
06-06-2018 12:14 AM
When you list something brand new, ebay recommends what you should sell it at. Where did they get that number from? When I list something I compare it with what is listed and put it near the middle on the lower side on .com and on .ca it is the lowest. They want me to sell it for $4.70, give me a break.
Suggested $4.70
.com
.ca the cheapest
on .com middle
on .ca cheapest
06-06-2018 12:45 AM
06-06-2018 12:50 AM
That may be a built in feature/side affect from using the new eBay catalog. Pitting 1 seller against the others. Price suggestions made by bots. But similar to what I was saying before. They all become a mish mash of identical looking listings with a buyer basing their decision entirely on item price and shipping.
-CM
06-06-2018 03:46 AM
Don'y you just love it when they say your chance of a sale is 100% less than a competitor, when you're the same price, or the only one selling that item. Race to the bottom for sure, with ebay in the saddle, I just wish they would take off the stirrups while they ride us into the ground,lol.
For many used items, condition plays a huge part in it's value.
06-06-2018 04:16 AM
The price recommendation features seem to be coded abysmally. Same goes for the ridiculous relisting price suggestions that get emailed when you end a listing. I expect the catalog items will get fine tuned because it *really* should be hard to screw up a lookup to a sales history table for a rolling average/last sale price. I find it hilarious they are generating pricing suggestions for non-catalog items that they have no way to actually generate any history for using anything other than the most inaccurate fuzzy text matches since there are no MPN/UPCs to tie back to the product. Time to relist XYZ widget! Relisting the item for $2 less could make the difference!
In any case the point of the exercise isn't really accuracy but rather to keep reinforcing downward price pressure on the seller. If they weren't busy bragging about testing hundreds of new features daily maybe they could roll out 1 that actually works, but probably not.
06-06-2018 05:04 AM
I love the suggestions about how to improve my listings that then tell me they can't show me any comparable items.
Mostly this is my sewing patterns, which are mass produced, but vintage-ish.
When I Search the maker and pattern number, I do find comps- most of which are used to my new, have added shipping to my 'free' shipping, or are not available worldwide.
Removing those, I find my pricing to be about the norm.
Sheesh.
06-06-2018 08:17 AM
eBay on eBay.com has been adding the Best Offer option to some listings. Sellers are very unhappy with this level of interference.....
Seller removes the Best Offer Options and it is back.
The following is stated on each listing.........Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.
06-06-2018 01:30 PM
While there are some sellers of marginal mental stability here, I suspect most fall into two categories>
This is a forbidden practice and is a huge bugaboo of mine .
http://pages.ebay.ca/help/policies/listing-no-item.html
Listings that are out of stock but left active, often with a drastically increased price to prevent purchases. (See the out-of-stock option for Good 'Til Cancelled listings.)
06-06-2018 01:43 PM
The other variation is a seller with an item that is out of stock instead of increasing their price just changes the shipping to an unrealistically high amount. Has same affect. No purchases. Item stays in play. Not sure if it bypasses the raising the actual price situation. Interesting cheat when they get away with it and not a lot anyone can do to stop this practice.
-CM
06-06-2018 05:06 PM
Besides being "eBay illegal" it's just stupid.
The seller isn't going to get a sale.
He is turning off potential customers.
And all he gets out of it, at best, is keeping his watchers and views public, although those are the visitors who did not buy his product when he did have it.
I gotta go mail my parcels. The exercise will cool me off about this.
It really really bugs me.