07-15-2012 05:29 PM
I am new to ebay and in my listing
have requested to be contacted
for international shipping costs.
I received an international bid but
no email requesting shipping costs.
Do I contact them and give them
a shipping quote or do I wait until
auction close and if they win,
then contact them with the
shipping quote? What is the
proper procedure in this situation?
Thanks
07-15-2012 06:17 PM
If you are willing to ship to that person's country, definitely send a shipping quote before the end of the auction. If you wait and the person wins, she might not be prepared for the high cost of Canada Post's shipping. Is that for the pattern? On an item like that, to send it lettermail would not be terribly expensive, but still, -- there is no shortage of buyers willing to leave a seller a 1 in DSR because they think Canada Post charges too much.
If you do not ship to certain countries but you receive bids anyway, a seller is allowed to remove a person's bid for pretty much any reason. Read here about cancelling bids:
http://pages.ebay.ca/help/sell/manage_bidders_ov.html#canceling
And whilst you're at it, be sure to set yourself up to block bids from members outside the regions to which you will ship. Do that here (it's all part of the same page):
http://pages.ebay.ca/help/sell/manage_bidders_ov.html#set
Oh, and you knew about the 21-day hold on payments to new sellers, right?
07-15-2012 07:38 PM
Pattern buyers do tend to be pretty good about reading descriptions and terms of sale. I would send the bidder the shipping cost - probably no more than $7.40 LetterPost, but it still could be a surprise.
This group of customers are rarely a problem, so Letter is fine. If you are nervous add a few pennies to handling (which covers the cost of envelopes, stiffeners and tape) as a form of self-insurance. But you will probably never need it.
It would be a good idea to weigh and measure all your items before listing to prevent just this problem.
07-16-2012 07:54 AM