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Will Buyer protection penalize eBay sellers?
May 2nd, 2010 by TJ

Buyer Protection cases penalize eBay sellers even if resolved happily or false in the first place
(The Whine Seller Blog)

eBay sent out a seller update out earlier today and most of it was “Yes, yes. Fine, fine.” Then I got to this part:

New seller standard: Buyer Protection cases counted along with low DSRs. You’re on the right track!

Opening a case with the eBay or PayPal Buyer Protection program is a clear indication of buyer dissatisfaction, especially when the buyer tries and is unable to resolve an issue directly with the seller. That’s why, starting in September, “item not received” and “item not as described” cases will be considered along with low DSRs to evaluate and reward seller performance.

The “You’re on the right track” bit is because I currently meet this requirement.

Um…. I’ve been selling on eBay for many years now and I have had lots of buyers start “Item not received” or “Item not as described cases”. But here’s the thing, eBay. Of all of those, only five were actually buyers whose item didn’t arrive or wasn’t as described or who had a problem at all for that matter.

All the others. Let me repeat, ALL THE OTHERS were buyer who opened the case because, as they told me, “They weren’t sure how else to email the seller to ask a question.”

So if this is going to count toward my freaking DSRs, are you going to make it clearer what the process is for? Better yet, is there going to be a way for buyer and seller to amicably close the case if it was started under newbie confusion?

Read the ENTIRE article here.

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eBay changes… according to recent blogs and their comments…
Feb 7th, 2010 by TJ

After reading recent comments left on other blogs about the ebay fee changes, sadly, I agree… ebay is no longer ebay… but it is beginning to be typical ebay. They continue to try to get rid of hobby & small sellers. They have walked away from their roots. Could be good… could be bad. It’s not the ebay we have all enjoyed dealing with over the past decade or so. eBay isn’t eBay anymore.

We are a low-volume seller on Ebay – and we do NOT like these changes, BUT no other site has the traffic counts and exposure that eBay does. We have learned as others “…you either learn to adjust or you die. You learn to take the changes and adjust your business to them…or you quit and move on. It will never be the same as it was in the “good old days”. Those days are long past.

We do have some repeat buyers, but our customers do not spend all their time on eBay either – who has the time to do that anymore? Even if they go online much more often than ‘twice a year’ they do their search, find the format they like, and then the best deal. It doesn’t always matter if they’ve bought from you before. It is hard to build affinity when buyers are fickle. We are in an economy that requires them to be as frugal as possible. “How many nickels can I spend to list a $3 item that might take forever to sell? The answer looks like 60 to break even, but it’s really not. That $3 item listing is an ad, a portal to my other 4,500 listings, so the actual answer is I can afford to pay that nickel until the end of time as long as everything else is moving.” We have tried penny auctions, anything less than a dollar auctions, and while you end up giving some things away, it does bring lookers into your store and many times higher priced items are purchased. But it is a constant struggle, just like any other business competing for customers. Many sellers, like us, will tell you most of their sales are ‘one-time-only’, with a small portion of repeat buyers.

At a time when we as sellers are watching our pennies just as close or closer that the buyers, eBay has a major change in fees again. “Is that gaming the system? yeah. I guess… so what. They just gamed me out of an extra $40/mth. It’s called “business”.” When eBay does it, it’s just business – it’s not personal.” Well, when we add more to our costs to recoup, we get slammed on our DSRs, and it’s our business and it’s personal. Which brings me to another pet peeve of mine… I don’t think buyers should even get the chance to rate through DSR on shipping charges when shipping charges are spelled out in the auction. If they don’t like the shipping price listed, they have the option of buying from thousands of other sellers. I always spell out shipping charges and get really irked when I get bad feedback on my shipping charges when they bought the item for the lowest price on eBay including the shipping charge! Why doesn’t eBay educate their sellers in that respect, instead of just letting someone rip up the seller? (If most buyers ever had to actually ship an item, they would see what it really does cost) Just my rant for the day.

Some other comments were:

“Add all store stock into core, plus the hundred free 99 cent ‘special’ items gleaned at the finest yard sales and search will be a total debacle. The last search crash was just a dress rehearsal!”

“The more or less expensive question is deceptive since I will pay slightly more – but get core exposure. I pay extra for core exposure now – and everything else goes into store inventory. On 3/30 everything will be in core – which means it’s a value proposition. I pay a little more, but get a lot more for my money. Which is more expensive – $50 with almost everything hidden in stores, or $60 with everything in core?”

“(another) serious move is also coming. The enforcement of DSR percentages. This will allow ebay to suspend you easier based on arbitrary feedback left for you with no chance to appeal it. With no power to leave truthful feedback to buyers we are ALWAYS at risk to being victims of flaky negatives. When you do this for a living, a 30 day suspension can really hurt. Ebay has created monsters out of buyers making them want Fedex service for the price of Media Mail. I am seriously thinking of leaving after 14 years on the treadmill. The stores were just starting to kick in allowing us to once again sell some of the lower priced items that we could not afford to list otherwise. (Often these items pay the rent!) Ebay always takes away the punch bowl just when the party gets lively.”

It will be interesting again, to say the least… and yes, we’ll stay on for now… although we will expand to other sales sites as well.

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Becoming An eBay Top Rated Seller
Oct 28th, 2009 by TJ

John’s take on this rant is 1)bend over; 2)bend over; 3)bend over. LOL Some days it happens. Very few buyers make us feel this way, but there are a few. Apparently John had a particularly RUDE customer. Read about it:

3 Easy Steps To Become An eBay Top Rated Seller

Posted using ShareThis

I certainly understand John’s frustration. Even though we are a Top Rated Seller, we don’t deal with online bullies and idiots either. We all experience the BeRated Seller Status at times due to eBay’s system – he hit that one right on the head! We have even blocked potential bidders after they have asked a question, but never bid, due to their threatening tones. (When someone asked about our shipping charges and told US how much it actually cost to ship the item and if we charged them the full shipping price, they would report us to eBay, we blocked them and emailed them back that we don’t bend to cyberbullies. FYI: shipping was less than $5.00- yeah. Also FYI, actual postage cost is NOT the total shipping cost. Ever wonder where those envelopes, labels, tape, and printer ink come from? Not the eBay fairy?!?!? LOL) We try to be fair, but fair does not mean ‘giveaway’. We all have to protect our businesses as best we can, and by blocking them on the front end, we don’t have to worry about retaliatory feedback. We don’t put up with rudeness in person and we don’t put up with it online either.

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Many sellers feel this way…
Sep 28th, 2009 by TJ

If you read many Ebay seller boards, many sellers feel the following way about eBay’s feedback and DSR systems.

Buyers don’t pay Ebay a cent to buy an item. Sellers spend tons of money monthly, and have very little to no control over who purchases from them and how they treat us as sellers. Most are honest buyers, but of course, a few “bad apples” abuse the current system to try and get free products and the seller is left to deal with the crazies or live with ‘bad feedback and dsrs’.

The biggest aggravation of Ebay is Feedback and DSR ratios. A real turn off is the fact that Ebay has forgotten who pays them!! We, as SELLERS, are their customers, who pay eBay money in the form of fees and subscriptions, and thus account for their revenue. Ebay, it seems, considers the buyers as their customers and sellers as middle men.

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