to our members, our browsers, our fans, our critics, our staff, and our investors.  I am actively reading the Etsy forums and sitting side-by-side with Etsy customer support representatives.  I am reading emails and blogs to understand the needs and desires of people who sell on Etsy, who shop on Etsy, who browse Etsy, who love Etsy and who bash Etsy.

I am studying other companies that have successfully (or unsuccessfully) combined discipline and hard work with “keeping things human,” as Rob says. I am talking to a lot of talented, experienced people and looking for a few of them to join Etsy and help us more quickly and successfully do things we’ve never done before, while continuing to celebrate Etsy’s creative, quirky and independent culture.

I am looking closely at how work is organized at Etsy.  My experience in Web-based businesses is consistent with my early observations at Etsy:  there’s always a giant list of things to be built to make a better Web site that people want to visit regularly.  Many of these desired features or functionalities involve technical development and therefore draw on a limited pool of resources to help accomplish them.

Thus, another part of my early agenda is to develop a well-understood project prioritization process inside Etsy.  That process should take into account the need to build a highly reliable and scalable technical infrastructure and one nimble enough to accommodate the dynamism of a business like Etsy’s.

It takes time and talent to fully realize the power of a great idea. Etsy is on its way, but there’s still much to do.

There are many great discussions going on about Etsy, both on our site and outside of it. We’d like to engage with them. To start, we’ll hold office hours in the Virtual Labs’s Treehouse Room on Wednesday, July 9th at 7-8 pm EDT. This will give everyone a chance to talk to us directly about what’s going, and share their thoughts.

Extra! Extra! New-and-Improved Etsy E-mail Alerts

It’s here! The News you can Use! According to this Storque article by admin Vanessa, this improved version of Etsy News Alerts will be more streamlined and site-news-oriented, as well as being delivered more swiftly to in-boxes as the news ‘breaks’.

Excerpt:

Many Etsians have been asking for a cut and dry way to get only the important site news from admin.  The Storque is great and all, you say, but there’s so much content, it’s hard to pinpoint what’s what in the Etsy News Section.

We over here at the Storque are up for the task.  We are converting the Etsy News Email list to be an Etsy News Alert system.  In the past, Etsy News was about a weekly or so collection of headlines from the Storque. Pleasant enough, but not instantaneous! Not hard-hitting! 

That was then, this is now: just sign up for the Etsy News Emails listserve here, or by clicking on the envelope icon on the homepage of Etsy.

You will get breaking news headlines straight from Etsy Central, as they are published on the Storque, delivered to your email inboxes.  Hello,  synchronicity!

Included Topics:

  • Downtime & site outages
  • Cooperative Advertising announcements
  • New site features launched
  • Statistics
  • Showcase announcements
  • Policy & legal announcements
  • Important Customer Support how-tos
  • Major posts from Etsy’s founder Rob Kalin, aka Rokali
  • Town Halls or other community-wide events
  • Other news important enough for us to bug you

Sign up for this (and other) Etsy E-mail Alerts here. You can also find a graphic link to the sign-up page on the Etsy front page, beneath the ‘Ways To Shop’ left sidebar. The forum announcement thread can be found here.

Etsy publishes their survey results

The Etsy survey results have been published, please see this Storque article for a summary.
Etsy has compiled the detailed results into a pdf file you can download here

Etsy keeping it more handmade

In this Storque article, Rob/Rokali describes some new changes to the site, focused mainly on tweaks to browsing and searching that will result in reduced category bleed, and vintage and supplies being screened out from the default search settings.

The tagline on our homepage reads Your place to buy & sell all things handmade. This was our focus when we launched Etsy two-and-a-half years ago, and it will remain our focus. However, a bit of housekeeping is needed to maintain this.

Etsy currently has over 1.1 million active listings, and more than twice this number of items have been sold. Way back when, in April or May of 2005, when we were laying out the top-level categories, we included two categories that we thought would be of great use to the community: Supplies and Vintage. We’re glad we did this, and we have been happy to see these categories thrive.

As Etsy continues to grow and the circles of people who know about the site spreads beyond crafters, we see the ratio of buyers to sellers increase. What began as a one-to-one ratio is now five-to-one, and we hope to see it around ten-to-one by the end of this year. This means means more buyers for every seller. It also means the vast majority of people coming to the site are coming here to find “all things handmade.”

We’re super sensitive to how the small businesses get pushed to the perimeter of marketplaces. Indeed, we created Etsy for the specific reason of making sure that handmade goods were kept in the center. We’re going to make some changes to the current site to make sure the center can hold.

What’s going to change?

We’re tweaking how both browsing and searching work.

The main search bar will default to searching only handmade goods. This means that vintage items and commercial supplies will, by default, be excluded from search results. Of course, the searcher can opt to include them by selecting the correct option from the drop-down menu to the right of the search bar.

Right now we have what we call “subcategory bleed.” When you click into, say, Art, you only see items whose first tag is Art. But as soon as you hit a subcategory in Art, like Drawings, you see all items who have both those tags, no matter what the first tag is. This will be remedied to work in the way that most people expect it to work (from other ecommerce taxonomies): Art > Drawings will only show items with the first tag Art; in other words, items inside that top-level category.

Three Special Considerations

One: Patterns will be moved to their appropriate places: handmade patterns with the handmade crafting supplies, and commercial patterns with the commercial supplies. The Patterns for sale on Etsy are both handmade and commercial, and should be tagged appropriately. This moving will be done automagically, and we’ll give specific advance notice for it.

Two: Handmade supplies are handmade, so they’ll still be included in the default results.

Three: We know that changes like these will require some getting used to. We’re going to give all commercial supplies and vintage items an extra 4 months of listing time in light of this.

