
02-27-2018 03:16 PM
Did you have any sales that way? How much did you save in fees or is it about the same?
by the way for anyone that doesn't know. COD is Cash on Delivery.
Solved! Go to Solution.
02-28-2018 01:49 PM
Buyers hate paying for shipping.
Adding COD at an additional cost of $8 would be a sales killer.
You should however consider FREE SHIPPING
Free Shipping just means adding your shipping costs into your asking price.
Which is cheapest:
A $10 item with $5 Shipping?
A $15 item with Free Shipping?
This only works well when the cost of shipping is Flat across the shipping area.
I can use LetterPost for most of my items, since they are less than 500gr and less than 2cm thick.
I can send a 99gr item anywhere in Canada for $1.80 and anywhere in the USA for $2.95. Which takes care of my two largest markets.
These prices are for an untracked and untrackable service. What do you plan to sell? What is the price range on your items?
02-27-2018 03:42 PM
Don't even think about COD!
Beyond not being a "legal" payment method on eBay it's simply asking for trouble in a million ways.
02-27-2018 04:39 PM
Cash on Delivery ...yes That's the beauty of selling on Kijiji, Facebook, or for eBay local pickup items, etc!
Occasionally back in the early days of eBay sending cash in the mail was mildly acceptable for eBay transactions....but I would never even consider it as acceptable for eBay transactions these days....
02-27-2018 05:15 PM - edited 02-27-2018 05:17 PM
02-27-2018 08:43 PM
02-27-2018 08:49 PM
02-27-2018 10:33 PM
02-27-2018 10:35 PM - edited 02-27-2018 10:38 PM
02-28-2018 02:37 AM
02-28-2018 03:55 AM
Yes it is more expensive but more important is that you would be sending your item out before you were paid.
02-28-2018 04:20 AM - edited 02-28-2018 04:20 AM
Canada Post charges $7.25 for COD (Collect on Delivery) plus cost of shipping.
https://www.canadapost.ca/web/en/kb/details.page?article=how_to_send_and_rece
02-28-2018 01:49 PM
Buyers hate paying for shipping.
Adding COD at an additional cost of $8 would be a sales killer.
You should however consider FREE SHIPPING
Free Shipping just means adding your shipping costs into your asking price.
Which is cheapest:
A $10 item with $5 Shipping?
A $15 item with Free Shipping?
This only works well when the cost of shipping is Flat across the shipping area.
I can use LetterPost for most of my items, since they are less than 500gr and less than 2cm thick.
I can send a 99gr item anywhere in Canada for $1.80 and anywhere in the USA for $2.95. Which takes care of my two largest markets.
These prices are for an untracked and untrackable service. What do you plan to sell? What is the price range on your items?
03-01-2018 01:40 PM
03-01-2018 01:51 PM
https://www.canadapost.ca/cpotools/apps/far/business/findARate?execution=e1s3
Play with this.
Use METRIC . Canada Post went metric in 1974 and anything else will be guesswork.
Canada Post is so cheap compared to couriers that the couriers sub-contract rural and isolated deliveries to Canada Post.
Signature Confirmation costs $1.50. Use it when you feel that the customer is hinky or if the item would really hurt you to lose.
Signature Confirmation is REQUIRED for items over $750 including postage.
Protip: Don't sell anything that will cost more than the number of feedback you have received. (Don't offer anything valued at $100 until your FB is over 100).
Have you ever purchased anything on eBay? Start with shipping supplies like polyenvelopes. I use e_mailers.ca who leave immediate feedback and supply good products at a reasonable price.
If you are willing to tell us what you plan to sell, you will get some focussed advice. I sell postage, postage stamps, sewing pattern, postcards, and vintage paperbacks. I know nothing about electronics.
03-01-2018 04:11 PM - edited 03-01-2018 04:17 PM
It is very important to do your research before pursuing listing on eBay or any selling venue. It's not as simple as listing and then trying to sort out what you are going to do if the item sells. Read up on everything shipping...the options for shipping whether it be a bonafide courier, Canada Post,etc. Know what you are doing and how you are doing it before you list. Keep in mind Fedex and UPS charge brokerage fees to the recipient for any cross-border shipments. Check out type of packaging, packaging materials, packing materials,etc. that will be needed to get that item shipped out and for it to arrive without damage. Do a preliminary packaging by packaging an item you intend to list, pack it, measure and weigh, estimate additional weight for that final taping up and use that information on whatever shipping method you plan to use to get shipping costs estimates- which is easy to do on Canada Post website.
A tape measure and a postal scale are an online sellers best friends.
Generally speaking large,bulky, heavy weight items are not economically feasible for shipping costs will be huge.
03-02-2018 02:28 AM
03-02-2018 11:47 AM
Don't even consider COD for eBay shipping. Really, forget the idea completely. It's so unworkable for eBay sales in so many ways that it would take me several paragraphs to explain. All the eBay-related problems aside, many people aren't even familiar with the concept anymore. Just don't do it. For the most part, buyers on eBay are used to having to pay up front (through Paypal mostly), so you're not creating any advantage for yourself even if the idea of COD weren't fraught with problems for eBay selling.
@vintagetonow2134wrote:Did you have any sales that way? How much did you save in fees or is it about the same?
Take the advice offered above and thoroughly investigate Canada Post's regular services. What you actually choose will depend on the size, weight, and value of the items you're selling. Get a small, $20 weigh scale from your local Wal-Mart so you can weigh your items accurately. If they're higher value (say, over about $75) you may be able to afford to use a tracked air service. And don't use any international surface (i.e. not air) services -- this will only get you late delivery defects as a seller.
03-04-2018 12:21 AM
03-04-2018 12:35 AM
03-04-2018 12:41 AM