Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Ebay Buying The Unimagineable
SALES FROM THE CRYPT In today's contemporary society, where everything can be done already over the Net, online shopping is one lucrative activity for the seller and convenience for the buyer. This is where eBay comes in the limelight....

How Professional Ebay Auction Templates Can Boost Your Ebay Sales
Do you like to sell on eBay? It's easy and fun, isn't it? In fact, it's one of the easiest online business you can start almost overnight, without any major investments. That's the best thing about it. But do you also know that only the minority of...

Scam, Fraud and Phishing – How To Avoid The eBay Plagues
If you surf around a little on the internet, you can't avoid hearing of the countless people, that have been scammed at eBay. It seems as if scam, fraud and phishing mails have become the plagues of eBay nowadays. It's easy to complain...

The Ebay "Powerseller" secrets to save you from the 3 P's
"The Ebay "Powerseller" secrets to save you from the 3 P's" 1100 words. Formatted to 60 characters. You may publish this article free of charge in your ezine, web site, ebook or print publication so long as the copyright notice and the resource...

Top Ten Buyer Searches For Fine Jewelry on eBay!
Are you looking for "Hot Items" to sell on your eBay Auction? Are you having trouble deciding on a category? Being an active eBayer, I am often asked about what products to sell. As explained in my book "eBay Marketing Wholesale SourcePak" finding...

 
Angry Seller Unfairly Denounces eBay



Recently, an angry eBay seller furiously denounced eBay for cheating him out of listing fee credits.



eBay's stated policy is: "If your listing ends without a winning buyer or results in an Unpaid Item (UPI), you may qualify for a credit by relisting the item. If the item sells the second time, eBay will refund the Insertion Fee for the relisting."



Unfortunately for the seller, this notice was all that he knew of eBay's re-listing policy. He should have taken the time to read more thoroughly and he would have discovered that eBay's has limitations on this policy. In fact, he had broken not just one, but two of eBay's rules.



1. eBay automatically credits the second listing fee - but only if the seller uses eBay's official Relist feature. Sellers have the choice to use the "Unsold - Relist" links. If they simply recopy the auction and list it again eBay will not know that it's a re-listing and won't credit the money. That is exactly what our irate seller did.



When he demanded that eBay compare his two items and see for themselves that they were the same, in spite of the fact that he didn't use their form, they rightly refused to do so. At any one moment, eBay has tens of millions of items for sale and expecting them to spend enormous amounts of time fulfilling requests for special treatment are not reasonable. eBay is a business with obligations to its stockholders and this use of employee time is not cost efficient.



2. Both his original and relisted auctions were of multiple items, known as a Dutch auction. eBay rules clearly state that refunds of relisting fees only apply to single item auctions, not multiple ones.



There are other restrictions on this policy:



3. Relisting credits are only available in these formats:



* Auctions

* Buy It Now



Store owners cannot take advantage of this feature.



4. The starting price on the second listing must not exceed the original one. That is, if your opening price on Auction #1 was $20, the price on Auction #2 cannot be $25.



5. eBay offers sellers the option of adding a "Reserve" to their auctions. This is a set price, declared by the seller. If the bidding doesn't reach this price, the seller has no obligation to follow through on the sale. If the reserve is $50 and the bidding only reaches $48.65, no sale occurs.



* If Auction #1 didn't have a reserve, then Auction #2 cannot have one, either.

* In the event of a reserve, the amount on Auction #2 must not exceed the reserve on Auction #1. If the reserve on Auction #1 was $75, the reserve on Auction #2 cannot be $90.



6. Your merchandise must be relisted within 90 days of the closing date of the first auction.



There is a special circumstance with relisting fees and that is the problem of the unpaid buyer. Sometimes, for reasons that are hard to fathom, there are buyers who bid - sometimes aggressively bid - on auctions, or choose the Buy It Now option, but then never pay for the merchandise they've won.



Naturally, this is a hardship on the seller since they've paid not only to list the item originally, but have paid eBay's Final Value Fees which are triggered in the event that an auction or Buy It Now is successful. Thus, they're out two fees, instead of only one!



In this case, there are several steps to go through, which involve contact between the seller and buyer, and eBay and the buyer. But ultimately, eBay cannot force anyone to pay for merchandise, so the best they can do is refund both fees to the original seller.



And what if you relist your merchandise and it doesn't sell the second time around? Unfortunately, you're out two listing fees, rather than one. That was certainly the case with the furious seller who didn't take the time to educate himself on eBay's rules. The irony is that his losses were under $1. Hopefully, this will be a wake-up call to take more care in his business. After all, if we're going to successfully play the auction game, we must know the rules.



eBay seller tools are useless is you don't know what to do with them. Let Sydney Johnston teach you what to sell on eBay.



About the author:

Starting an eBay business is easier with mentoring from an eBay expert. Learn from our offers an 11 Day Course that teaches how to sell on ebay: http://auction-genius-course.com/11days.shtml

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.