Unlike many of you I’m continually having to source new product and use MS Excel to calculate the possibilities. Tonight I finally added a formula to project eBay/PayPal fee costs and thought that I’d share it here. This is for sales over $25 and under $1K each in value. In this case the starting bid and final value (Q17) are the same ($60).
Written in prose my average listing fees are ((Insertion + Gallery +.Buy It Now)*2.5) + Final Value + PayPal or…
=((2.4+0.25+0.05)*2.5)+((Q17-25)*2.74)/100 +(((Q17*2.9)/100)+0.55)
((2.4+.25+.05)*2.5) = (Insertion + Gallery + Buy It Now) x 40% Sell through Rate
((Q17-25)*2.74)/100 = Final Value
(((Q17*2.9)/100)+.55) = PayPal
Ebay, like me, on average, has a 40% sell through rate so that explains the 2.5 multiplier of Insertion, Gallery, and Buy It Now fees. In theory one relisting is free if the item sells on the second attempt but there’s no way that I can think of to nail this down more accurately. If it fails to sell on the second attempt then, I believe, these fees are paid a third time returning the average to around 2.5.
The insertion fee at the front must be entered manually, in accordance with the indexed scale, for each entry. Otherwise this formula can be copied from cell to cell for item listings (>$25 <$1000)
Turbo Lister’s Fee Calculator usually estimates about $2.00 for an average insertion fee giving, perhaps, the impression that listing fees might total something a little greater than this. So far this formula discloses, however, that I’m paying pretty close to 20% of gross revenues to eBay/PayPal. What do you think? Is this a reasonable percentage to be paying for the venue? I know that many salespeople make 20% commission but we’re doing all the sales work here. I wonder what percentage of gross revenues a retailer pays in rent?