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10 Tips for
Increasing Your eBay Response.
So you've got the buyer in front of your auction, and they've
read the description. They're must be interested, or they
wouldn't be looking… but just how can you push them over that
line and make them leave a bid? Read on for some tips.
Improve your picture: In all that description writing, you might
have missed the vital importance of your item's picture. A picture
with bad lighting or an intrusive background looks amateurish and
won't make anyone want to buy from you.
Add an About Me page: You'll be surprised how much you can reassure
bidders just by creating an About Me page and putting a little bit
about yourself on your business on there. You can also have a few
special offers there for people who bother to look at the page, and
let people subscribe to your mailing list so that you can email them
updates.
Use SquareTrade: Signing up at SquareTrade and displaying their logo
on your auctions shows that you are committed to have them resolve
any disputes that arise. You always see this on Power Sellers
auctions - it makes you look more professional.
Write terms and conditions: Have the 'small print' clearly visible
on all your auctions, giving details of things like shipping times
and prices, your refund policy, and any other business practices you
might have. This helps build confidence with buyers.
Show off your feedback: Copy and paste a selection of the feedback
comments you're most proud of to each item's description page,
instead of making bidders go and look for it. If you have 100%
positive feedback, be sure to write that on every auction too.
Add NR to your titles: If you have extra space in a title, put 'NR'
(no reserve) on the end. Bidders prefer auctions that don't have a
reserve price, and doing this lets them see that yours don't.
Benefits not features: Make sure your description focuses on the
benefits that your item can give to the customer, not just its
features. This is a classic sales technique. If you have trouble
with this, remember: 'cheap' is a feature, 'save money' is a
benefit.
List more items: If you want more people to respond to your items,
then list more items! You might find you have better like listing
items at the same time, instead of one-by-one. There's no need to
use a Dutch auction - you can just keep two or three auctions going
at once for an item you have more than one of in stock.
Accept unusual payment methods: To reach those last few buyers,
accept payment methods that many sellers don't, like checks.
Buy some upgrades: The best upgrade is the most expensive one, which
makes your item appear first in search results. In crowded
categories, you might find that this is worth the money.
Once you've got some buyers, you want to keep them coming back to
you. The next email will show you how to turn one-time buyers into
long-term customers.
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An Introduction
to Bidding and Buying on eBay.
Have you noticed that whenever you open a newspaper, watch the
TV or have a conversation, people seem to be talking about eBay?
If you've never used it and you've no idea what it's all about,
then the chances are that you're starting to feel a little left
out. But don't worry! This email contains everything you need to
know about the basics of bidding and buying on eBay.
So What is eBay?
EBay is an online auction website - and not just any auction site,
but the biggest one in the world. If you know how an auction works,
then you already know how roughly eBay works. Someone adds something
they want to sell to the site, and then buyers come along and place
bids on it. The highest bid wins the item! It's that simple.
EBay being an online auction makes a big difference, though. Buying
and selling are not reserved for any elite. EBay accept almost any
item, no matter how small, and will then advertise it on their sites
all over the world. It's a powerful combination of an auction and a
slightly chaotic marketplace.
What is Bidding?
Bidding is when you say how much you will pay for an item in an
auction. Bidding on eBay, however, doesn't work in exactly the same
way as a normal auction, at least in theory. On eBay, you tell the
site what the maximum you are willing to pay for each item is, and
then eBay places the bids on your behalf. That means you could say
you were willing to pay up to $100 for something and only have to
pay $50, if that was the highest maximum bid anyone else placed.
It's not as complicated as it sounds - the best way to get used to
it is to give it a try. First, the best thing to do is to go to the
eBay website designed for your country. If you don't know the
address for it, just go to www.ebay.com and it will tell you there.
Now, on the front page you should see a big box marked 'search':
just type in anything that you'd like to buy there.
Wasn't that easy? Now you should have a list of items for sale in
front of you, along with how much people are currently bidding for
them and the time when bidding ends for each item. If you click one
of these, you can read the description, and then - if you're happy
with the item and happy to pay more than the current highest bidder
is - you can bid!
How Do I Bid?
Go ahead and scroll down to the bottom of an item's description
page, and type the maximum you are willing to pay (your maximum bid)
into the box. Then simply press the 'place bid' button - you will
need to sign in once you press the button, or go through a quick
registration process if you don't have an eBay username).
If someone else's maximum bid on that item is higher than yours,
then eBay will tell you and give you the opportunity to bid again.
Otherwise, you're now the new highest bidder! All you need to do now
is wait until the end of the auction - if someone else outbids you,
then eBay will email you and you can bid again.
All sounds great, doesn't it? But by now you might be wondering
whether a site as chaotic as eBay can really be all that safe to buy
from. That's why the next email in this series will be about your
rights when you buy from eBay.
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Your Rights as an
eBay Buyer.
When you buy things on eBay, you pay the seller before they send
you anything. This means that you, as a buyer, are vulnerable to
all sorts of problems. You might not get the items you have paid
for, or they might be damaged or faulty. Luckily, you have two
very important rights when you buy on eBay.
The Right to Receive Your Item.
Maybe the seller never sent the item, or maybe it got lost in the
post. Whatever happened, you paid for the item. If it doesn't arrive
in the post as described, you have the right to a replacement or a
refund, whether it's the seller's fault or not.
The fact that you bought something on eBay doesn't mean that you
don't have the exact same rights that you would have if you bought
it in a shop (these rights are pretty much the same all over the
world). Plus, under eBay's rules, the seller isn't allowed to change
their mind about selling you the item: once the auction ends, it
becomes a contract - you must buy and they must sell, or face eBay's
penalties.
The Right for Your Item to Be as Described in the Auction.
Sometimes sellers don't wrap items properly, and so they get broken.
Occasionally they write descriptions that are misleading or just
plain wrong to begin with, leaving out vital details that would have
caused you to change your mind about buying. If this happens to you,
you again have the right to a replacement or a refund.
So How Do I Use My Rights?
First, you should take it up with the seller - most will be
responsive, as do not want to have their reputation damaged when an
upset buyer leaves negative feedback for all their future buyers to
see. If that doesn't work, report them to eBay.
While eBay don't have many people handling complaints, they do have
a relatively effective set of automatic process to handle common
problems buyers and sellers have with one another.
Finally, if that doesn't work, then you should seek advice from
consumer groups in your country, and as a last resort from the
police. You should never have to get this far, though: problems on
eBay that can't be resolved easily are extremely rare.
Don't Be Too Quick.
Remember not to get too annoyed and be unfair to the seller: nice
sellers have agreed to give me refunds for undelivered items, only
for me to find out a few weeks later that they were being held for
me at the post office! Always try your best to communicate and think
of everything that might have gone wrong: eBay works best when
buyers and sellers sort out their problems together, instead of
reporting each other to the authorities straight away.
More often that not receiving what they paid for, buyers have an
altogether different problem: they knew what they were paying for,
but didn't realize that what they were paying for was overpriced,
low quality or a scam. The next email will give you a list of tips
on how to avoid being ripped off on eBay.
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