Archive for January, 2008

Final Value Fee discounts for US Powersellers

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

http://pages.ebay.com/services/buyandsell/powerseller/benefits/discounts.html

PowerSellers in the United States or Canada will start getting Final Value Fees discounts on April 2008, based on their detailed seller ratings (DSRs) for the last 30 days. Discounts will apply to sales on or after February 20, 2008.

PowerSeller fee discounts are our way of recognizing and rewarding sellers who consistently provide excellent customer service on eBay. Because detailed seller ratings (DSRs) enable buyers to rate specific aspects of their transactions - item as described, communication, shipping time, and shipping and handling charges - these ratings provide the best measure of customer satisfaction and the best way for eBay to identify good sellers. Your DSRs also give you a complete picture of how customers rate your performance and what you can do to improve.

*  If you are a PowerSeller and all four of your detailed seller ratings (DSRs) for the past 30 day period are 4.6 or higher, you qualify for a 5% discount on Final Value Fees
* If you are a PowerSeller and all four of your detailed seller ratings (DSRs) for the past 30 day period are 4.8 or higher, you qualify for a 15% discount on Final Value Fees

Again, I expect to see something similar hit the UK very soon. This will help offset the increased Final value Fees announced today, although it has to be questioned - how many Powersellers have all DSR’s 4.8 or above?

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New eBay fee structure announced on eBay.com

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

http://pages.ebay.com/sell/update08/basic/index.html

Basically lower insertion fees, higher Final value fees, discounts for Powersellers, and higher Shop Inventory Final value fees, and galleries are now Free.

Expect to see the same coming very soon to the UK site, and a full write up on it’s effects on buyers and sellers.

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Major feedback changes announced.

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

http://pages.ebay.com/services/forum/new.html

The eBay Feedback system was originally designed to provide a simple, honest, accurate record of the buyer’s and seller’s online experience to ensure safe and satisfactory trade. It was driven by two factors: transparency and accountability. Over time, we found that the transparency of the existing Feedback system makes some members reluctant to hold others accountable. For example, buyers fear retaliatory Feedback from sellers if they leave a negative.

Therefore, we’ll be making a few significant changes to eBay’s Feedback system to continue to improve accuracy and accountability. Within six months, these changes should help to differentiate and reward sellers who provide a positive buying experience on eBay.

There are five key elements to the new Feedback system being introduced in the first half of 2008:

1. Beginning in February, buyers and sellers will be able to earn up to one Feedback per week from the same trading partner. Today, members may only affect each other’s Feedback scores one time, regardless of the number of transactions between the parties. This change will both encourage repeat transactions and reward good service.
2. Sellers will no longer be able to leave negative or neutral Feedback for buyers. This change will occur in May, 2008.
3. Removal of negative and neutral Feedback left by members who are suspended or who fail to respond to the Unpaid Item Process (UPI).
4. Positive Feedback percentage will be based on the past 12 months of Feedback, rather than lifetime, since it is most indicative of the seller’s recent performance.
5. Restrictions on when Feedback can be left:
* Buyers must wait three days before leaving negative or neutral Feedback
* Instead of 90 days, members will be able to leave Feedback for 60 days

I truly do not know what to say about this…. so a buyer stiffs me with a neg because of their inability to read the description, or because they can not communicate problems to me, and I am not allowed to leave a warning feedback comment??

This is a controversial move, that I for one am not overly happy with.

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eBay 2007 end of year statement, & proposed fee structure changes

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

eBay n the last few hours have released their 2007 summary of accounts, as well as announcing the retiremnet fo Meg Whitman CEO, to be replaced by John Donahoe, the driving force behind Detailed Seller Ratings, Sponsored Links and Best Match search initatives.

The official presentation is very high level board room stuff, which if anybody wants to read it - click here…

The most interesting part, as widely expected, is that following the category tests in Media, Collectables and DVD’s towards the end of last year, it looks like lower insertion fees, inclusive gallery pics, but higher Final Value Fees are all on the way in 2008, with an official announcement due within the next week or two.

Fee Changes - Click to enlarge

This move will suit high volume, low value sellers in the main, but will also allow newbie sellers to take a bit more interest in listing, and get started on the road to eBay riches!

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Yahoo to buy eBay???

Saturday, January 12th, 2008

I picked this up on Skip McGraths eBay blog, and makes interesting reading….

