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View Full Version : Peoples top tips for selling on ebay


Rob Holmes
14th September 2005, 18:08
I was wondering if anyone had any pearls of wisdom to share with regards to selling on ebay?

e.g. whats the best length of listing?

auction or fixed price?

start at 1p or £5 ?

Whats the best time to finish an auction?..

etc etc..

Rob

clickprofits
14th September 2005, 18:11
Whats the best time to finish an auction?..

There was a good article of ebay tips in Web User magazine recently, will see if it is available online. Sunday is the best day to end your auction apparently (highest number of users)

edit - couldn't find the Web User article online but found these instead:

http://www.pcmag.com/print_article2/0,1217,a=121030,00.asp

http://sbinfocanada.about.com/cs/onlinebusiness/a/ebaysellingtips.htm

http://www.ukauctionhelp.co.uk/advice4sellers.php

This forum has some tips too:
http://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/showthread.html?t=33781&page=1

Eagle
14th September 2005, 20:11
*
Always leave feeback as soon as the customer has paid!

Few things are as annoying as holding a buyers feedback rating to ransom... and it's a sure-fire way to guarantee they won't buy from you again.

:)

DarrenH
14th September 2005, 21:03
Hi

make your headline captions keyword rich, use the amount of characters your given wisely.

Go above and beyond the call of duty, overdeliver in serivce and you'll get repete customers.

make all transactions and simple as possible, keep people completely informed if thigns get delayed etc.

Darren

kyber
15th September 2005, 09:44
As mentioned above, auctions that end on Sunday afternoon generally do much better than auctions ending any other time. (By sheer coincidence, I brought a specialist in Business Intelligence out to work with me in Cork for a few days earlier this week and he shared this particular pearl with me over dinner one evening.)

(We built a 12 billion row, 1.7Tb, OLAP cube a few weeks ago on MS SQL Server 2005 - pre-release - to demonstrate scaling to analyse sales data and we needed some help in terms of leading practice in retail for management reporting.)

Stuart

Rob Holmes
15th September 2005, 14:22
Nice - I've got an item to stick up on ebay so I'll give it a go as above!

Rob

APRogers
15th September 2005, 20:08
I've only sold my own stuff to raise cash and reduce clutter but I've never failed to sell or astound myself at the prices people will pay. A few pointers: Take time to make the advert striking Don't put crap like L@@K or RARE in the title - use the words wisely Use more than one GOOD CLEAR picture Quote original specs from manufacturers web site if relevant Host your own pictures to reduce fees Invite questions Weigh the item and include postage options/prices Don't inflate the postage, just add a reasonable amount for packaging - better still pack it first, then you'll know! Include all relevant information, including what's substandard if anything - it'll save you so much hassle in the long-term for selling stuff poorly describedI could go on and on but the bottom line is to ask yourself 'Would I buy it, based on my advert?'

Enjoy

Alan

Ravenfire
16th September 2005, 08:03
Oh very useful..I have a mobile to sell on there so will try and follow these tips before adding it.

chris1317
16th September 2005, 09:00
The Sunday afternooon thing is interesting, im going to try that next time.

I have noticed also that you can pick up bargains at about 2 or 3 ish on a weekday. My girlfriend buys stuff when im at work. Must be less competition online.

Chris.