February "Ask a Seller"

tyler@ebay
Community Member

Hi everyone - 

 

I'm glad that folks found this segment helpful. I'm still working on formatting for a similar 'Ask a Buyer' piece, so stay tuned there. 

 

This month's question is as follows:

 

How do you package tricky objects? Baseball caps, dishes, etc?

 

Looking forward to your expertise!

Tyler

 

PS: If you have a question you'd like to see featured as an 'Ask a Seller' please feel free to send me a private message!

Tyler,
eBay
Message 1 of 14
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February "Ask a Seller"

Packing well is one of my biggest concerns selling on eBay.  I am a big fan of using recycled packing materials. I save all bubble wrap, tissue paper, styrofoam peanuts, packing paper & all sizes of boxes.  I am known for overwrapping. Not one of my items has ever been damaged in transit.  One customer joked that my packaging was bullet proof.  I have wrapped all size items like jewelry, china dishes & glassware, electronics & computers.  They always need to be packed nice & secure & tight with no movement in the box. My biggest beef is with sellers who don't pack well & you receive the items damaged. I wish eBay would have one of the feedback questions we leave for scoring sellers dealing with packaging. 

Message 2 of 14
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February "Ask a Seller"

Surprised that no one else has commented on packaging items for sale. To me it is a big deal both as a buyer & seller.  Just going through a problem with a seller now who didn't pack a huge lot of jewelry properly.  Thankfully I am good at repairing jewelry.  But it didn't need to happen in the first place. And it shouldn't matter how cheap or expensive items are.  Just good common sense & realizing the post office doesn't handle items with care.

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February "Ask a Seller"

I for one, would never sell an item, that i can't guarantee to arrive safely.. so pottery, tea cups, and the like would, never be in my listings.   with that being said, smaller breakables, such as salt and pepper shakers , tea figurines can be safely shipped..  even if you over package there is still going to be the buyer that says it was damaged in transport.. whether it was or not.?? all they have to do is show a photo of a broken item, and they get 100% refund.. even if it wasn;t ..

 

Re.. someone has a broken item, and they buy another, show the photo of the broken one, and they win their case.

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February "Ask a Seller"

I was a buyer-only for six years on eBay before attempting to sell here. Every tool in my seller’s chest to start came at the price of a bad experience as a buyer. I learned what NOT to do for those six years and, really, a majority of the things that upset me as a buyer were things that centered on either grossly overcharged postage or exceptionally poor packaging. And I wasn’t buying delicate bone china; there was no excuse for it.

I don’t sell a lot of ‘tricky’ things but I do make sure to use only appropriately-sized, structurally-sound cardboard boxes in pristine condition and void fill like it’s going out of style. Bubblewrap and air pillows are my best friends. I quickly determined that crumbled paper was next-to useless and merely added extra weight. I’m not a fan of plastic except in shipping; I want my items protected from moisture on their journey too. If the item is special, I line the box with 1/2-inch bubblewrap and then line the item with 3/8- inch bubblewrap and then use air pillows to keep everything from sliding or flopping around.
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February "Ask a Seller"

To be taken into consideration before listing/mailing non-insurable contents as per Canadapost and would you be covered for a claim?

 

https://www.canadapost.ca/tools/pg/7_Paying_Terms/Terms_Without-e.pdf#page=7

 

-Lotz

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February "Ask a Seller"

  • My best discovery was poly envelopes.

Waterproof, nearly impossible to damage in transit. (Scissors help in opening them,)

  • Second discovery was that bubble envelopes bend and are not as good at protecting as a poly envelope with a stiffener.
  • Cardboard is heavy. Weigh your item after packaging, not before.
  • If you can find corplast (plastic cardboard) at a low price, grab it. Unfortunately, elections are now much greener about reusing their lawn signs and there is no more post-election harvest of abandoned signs.

 

I'm packaging small light items, but when I sell a single stamp for $120 US, I want it to arrive the way I sent it.

 

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February "Ask a Seller"

When using bubble or poly envelopes always place cardboard in the envelope with the item. The postal machines like the envelopes to be stiffened, they don’t like soft envelopes, they can get caught in the machines.

 

 

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February "Ask a Seller"


@msmaggie060 wrote:

When using bubble or poly envelopes always place cardboard in the envelope with the item. The postal machines like the envelopes to be stiffened, they don’t like soft envelopes, they can get caught in the machines.


I use kraft paper bubble envelopes, the outside paper layer provides stiffness that a pure plastic bubble envelope does not have.

-..-

Message 9 of 14
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February "Ask a Seller"

Not good enough!

If the machine doesn't bend it, the carrier will.

If it can be damaged by bending you needKRAFT PAPERKRAFT PAPER

 

POLYPOLY

The bigger the envelope the more likely the carrier is to use it as the wrapper for all your other mail.

Message 10 of 14
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February "Ask a Seller"

"If it can be damaged by bending you need" should end " a stiffener which cannot easily be bent."
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February "Ask a Seller"

In my "world", damage is not usually so much an issue as appearance (I sell quite a number of antique, vintage, and reproduction fashions).  By that I mean the customer should find the packaging and presentation appealing and attractive, i.e. a sign that I care about their purchase and appreciate their patronage.   They will also see that the item has been well protected from damage in transit by a sturdy box and sufficient filling (such as airbags, bunched-up tissue paper, etc.).  

 

Every major item I sell is packed as if it were coming from the House of Dior itself.  I kid you not -- I saw how Dior prepares, wraps, and parcels their precious wares on a video taken by the ROM for a Dior dress sent as an addition to their collection.  What I discovered is that Dior uses virtually the same methods I do: a brand new, appropriately sized box, lots of crumpled tissue paper to fill out the garment and help prevent creasing; a plastic bag liner to guard against possible moisture damage, more tissue to wrap and roll the item rather than actually folding it (a trick I picked up long ago from a stewardess friend), usually a pretty satin ribbon tied around the rolled-up and tissue-wrapped garment, airbags on top to prevent shifting around, and a tissue-paper liner folded over in the centre with my logo on a fancy sticker -- the first thing the buyer will see upon opening the box.   

 

The customer opens the parcel to find not a rumpled-up piece of clothing stuffed "naked" into the smallest possible leftover grocery-store box (something I've encountered with dismay as a buyer), but an item that might have been packed and sent by the finest clothing shop, in a purpose-made box (my favourites are Canada Post's lovely white "large" and "extra-large" size boxes).  Yes, they're more expensive than leftover, re-used brown boxes, and more expensive to ship due to their size, but my customers keep coming back, which I hope is partly due to my care in presentation.  

 

You'd be surprised how many of my buyers make a point of telling me how much they appreciate the packaging.  I figure for the extra few minutes of my time and few dollars, it's worth it for a $300 to $500 item that is unique, and therefore both irreplaceable and useless if damaged.  Insurance is fine, but a damaged item due to sloppy or lazy packing won't encourage a buyer to return.  

Message 12 of 14
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February "Ask a Seller"

I created my own name years ago for first glance disappointment: "box shock"

 

I sell a lot of treasure hunt style boxes, or groups of stamps.

 

I noticed early on that despite how good in general the contents of the mixed up boxes were, if bychance the stuff on the very top was cheap, poor, shabby, damaged, the "box shock" of the first impression from the first glance tended toward more complaints, INADs etc.

 

Since then I try to make sure there is at least some interesting stuff on the very top so that upon opening the box/package at first glance they are seeing something interesting, better in their purchase.

 

Message 13 of 14
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February "Ask a Seller"

Yes, I have no doubt that good presentation is important in many areas of selling.  The old adage about getting one chance to make a first impression is true. 

 

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