What’s the timeframe for these changes? Our goal is to put them in place by the end of this month. Like all tasks that require engineering work, things could take longer than expected, so please keep this in mind.

The comments for this article are closed, but here is an accompanying forum thread for discussion.

UPDATE 02/02/08:

Rob/Rokali has provided a mock-up of how the new header might look.

UPDATE 02/02/08 by JB:
Rokali has posted his follow-up

Etsy Gets Another Shot in the Arm

In this Storque article, Etsy’s First Five Years, co-founder Rob Kalin discusses Etsy, from it’s early beginnings, to a point in its not-too-distant future. Kicking off with a reading of a children’s book, Swimmy, to help illustrate his ideal company model, he goes on to give a quick introduction of Etsy investors, then outlines why a nearly-solvent Etsy needed another financial boost:

  • Given our current rate of growth — with how many images we store and how much traffic we serve — we estimate that we’ll need to spend $5 million on hardware and hosting in the next two years. This is not only to keep up with what we have now, but to support new features and expansion.
  • Right now, Etsy only supports the US Dollar and the English language. We want to support many other currencies and languages, but to do so requires significant resources: from people to translate the site as it exists now, to providing customer support in new languages.
  • The checkout experience on Etsy is not ideal. Every buyer has to pay every seller individually when checking out. Based on our own tests, and based on a lot of unsolicited feedback, this is a major hurdle to increasing sales. People shopping on Etsy expect an experience comparable to other leading ecommerce sites like Amazon.com. We aim to build an in-house payment system, and to do this properly requires a significant amount of capital investment.
  • In the same vein as the previous point, people searching for items on Etsy expect search to be comparable to Google. This is quite a lofty goal, but we’re up for the challenge. Our new investment will help us achieve this.
  • Etsy is a platform on top of which tens of thousands of other people run their own businesses. We have a huge responsibility to keep our service humming and improve it based on community feedback. In order to do this, first of all we need to stick around. While it’s nice to know that we can cover our own operational costs, I never want to make the excuse that we can’t succeed because we lack funds to buy servers, cover a bandwidth bill, provide a warm office for our employees and so on. In other words, we need a bit of a cushion in order to provide the best service we can, confident that we can spend a bit more when need be.
  • We need to be able to make it through any hard times that hit the economy. We believe that the current economy, favoring megacorporations and supersizes, is unstable. People who make a living making things, especially those we have on Etsy, will play a key role in revitalizing and stabilizing the world.
  • The services Etsy provides, from customer support to shopping tools, need to grow and improve. We want to offer superb customer service, including live phone support; we want to provide our sellers with detailed stats on their shop. We can do these, but they require more resources than we currently have.
  • It is immensely important to me that all Etsy workers are paid a good salary, provided with full benefits (medical, dental, vision) by the company. Many companies, far too many companies, underpay their employees, don’t make workers employees at all (”permalancers” and “permatemp” are the new words for this), and provide few if any benefits. (We also know that many of the sellers on Etsy lack access to such benefits as health insurance, and we want to work to change this.)

He wraps up the article with a double postscript:

P.P.S. I’m planning another Town Hall, so please think up any questions and post them in the comments. I’ll gladly answer them during the online meetup.

Etsy censors comments on Storque articles

Today, comments on Storque articles from several Etsy users were deleted.

The following are screenshots of two of the deleted comments, reproduced here with permission of the commenters.

This comment from Eclipse was made on this Storque article about the recent Etsy survey:

eclipsecomment

This comment from Simone Walsh was made on this Storque article about recent shop template changes:

simonecomment

This screenshot is a little small, but the comment by Simone Walsh reads:

Prior to these changes, your Shop page had only a few mentions of your username and the document was not structured at its best for Search Engine Optimization.”

Apart from the fact that our shop names mostly have no SEO value no matter how often they’re repeated, the page is still not structured for search engine optimisation. It’s not structured at all, in fact!

Etsy needs to take a big step back and learn about proper HTML and implement correctly structured markup. This alone would make the world of difference in SEO terms.

If people really do want to learn about SEO, then I’d suggest reading this article as a starting point: http://www.sitepoint.com/article/ultimate-seo-checklist

Altogether, four original comments were deleted. The other two original comments came from Quirke and were posted on the Survey article and this Forum Decorum article about “forum addiction”.

Additional comments referring to the deletions were also deleted, such as this follow-up comment from Eclipse in the Survey article:

eclipsecomment2
Multiple other replies were also deleted from the “Forum Decorum” article, and the article was locked to further comments.

Etsy’s stated policy on Storque comments can be found here:

Like any online magazine or blog, the editors reserve the right to remove comments that we deem inappropriate or offensive. The Storque is a live, public space for editorial content, and we urge commenters to reflect on their tone and message before posting.

Etsy starts a mailing list.

reported in the Storque article here

We are very excited to announce the launch of our very own Etsy-centric list service: Etsy Email! We’ve got all the latest news, tips, finds, and team info rolled into one place and delivered safely to your email inbox, if you so choose! You can up sign up through the icon on the homepage or through this link.

This ain’t spam, y’all. This is strictly opt-in, coming from us Etsy admin personally to you, shoppers and sellers! We won’t be sharing, selling or otherwise disrespecting your private info. You won’t even know who else has subscribed. You’ll be able to opt-out at any time, if you so choose.

Look for the icon on the homepage of Etsy, right above the BuyHandmade.org Pledge!

There are actually 4 separate email lists:
1. “Etsy News emails”
2. “Etsy Finds emails”
3. “Etsy Success emails”
4. “Etsy Teams emails”

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