
04-26-2014 06:59 AM
does any one know wht sellers are allowed to mark an item as being shipped when they have only created a shipping label?
04-26-2014 09:04 AM - edited 04-26-2014 09:05 AM
How would you know the seller has only printed a shipping label??! That's a strange comment. When an item is shipped the yellow ship sign is shown in your Purchase History....but I hear some sellers forget to do this. I haven't had that experience and also I get a msge from ebay and paypal confirming it's shipped.
04-26-2014 10:24 AM
What is your real problem?
The seller marked something as shipped but it has not yet arrived?
It takes about 10-15 days for arrival from Europe.
It takes about 15-20 days for arrival from North America.
It takes about 30 days for arrival from Asia.
If more time than that has passed , first ask the seller for the date of shipping and the service used. Do not allow the seller to 'ship a replacement'. This is a common scam with Asian sellers. It won't arrive either.
If you don't have a satisfactory answer, go here:
http://resolutioncentre.ebay.ca/
and file an Item Not Recieved dispute.
04-26-2014 12:33 PM
As soon as a shipping label is printed through ebay or paypal the item is automatically marked as being shipped. The seller has no control over that.
04-28-2014 09:53 AM
Hmm, interesting, I learn something new on here all the time!
05-03-2014 05:25 PM - edited 05-03-2014 05:26 PM
They do this probably for a bit of nice automation for the seller. In my experience it's not caused any trouble at all. You've paid for the shipping label, there's no reason NOT to use it on a parcel and ship it out immediately, within the stated time frame for shipping or ASAP. That's what I do and it appears my sellers are doing the same.
05-04-2014 01:42 PM
when the seller makes an electronic shipping label they mark it as shipped when in reality it hasn't even been shipped I think this is wrong and misleading
05-04-2014 01:45 PM
it should not be marked as being shipped when the seller has only made an electronic shipping label and has not realy shipped the item I think this is misleading and wrong it should only be marked as shipped when it has been taken to or picked up by the shipper!
05-04-2014 01:47 PM
a shipping label does not mean item has been shipped this is misleading and should not be allowed on ebay if your going to advertise fast shipping wel do it don't use the system to lie for you
05-04-2014 01:51 PM
when you try to track an item it tell you item has not been received at the shipper but an electronic shipping label has been created sometimes it takes 2 to 3 days before the shipper receives the item this is my problem ebay and paypal allow this misleading information which I think is wrong marking an item as being shipped when it has not
05-05-2014 11:54 AM
This is why I keep telling buyers that tracking does them no good at all.
Tracking benefits the seller, who can use it to prove that a complaining buyer really has recieved his item and should not get a refund.
All it does for the buyer is cause emotional upset and drama.
Give the item time to arrive. If it doesn't arrive by Day 30, ask the seller the date of shipping and the service used. If he doesn't have a satisfactory response, file the Item Not Recieved dispute before Day 42 and get your money refunded.
Meanwhile, get out of the house and enjoy the faint beginnings of spring.
05-06-2014 05:10 PM
Hello 'bigted99',
The problem is not the shipping labels, - the problem is not understanding the procedure.
As PJ tells you, once you place your order and the seller processes it, the seller prints off a mailing label.
"As soon as a shipping label is printed ... the item is automatically marked as being shipped."
"Shipped", here, is not misleading. The item is on its way. If you personally feel there should be
no indication until you are able to see that it is half way to your house, that is your misunderstanding,
not anything misleading about the system.
Think of the sellers who must send out hundreds or even thousands if items per day. Your order
comes in, they wrap it, slap the label on, toss it into a bin to move out with the other orders. It is simply
not possible for that seller to scrutinize each and every order to know when yours will in fact have hit
the mailbox. There may be many people handling it along the way before it leaves the shop.
Ebay has the system set up this way. Even a small vendor who only sells a few items per month can
be assumed to have processed the order once the label is printed. At the very least it tells you the seller
is serious about getting the item to you.
Once you know how to use the shipping-tracking information privided to you, you will find it very useful
indeed.
Sure, it's too bad that all sellers do not have the option to switch that on or off, - so that the major sellers
can have it on, and the small ones can mark your item shipped later in the week when they send that
friendly little note to tell you it's finally in the mailbox.
But that option is not yet available, - most likely because too many sellers, big and small, were not using
it at all and that causes far more problems than the present form.
The existence of a label means the seller fully intends to send it to you.
After all, as 'hocotate' states, when a seller has paid for and printed the label, "there's no reason NOT to use it on a parcel."
From there, you only need to know how to read the information. If your items has not yet been checked into
a postal outlet, the tracking tells you 'electronic shipping info received'.
What that means in English is that the label has been printed. What's the difference if a little brown envelope icon
has or has not been highlighted?
Once the item enters the postal system, the tracking information will show it. This enables you to know if
a seller mails your item in a reasonable length of time, or retains your item for 3 weeks.
Even if a seller keeps the item back for 3 weeks (mistakenly thinking he needs to wait out that 21-day hold)
when the item does finally get into the mail stream, you will know it is on its way. Similarly, if you paid
immediately (not an e-cheque) and the seller hasn't mailed it for over a week, you may feel justified in asking
the seller where it is.
In either case, the availability of this information greatly reduces false 'not received' claims. A buyer who
knows his item has been delayed but is finally on its way will feel greatly relieved and be more willing to
wait for its arrival rather than blindly react with a claim.
Your item will be 'checked in' at various points along the way, and even if it is held up in Customs for a
few days, the tracking info will tell you this. All you have to do is click on the number provided.
It will even tell you if a signature is required, in case you need to have someone available to sign
for the parcel in your absence.
If clicking the number doesn't seem to work, any genuine tracking number will certainly register here
when the item enters the country:
http://www.canadapost.ca/cpotools/apps/track/personal/findByTrackNumber?execution=e1s1
There is nothing misleading about the system. The item is being sent to you, and the best way for ebay
to let you know this is to indicate it once your address label is printed.
A major seller will have slapped it on your package right away. A small seller will fiddle around with
scizzors and glue a bit first.
Like people who lose money because they don't know how to file for refunds, when you know how to interpret
the tracking information you are given you will see that it is extremely handy to have at any stage of the delivery.
What causes 'emotional upset' is not the existence of the tracking sytem, but rather the buyers' not
knowing how to read it.
No system of any kind will be beneficial to its users if they do not understand it. That lack of comprehension
on the part of some users does not equate with a lack of utility of the system for those who do.
Just like filing for refunds, -- know how the thing works so you can get the most out of it.