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eBay’s 2011 Spring Seller Update
Mar 20th, 2011 by TJ

Apparently it’s spring cleaning time over at EBAY again! More changes, but hey, life is change. I guess more than spring cleaning, it’s just reassessment time again!

Well…. Here is the text of the seller’s letter we received from ebay:

We know that online buyers pay attention to the total cost of an item–including shipping–when deciding what and where to buy. That’s why, to encourage low-cost shipping, starting July 6 Final Value Fee rates for Store sellers–Fixed Price and Auction-style–will be reduced and then applied to the total amount of the sale–including shipping.

The best way to minimize the impact on your overall fees is to take advantage of the available ways to reduce your shipping costs and charges.

New eBay Shopping Cart
Online shoppers are accustomed to adding items to a shopping cart–and they’re often motivated to buy more. That’s why we’re introducing the new eBay Shopping Cart that works with both Fixed Price and Auction-style items. Buyers can add items from multiple sellers and pay in one easy checkout–making it easier and more likely for them to buy more. It will become the way to shop on eBay before the 2011 holiday season.

New communications hub
Starting in May, you’ll be able to manage your communications with buyers from just one location within My eBay. View the emails that eBay sends to buyers after a transaction, manage your buyer-facing Automated Answers, or access your Store newsletters–all from one convenient page.

Category and item specifics changes
Category and item specifics changes are also consolidated with rest of updates. Find out if your listings are impacted and get details on the 2011 Spring Seller Update.

As always, thank you for selling on eBay. (aka thank you for giving us more of your profit margin. LOL)

OK – the takeaway:
Sellers that honestly charge reasonable shipping fees are getting a bum deal. Sellers that blatantly gouge on shipping fees should be banned from eBay anyway and make the world a better place. It is eBay’s lazy way of handling these type of sellers who use shipping to skirt paying fees.

Our store always charged reasonable shipping and in the past two months have readjusted 98% of our listings to reflect free shipping anyway. There are, however, a few things that irk me: 13% closing fee for books and media – give me a break! (In other words, if you’re still selling books on eBay, we’d just as soon not have you here.) Also ‘eBay will eliminate the current 5% discount for non-TRS PowerSellers’. See the new charts here on the AuctionBytes Blog (they do a great job of reporting these changes). Check out this blog post about the podcast with eBay’s Vice President of Selling Experience Todd Lutwak at radal.info.

As usual, I will see which parts of my store it affects and if possible, move those listings to another marketplace – namely Amazon.
Just another day in paradise!

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Will eBay auctions continue?
May 15th, 2010 by TJ

One of the guys I like to read and keep up with is Skip McGrath’s Auction Seller’s Resource. In his latest newsletter is a good article on what we all have known was happening, but Skip sums it up very nicely.

ARE EBAY AUCTIONS GOING AWAY?
At eBay’s annual meeting, CEO John Donohoe said that auctions now make up less than half of all listings on the site. And he predicted it could drop to as low as 30% by 2011. Just a few years ago, auctions made up around 70 percent of the listings on the site but in the last quarter they were only 45 percent.

This is not by accident. Since Donohoe took over, eBay has made a concerted effort to look more like Amazon…..

The very nature of the auction business is that it only works when there is a sense of community and a shared passion between buyers and sellers. Those are the traits that made eBay successful. And, these are the same traits that eBay has assiduously tried to kill over the last few years….

Once you learn how to sell on eBay successfully you have learned valuable skills that you can transfer to selling on other venues such as Amazon, Craigslist, Upillar and Bonanzle (both Upillar and Bonanzle are really growing fast) and your own website.

Read all of Skip’s article here. While you are there, sign up for his free “The Ebay Seller’s News” newsletter – you will be glad you did!

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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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I use Cyberfetch site submission software for my blogs!
Dec 27th, 2009 by TJ

You can’t just sit back and write your blog and do nothing to promote it. One great product I use is Cyberfetch Submission software to submit my sites to search engines. The following article explains it very well, so I’ve included it. (I don’t believe in reinventing the wheel. lol)

Review of Cyberfetch Automated Search Engine Submitter

Author: Matthew Meyer

Every once in awhile when I purchase a piece of marketing software or an ebook I am pleasantly surprised. This is the case with Larry Stern’s Cyberfetch Search Engine Submitter. The software will submit your site to 1223 USA based search engines, message boards and ffa sites, 315 such Canadian sites, and 473 European directories, and message boards. You can also purchase databases for Asia as well.

I know most people do not believe in posting to ffa pages or message boards because the ads are rotated off rather quickly. They say that nobody actually sees these posts. Well they are almost right. There is one person who looks at these pages and that is the owner of the page. And who is the owner? He is an internet marketer. He is interested in getting traffic to his website. So if you have a product that interests such a person this is very cheap effective advertising. I know because I own an ffa network with over 15,000 members. It is my number one money maker and has a proud PR0 ranking from Google.

I purchased the Cyberfetch software with the USA, Canadian and European databases for less than $60. Larry takes a very hands on approach to his business. He personally contacts everyone who purchases the software and manually gives them the unlock code and database download info so it might take a day. To his credit he responded to all my emails quickly.

I set up my campaign for one website with a tracking url. It is very easy to use. A novice can get this going right away. I submitted my campaign to all the search engines. It is done in just one click for each database and runs in the background without taking up too many resources. You can submit unlimited urls or campaigns and you can use the software every day if you wish. There are no recurring charges. It is a one time fee that is it. Also Larry updates the database and you get two years of updates with your purchase. This is very important since the sites can come and go. It is great that he keeps up with it. This is very time consuming work that you do not have to deal with.

Ok the results. Within 24 hours I had 34 clicks on my link. I consider this to be excellent. Keep in mind this is a search engine submitter. Most of the time you have to wait weeks for the link to get indexed if they do it at all. Also, many of the sites the Cyberfetch software submits to are not boards where ads rotate off right away. So my link is getting indexed all over the net. This is good for my SEO and also for future traffic. But I got IMMEDIATE real traffic with this software. I believe this represents excellent value considering that I can use this every day with updated databases for two years for a small one time fee. I highly recommend the Cyberfetch Search Engine Submitter.

There are other excellent pieces of software which are even better than Cyberfetch. The Rolls Royce of SEO software is the Arelis Software from Axandra. However, it is much more complicated to use. You really have to study this software. Plus it is in a different price ranges. The Axandra software costs around $200. Also, the Axandra software does not sumbit to ffa pages and messsage boards. With Cyberfetch you really are sending out your ads to ten of thousands of pages. Axandra takes a more long term view and tries to get you listed permanently in the major search engines and directories while Cyberfectch is a piece of software which blasts your ads out to masses of less important pages.

The software which most closely competes with Arelis is SEO Elite. I have purchased both pieces of software and they are both excellent and very similar. I have to say that Arelis out classes SEO elite. It is simply a beautiful piece of software. It creates templates for your link exchanges pages from just scanning a webpage of your choice. It then creates beautiful link direcotories for link exchanges.

Bottom line Cyberfetch and Arelis have different niches so they are not mutually exclusive. However, SEO elite duplicates Arelis very closely and my choice between then two would be Arelis.

About the Author:

Matthew Meyer is an internet marketer who manages the Quickregister.net free search engine submission service. He writes about internet marketing in his blog at Quickregister.net search engine submission service blog.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.comReview of Cyberfetch Automated Search Engine Submitter

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