Rumors are rife on the internet that Yahoo is about to make an all stock offer for eBay.
There have also been rumors that Microsoft was interested in eBay.  There was some truth to that. I do know someone who told me Microsoft was taking a serious look at eBay, but they have now take a pass (Whew!!!).

eBay and Yahoo makes a lot more sense. There are some great synergies. Yahoo owns the auction market in Japan where eBay gave up.  Yahoo’s active IM users and capability could provide some opportunities for Skype.  eBay’s Pro Stores have struggled to compete with Yahoo Shops, so combining them would make sense.  One advantage of ProStores is that you can launch items from Pro Stores directly onto eBay.  Yahoo has thousands of shops sellers. If they gave that functionality to Yahoo Shops, that could be huge for eBay. On the PayPal front, a lot of Yahoo shop owners take PayPal but Yahoo get none of that –with a merger they could participate in those profits.

Mostly the merger would give the combined company a greater defensive posture vis a vis Google.

Most of the rumors talk about Yahoo buying eBay in a stock trade but this would severely dilute Yahoo stock.  They would have to pay about $40 a share.  I think just a straightforward merger would make a lot more financial sense.

The big challenge would be the cultural clash. When eBay bought PayPal it took over a year and a half for that to settle out.  The other factor is how the community would react.  Yahoo doesn’t talk to its members.  Their members are users whereas eBay’s members are a true community with a very distinct culture –I know it may be love/hate, but it is a community nevertheless.  My worry over a merger of the cultures is that eBay could go from being a big family that argues and fights a lot but stays together to a dysfunctional family.

Source

HOWEVER…. there are no links to sources in this article, so I went off to look on Google for “Yahoo eBay Merger” - most of the news stories it finds date from 2002 to 2006, nothing recent from the last week or two, and to be fair, this story has been doing the rounds for sometime. As far as journalistic integrity goes in the US, the New York Times is pretty much the gospel on all things business related, and their Blog has no recent news on it.

A similar rumour as recently been doing the rounds about Microsoft planning to charge for the use of Hotmail, but as pointed out on the BBC website, this rumour was being substansiated by a link to a 5 year old news article!! And even this article was first published in 2006!

But that’s not to say what Skip claims is completely untrue. Yahoo is a much bigger company that eBay, in terms of stock value, and internet reach. Yahoo has a much much bigger international reach than eBay, and is well established in the far east and developing nations, again something that eBay has struggled with. Yahoo also has good experience with online Auctions, and indeed where much bigger than eBay back in the early days.

So, if anyone finds any recent news sources to this story, please feel free to let us know!!

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eBay Shops - what are they and why should you have one?

Friday, January 11th, 2008

What is an eBay Shop?

An eBay shop is simply adding a few extra features to your existing ID - your details remain exactly as they are, but you have the shop name and logo next to your user name, and you have a lot more flexibility in creating your listings and “branding” yourself. The Listing Fees are much less than a normal auction and items can be listed on a rolling 30 day listing - although only BIN, but the exposure that Shop listings receive is significantly reduced. Keyword Searches will only show listings if there are less than 50 matching items in Auction or BIN, and even then they appear at the very bottom of any results.

There are currently 3 levels of shop available –
- Basic Shop: an ideal solution for sellers who are just starting out and want an affordable and easy-to-use platform to sell online.
- Featured Shop: a more comprehensive solution for small-to-medium sized sellers who want to aggressively grow their online business.
- Anchor Shop: an advanced solution for higher-volume sellers who want maximum exposure on eBay

For the purpose of this article, the focus will be on a Basic Shop.

How do Shop listings differ from normal listings?

Shop listings are pretty much the same as a Buy It Now listing, except they run continually until sold or ended by the user. The Insertion Fees are considerably less than Auction or Buy It Now listings, although exposure is reduced, and Final Value Fees are also slightly higher

As Shop listings are on 30 day recurring cycles, it is also a useful place to “park” any unsold auctions or Buy It Now items. For a relatively small charge, these previously unsold items are still available for buyers to purchase – if they find them of course, but more on that further down.

What do you get for your money?

A Basic Shop on ebay.co.uk will cost £6 GBP per month, although the first 30 days are free. Looking at the pure economics of listing, a 10 day Buy It Now listing with Gallery will cost around 30p, depending on the starting price and quantity available, so 30 days will cost at least 90p. The same listing in a Shop Format would cost a mere 6p. From this principle, it would only take 24 listings to break even on insertion fees on the pessimistic assumption that nothing sells to incur Final Value Fees!

