mesh

Jim Buckmaster: craigslist CEO/comedian

Who knew that Jim Buckmaster, the CEO of the massively popular craigslist classified advertising/community, was such a funny guy? Not yuck-yuck, clown-in-a-little-car funny, but insightful and funny in a very dry and laid-back sort of way. And there’s a lot of Jim to lay back, since he’s very tall — six-foot-seven or so, I believe.

His mesh “keynote conversation” with Mark Evans this morning was not just fascinating and informative — especially about the way that craigslist manages to run a site that gets 9 billion page views a day with just 200 servers (Jim said he heard that Google has about a million) and 24 staff — but also funny.

For example, Jim was asked by someone what was the weirdest thing he’s ever seen on craigslist, and Buckmaster said at first that he couldn’t mention some of them in mixed company, and then said he had found a couple in the “best of” section of the Toronto site of all places — including one in which a woman said “Spadina subway station, I spilled my grandmother on you (because I was carrying an urn with her ashes in it); think we got off to a bad start, would love to have coffee.”

Delivered in his laconic way, it was hilarious. There were many moments like that, and also tons of insight into the laser-like focus that craigslist has on its users — they are effectively in control of the company, Buckmaster said over and over. If they don’t want it or ask for it, it doesn’t happen.

Update:

Tony Hung of Deep Jive Interests has a couple of great live-blogging posts here and here.

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Discussion

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  1. It was the best session. Great job.

    Posted by Ian Ketcheson | May 31, 2007, 8:02 pm
  2. Without hijacking anything, if anyone’s interested they can check out my partial “transcripts” of Mesh over at DJI

    Part 1 is over here
    Part 2 is over here

    Cheers
    Tony.

    Posted by Tony Hung | May 31, 2007, 10:04 pm
  3. Jim was hilarious. I thought that his most thought provoking point was that craigslist could make more money, but it doesn’t need to, so it won’t! He had a great point about businesses who layoff staff are usually doing so to meet a profit objective. I think that other industries/businesses could learn a lot from craigslist and perhaps conclude that enough profit is enough.

    William

    Posted by William | June 1, 2007, 9:10 am

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I'm a technology writer with The Globe and Mail in Toronto, and this is where I blog about things I come across on the Web. Feel free to leave a comment or use the contact form to send me an email.

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