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eBay Sellers' Club

I met an eBay watch seller at a trade show and knew he belonged on camera. That instinct drove 47% sales lift, 30% GMV growth among female watch buyers, and organic press across the watch world with zero pitch budget.

MY ROLE

NA Social Luxury Lead — Strategy, Concept, Casting, Execution

PARTNERS

The Many

PLATFORM

@ebaywatches — Instagram, Twitter, Organic and Paid Social
Sellers social handles

OUTCOME

Blueprint for national "Meet the Authenticator" campaign, later expanded to global markets including Australia and the UK

47%

Higher brand lift than North America benchmark

4.8% lift vs. 1.1% benchmark

38%

Total campaign impressions across paid social

30%

Total thru plays at $0.04 cost per thru play

62%

Agency or production budget — produced internally

THE PROBLEM

Some insights come from data. This one walked up at a trade show.

I was at the Las Vegas Jewelry and Watch Show when I met an eBay watch seller who knew more about what he sold than most brand marketers know about their entire category. His expertise was real, his passion was obvious, and his inventory stories were genuinely compelling. I kept thinking: this person deserves to be on camera.

The insight driving the concept was one I kept seeing in the watch community: buyers don't just buy the watch, they buy the seller. Collectors research who they're buying from. They trust expertise over advertising. They belong to clubs, forums, and communities where peer credibility determines where money moves. eBay had access to some of the most knowledgeable watch sellers in the country. Nobody was telling their stories.

"Buy the seller." Watch clubs are an integral piece of watch culture and the consumer journey.

Strategy brief, eBay Sellers Club

THE PARTNER

Real sellers. Real inventory. Real expertise.

I conceived and pitched a 3-episode episodic series spotlighting real eBay luxury watch sellers: their collections, their knowledge, and their authentic passion for the hobby. Each episode cast a seller with a distinct point of view.

Episode 1 featured three male sellers including an engineer, a poet, and a Cartier aficionado. Episode 2 brought a female-forward lens to the show, casting Misha Daud (Watch Fashionista), Caroline Joffe (WatchBox), and Viktoriia Kholevchuk (ChronoStore), tapping into a signal I had identified through community observation: female collectors were an underrepresented and underserved segment of watch culture. Episode 3 continued expanding the seller universe across categories.

The series was produced with creative agency The Many. I led strategy, casting, and multi-channel amplification across organic social, paid social (Instagram and Twitter) and worked with my internal eBay team on PR (Sammy Zola), paid (B Kumar) and community management (Sami Huda, Nancy Phatsphaphone).

THE EXECUTION

Content that moved inventory.

The view-through rate for Episode 1 on Twitter was 62%, against a benchmark of 50.42%. The content didn't just perform in paid — it earned its own audience organically, with sellers sharing the episode across their own networks and watch enthusiast publications covering the series without being pitched.

It also became a seller acquisition tool.

After Episode 1 launched, category managers started fielding requests from other eBay sellers asking to be featured. The Sellers Club had turned into a marketing asset for eBay's seller community, not just its buyer audience. That wasn't planned. That's what happens when you build something the community actually values.

THE RESULTS

The watch world showed up on its own.

The series earned coverage across the watch media ecosystem without requiring a paid placement strategy. Publications that cover watches seriously, WatchPro USA and UK, Revolution Watch, and Little Black Book, covered the series across all three episodes.


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