TEZillman
Well-known
Dexdog,
Over the past week or so, I helped my wife sell 12 items on e-bay, so being in the "seller frame of mind" I read your post with an entirely different viewpoint than I typically have had as a buyer.
Unless you have negociated how soon the seller will ship the item or the seller states in the listing when they will ship, you're at the mercy of what the seller considers reasonable. We had one buyer who thought that the item they purchased Sunday afternoon should be in the mail on Monday morning. We did not meet his expectation, but we did get all of the PayPal items out on Tuesday.
The same goes for packing. The seller may think that the lens isn't worth packaging in the manner you think is appropriate. Newspaper is a lot cheaper than purchased packing materials.
You have a gripe with the seller over paying for priority mail and insurance. The seller is clearly wrong here. On the other hand, once you have packaged up twelve items in similar brown boxes, it becomes tough to keep them straight. The only way to do so is to index the name and address with the item and the agreed upon shipping method. It wouldn't be difficult to make a mistake here, so I agree with many of the people above that you should contact the seller first rather than going straight to the feedback approach.
I learned several things during this adventure into "mass" selling on e-bay. First, other people's expectations often aren't the same as ours. In my mind, if someone pays by PayPal and pays for priority mail they should expect that the payment will get to the seller sooner and the post office will deliver faster and no more. These measures are not inducing the seller to ship items faster. In fact, the seller is stuck paying the fees for PayPal.
Second, one should be thankful for sellers who sell items on e-bay for less than $50.00. Below that point, the time invested in listing the item, answering e-mails about questions that are clearly addressed in the listing and packing and shipping the item, plus the e-bay and PayPal fees make it just about not worth the effort. On the average, the items that we sold for under $50.00 cost us 20% of the total sales price plus shipping cost in e-bay and PayPal fees. (yes, PayPal charges on the whole amount, not just the sales price)
Third, the radio button the is suppose to stop the listing from being seen by people outside the areas that you're willing to ship to doesn't work. We received at least a half dozen e-mails from people asking if we'd be willing to ship to other areas.
Fourth, the postage calculation on the post office's website is inacurate. We paid more for shipping in all cases.
Fifth, packing materials are expensive. I checked out the cost of buying new materials thinking that it would be easier to work with those. We fortunately had saved enough materials to ship all of the items, if we hadn't we would have paid another couple bucks per item for shipping materials.
Sorry, to get a bit off topic here. I just thought it would be helpful to voice the issues on other side of the Transaction.
Over the past week or so, I helped my wife sell 12 items on e-bay, so being in the "seller frame of mind" I read your post with an entirely different viewpoint than I typically have had as a buyer.
Unless you have negociated how soon the seller will ship the item or the seller states in the listing when they will ship, you're at the mercy of what the seller considers reasonable. We had one buyer who thought that the item they purchased Sunday afternoon should be in the mail on Monday morning. We did not meet his expectation, but we did get all of the PayPal items out on Tuesday.
The same goes for packing. The seller may think that the lens isn't worth packaging in the manner you think is appropriate. Newspaper is a lot cheaper than purchased packing materials.
You have a gripe with the seller over paying for priority mail and insurance. The seller is clearly wrong here. On the other hand, once you have packaged up twelve items in similar brown boxes, it becomes tough to keep them straight. The only way to do so is to index the name and address with the item and the agreed upon shipping method. It wouldn't be difficult to make a mistake here, so I agree with many of the people above that you should contact the seller first rather than going straight to the feedback approach.
I learned several things during this adventure into "mass" selling on e-bay. First, other people's expectations often aren't the same as ours. In my mind, if someone pays by PayPal and pays for priority mail they should expect that the payment will get to the seller sooner and the post office will deliver faster and no more. These measures are not inducing the seller to ship items faster. In fact, the seller is stuck paying the fees for PayPal.
Second, one should be thankful for sellers who sell items on e-bay for less than $50.00. Below that point, the time invested in listing the item, answering e-mails about questions that are clearly addressed in the listing and packing and shipping the item, plus the e-bay and PayPal fees make it just about not worth the effort. On the average, the items that we sold for under $50.00 cost us 20% of the total sales price plus shipping cost in e-bay and PayPal fees. (yes, PayPal charges on the whole amount, not just the sales price)
Third, the radio button the is suppose to stop the listing from being seen by people outside the areas that you're willing to ship to doesn't work. We received at least a half dozen e-mails from people asking if we'd be willing to ship to other areas.
Fourth, the postage calculation on the post office's website is inacurate. We paid more for shipping in all cases.
Fifth, packing materials are expensive. I checked out the cost of buying new materials thinking that it would be easier to work with those. We fortunately had saved enough materials to ship all of the items, if we hadn't we would have paid another couple bucks per item for shipping materials.
Sorry, to get a bit off topic here. I just thought it would be helpful to voice the issues on other side of the Transaction.