I have been watching a World of Good another eBay owned company evolve. Within the last year they have increased in popularity and items they carry.
I am in awe! The items you find here are hand made by true artisans. You can see bits of the personality, culture and pride taken to create each piece.
The beauty of traveling is to bring back with you a piece of the culture. World of Good has taken this and expanded on it. They have enabled consumers to connect with artisans around the world. These artisans are now able to make money using today’s technology. Providing them a new stream of income outside tourism.
You can adorn your home with these gorgeous items, sell them in your store or online. Even though, eBay owns it and has the media support that comes with eBay, not everyone knows of this company.
The possibilities are endless. Here is an example of some of the items you will find:

Here is their story:
“Two strangers were on parallel paths, working to connect marginalized artisans in developing countries with shoppers in America. This is the story of how their paths crossed to create WorldofGood.com.
Not long ago, in a country far, far away….
It’s the Summer of 2003, Robert Chatwani and Priya Haji, two San Francisco Bay Area-based thirty-somethings, perfect strangers at the time, and future proud founders of WorldofGood.com, are walking similar paths at two different open-air markets—just miles away from one another in Western India.
Each is striking up conversations with the local artisans, and each is hearing the same story over and over: We need more shoppers like you; greater access to markets. We would be able to create so much more opportunity for ourselves, our families, our communities, if we just had more people buying.
And the entrepreneurial wheels in both of their heads began to turn.
They both knew there had to be a way to link these talented artisans—and thousands more like them—with the millions of shoppers back home that buy $55 billion worth of mass-produced, factory- and sweatshop-made stuff every year. Didn’t there?
Aaaaand…action!
Back home, our two wily do-gooders began to craft their plans of attack.
Robert, a young rising executive at eBay, took his idea straight to the top of the food chain, securing the support of founder Pierre Omidyar, then-CEO Meg Whitman, and other key players in the company’s innovative, forward-thinking leadership team.
Priya, a seasoned entrepreneur with two social enterprises under her belt, convinced a couple of her newly minted MBA buddies to quit their jobs to start their own company, a fair trade wholesale business they called World of Good, Inc.
It wasn’t until two years later that Robert and Priya would realize they needed each other to complete the task at hand.
Full circle
Fast forward to Fall 2005. An introduction from a mutual friend, one serendipitous (and very, very long) phone call later, and the idea for the WorldofGood.com marketplace was born.
It was a no-brainer, and a perfect match.
Robert had, in eBay, a platform where $60 billion worth of stuff is sold every year—more and more of which was being spent on “good” products by an increasingly engaged buyer base. Distribution and global marketing reach? Check!
Priya had, in two years at the helm of World of Good, Inc., built the relationships and knowledge to authentically understand and navigate the inner workings of the global fair trade market. Supply chain know-how and industry credibility? Check!
It was only a matter of time before they had recruited a mighty team of do-gooders, and rallied hundreds of like-minded organizations together—all for the first time—around one simple, but pretty groundbreaking idea: one online destination where people could go to shop for products that make a positive impact on the world.
Now, five years later, those same artisans from those same open air markets in Western India—as well as thousands like them from all over the world—can sell their wares to millions of shoppers browsing the WorldofGood.com website.
One idea, two crafty minds, and a windfall of support from kindred spirits all over the world—and we are well on our way to figuring out how to reach the Big Lofty Goal: a steady job, healthy happy families, and a positive, promising future for millions.”

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Hey there! Thanks for the tip – they (World of Good) have great stuff. I’ll certainly go there for a gift, or to treat myself.
BTW, Happy New Year!!!
@ Cassy – Hi! Thanks for stopping by! BTW – loving the book, its such an easy read. – Happy New Year !
Hi,
Very nice and quality post! Thanks for sharing this with us!
Happy New Year!
What a cool idea! I’ll have to check it out.
@ Bash Bosh – Thank you for stopping by. Best for the New Year to you too
@ Rae Ann – That would be great. I would love to know how it works for you.
I like shopping at ETSY but will take a peek at World of Good. Never heard of the site until reading this post. Thanks for the info!!
online jobs are easy to get by but a high paying online job is difficult to get”:~
there are so many online jobs that you could apply for, some pay well and some does not;;’
online jobs are many but most of them does not pay well enough so choose an online job well ;,~
very nice website!!!
I really like your article about earning money online . i would love to read about earning money through surveys and stuff and through sites like earnon9india.com . please do write about these .
Thanks