
09-12-2018 11:54 PM
09-13-2018 02:22 PM
09-13-2018 09:29 PM
It seems that lately eBay is becoming more absurd and insane and also become more greedy. They already generate over $1Billion and they still want more??!!
09-14-2018 03:39 AM
It is called..... Interfering with business.
09-14-2018 10:55 AM
@Anonymous wrote:... become more greedy. They already generate over $1Billion and they still want more??!!
Probably because they took a loss in 2017 on almost 10 billion in revenue after expenses and taxes.
11-24-2018 10:32 AM
they are forcing sales thru at our expense
they had last week a way to turn off from their end if you called in …. that is now gone
I am new but 4th time I called in this week as I am not going thru all my ads to turn off …. the last couple took 2 to 3 tries to get it to post correctly
I suggest you call in when it happens and tell them to turn off and do not hang around waiting for them to do it
My last email to stated that each time one goes on to best offer and I see it I will just turn the ad OFF until this **bleep** is dealt with
AND if they want to force sales thru they can discount their 10% charge ….. maybe that's what required …. We just discount 10% to the buyers and take it off of EBAY's side … sounds fair to me!
Good luck to all and we need to stand up this **bleep** or next thing we are wasting more time on changing ads and on the phone then actually selling which was the reason I came here
Please remember when you call in that the person you are talking to just works and follow orders …..so it's ok to voice opinion but don't take it out on them
11-24-2018 02:24 PM
This has been discussed and complained about on the dotCOM boards for a couple of months.
First-- you are not required to accept an offer. Or even respond to it.
Second-- don't use the Simplified Sell Your Item form. Look in the upper right corner of the form and choose the Advanced form. This allows you to choose whether or not to accept Offers.
However, eBay no longer discourages buyers from making offers on listings that do not specifically ask for Best Offers.
So back to the polite refusal backed with the Blocked Bidder List if necessary for the persistent.
11-24-2018 02:35 PM
@frontline66 wrote:they are forcing sales thru at our expense
You are NOT being "forced" by eBay to accept an offer made for an item.
Just IGNORE the offers and they go away after 48 hours.
It is however, a bad policy by eBay to add best offer to a listing without the seller agreeing.
-..-
11-25-2018 04:41 PM
I understand what you are saying and ebay said the same thing …..its that fact that im not going to micro manage and have better things to do then send replies back to people why their offer was refused …. So if Ebay wants to waste my time I can easily do the same thing back or just move bc this is just 100% wrong and if you let them get away with it what will their next move going to be ???
11-25-2018 05:33 PM
11-25-2018 08:48 PM
The problem is I value my ebay members and if someone takes the time to view my items and there is a the option for them to submit an offer then I should have the commitment to reply back …. as they have no idea if its spam from ebay or im actual entertaining offers
Its just bad for business to ignore someone's time and effort to submit an offer bc people in most cases have googled and researched to put the offer in only to be a spam by ebay
11-26-2018 05:50 AM
11-26-2018 07:37 AM
11-26-2018 08:38 AM - edited 11-26-2018 08:42 AM
I think the wording is fine, but what does it accomplish being in every listing? (I've adopted the "minimize my descriptions size over time)
Someone who is thinking of giving a best offer will still do so.
Someone who isn't thinking of giving a best offer read something of no use to them.
Personally, I would write a form letter to include in my "message" in my responses to the best offers I did receive, if I got a lot of offers. Maybe something like:
"Thank you for your best offer. eBay is automatically adding "Best Offer" to seller listings to increase sales for select items. Unfortunately I am not able to accept your offer at this time." (I didn't spend a lot of time wordsmithing this)
I have noticed no change at all in the number of best offers I've been receiving. I get very few, perhaps I am just lucky.
11-26-2018 10:29 AM
11-27-2018 09:37 PM
@momcqueen wrote:
That’s probably a better tactic. Item Descriptions are read by only the rarest of shoppers anyway. Copy and paste from the canned decline text.
My friends you're missing the point I believe …. it's like if you seen an item on sale, you go to the store to purchase only to find out it's a misprint …. How does that make anyone feel like buying anything else in the store while you're there …. I'm guessing you leave upset and might not go back if it keeps happing ? I know that's what I would do if they had only used it as a marketing scam. Just my 2 cents.
11-27-2018 09:40 PM
Proceed with this however you like. Just because we are all veteran sellers, it doesn't mean you cannot choose to ignore our advice. Good luck!
11-27-2018 11:31 PM
11-28-2018 12:43 AM
11-28-2018 04:03 PM - edited 11-28-2018 04:04 PM
An interesting and timely thing, I just moments ago got an offer from a fellow that wants to combine 4 lots together and get a bit of a discount on them all.
I've gotten this kind of note all along but I noticed after responding to this that this fellow used the new make an offer process (none of the lots he's speaking to have best offer applied by me).
So I'm not unhappy with it at all, it will likely generate a decent sale that I may not have had otherwise.