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An eBay Seller’s Checklist.
Being a seller is a lot of responsibility, and sometimes you might
feel like you’re not doing everything you should be. This
simple checklist will help you keep on top of things.
Have you found out everything you possibly could about your items?
Try typing their names into a search engine – you might find
out something you didn’t know. If someone else is selling
the same thing as you, then always try to provide more information
about it than they do.
Do you monitor the competition? Always keep an eye on how much
other items the same as or similar to yours are selling, and what
prices they’re being offered at. There’s usually little
point in starting a fixed price auction for $100 when someone else
is selling the item for $90.
Have you got pictures of the items? It’s worth taking the
time to photograph your items, especially if you have a digital
camera. If you get serious about eBay but don’t have a camera,
then you will probably want to invest in one at some point.
Are you emailing your sellers? It’s worth sending a brief
email when transactions go through: something like a simple “Thank
you for buying my item, please let me know when you have sent the
payment”. Follow this up with “Thanks for your payment,
I have posted your [item name] today”. You will be surprised
how many problems you will avoid just by communicating this way.
Also, are you checking your emails? Remember that potential buyers
can send you email about anything at any time, and not answering
these emails will just make them go somewhere else instead of buying
from you.
Do your item description pages have everything that buyers need
to know? If you’re planning to offer international delivery,
then it’s good to make a list of the charges to different
counties and display it on each auction. If you have any special
terms and conditions (for example, if you will give a refund on
any item as long as it hasn’t been opened), then you should
make sure these are displayed too.
Have you been wrapping your items correctly? Your wrapping should
be professional for the best impression: use appropriately sized
envelopes or parcels, wrap the item in bubble wrap to stop it from
getting damaged, and print labels instead of hand-writing addresses.
Oh, and always use first class post – don’t be cheap.
Do you follow up? It is worth sending out an email a few days after
you post an item, saying “Is everything alright with your
purchase? I hope you received it and it was as you expected.”
This might sound like giving the customer an opportunity to complain,
but you should be trying to help your customers, not take their
money and run.
Being a really good eBay seller, more than anything else, is about
providing genuinely good and honest customer service. That’s
the only foolproof way to protect your reputation. Of course, you
might be wondering by now whether it’s really worth all the
hassle to get a good reputation on eBay. Won’t people buy
from you anyway, and couldn’t you just open a new account
if it really comes down to that?
Check out our eBay feedback guide for more - Click
Here
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