However the benefits go much further than just cheap insertion fees and long term availability to purchase. A shop subscription on eBay.co.uk also offers –

- An entry-level online e-commerce web presence, with a unique URL and brand identity for your shop
- Up to 300 customisable categories for your own range of product lines.
Bulk editing options for converting auctions and Buy It Now listings into Shop Format, and back again.
Traffic Reports to analyse where your visitors are coming from and what they are looking for, as well as growth trends and early warning signs.
- Basic Sales Reports to analyse your most effective category and selling format, your average selling prices, sell through rates and much more.
Email Marketing facilities to create and send flyers and newsletters to your buyers.
- HTML link building tools to easily create cross-promotion tools for your listings.
- Use customisable pages to boost your brand, communicate store policies, and connect with customers
Promotional boxes to highlight featured merchandise in your Shop to trigger sales.
- Options to run promotional sales with Markdown Manager.
- Custom listing frames to add your Shop header, search box, and category navigation to all of your listings.
- Listing Feeds to automatically publish and send product data to customers or comparison shopping sites via RSS Feeds.
- Customisable Search Engine Optimisation tags to guide traffic from outside of eBay to your store

Who has a shop?

Shops are not just for the high volume sellers or even entry level PowerSellers, but many hobby sellers are also eBay shop owners.
To open a Shop, you must be a registered eBay user with a seller’s account. You’ll also need to meet one of the following requirements:
- Feedback score of 10 or higher, or
- Have direct debit on file for payment of eBay fees, or
- Have a Paypal account linked to your eBay account and a Feedback rating of at least 5.

As mentioned above, it is a cheap way to have listings available on a continual and automated basis, rather than having to spend time and money re-listing unsold auctions.

For sellers of one specific type of product line, it is also a useful way to list multiple variations of similar products without falling foul of the Choice Listing Policy. Simply promote the most popular selling line in a regular auction or Buy It Now listing, but make prominent links to the various colours or sizes available in your store.

How do I get people to my shop?

It’s widely publicised that the exposure that Shop Format listings receive is significantly reduced, but when balanced with the insertion fee, you are getting what you pay for. The key is finding ways to let people know you have an eBay shop.

The fundamental method of gaining Shop exposure is to ensure you have enough signposts to your shops. These sign posts come in many forms such as the following –
Link store items through from existing Auctions or Buy It Now. Using the HTML link builder can provide simple text links such as “Buy It Now in my Shop for £9.99” to place in an auction, to impressive scrolling galleries of your shop listings that can showcase whole product ranges.
Create cross promotions .When buyers view, bid on, or win an item, your other items (including Shop Inventory items) are promoted in a special display. As a Shop seller, you have complete control over which items are shown.
Create an effective Shop listing header. Include your own banner, called a Shop listing header, on your Shop and all other listings to create your own unique and identifiable brand
Optimise your Shop for Internet search engines.  By carefully wording your text in the shop header, and specifying appropriate meta-tags, you can increase the chance of your shop listings being found by Search engines such as Google and Yahoo. Include these keywords in your Shop name and Shop category names where possible, and also in the content on your pages.
Utilise Customisable pages, Reviews & Guides, Blogs and About Me Pages. All of these pages are content based with static URL’s, and therefore highly favoured by search engines. Reviews & Guides in particular can be used as sales tools for our own products, by demonstrating to your buyers that you know your products well.
Promote your store “off-eBay”. There are many ways of getting your Shop URL out to the buying public, using modern techniques and more traditional methods
o If you post on eBay forums, or discussion groups focused on products that you sell, consider having a clickable link in your posting signature.
o MySpace & Facebook are proving to be effective marketing and networking venues where you can showcase your products and brand to a vast audience.
o There are also many sites that will advertise your eBay store in online directories.
o Google Base Store Connector is a free download that puts info about your store into their index, so that when people search Google for the products you have to sell, you’ll show up in their search results, along with a link directly to your site on eBay – it can be downloaded from http://base.google.com/base/storeconnector/index.html and is simple to operate – enter your store name, copy products from your shop, then publish them to Google Products.
o Include your Shop URL in an email signature block, on return address labels, any paperwork sent with your sales, and any invoice or payment acknowledgement templates sent after purchases.

In summary, an eBay shop is arguably the easiest path to establishing an online commercial presence that is available to one of the largest buying markets in one of the world’s largest shopping venues. The work involved is not significantly more than existing eBay sellers are already used to, and the costs involved are easily worth the many benefits that owning an eBay shop provides.

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***Focusing on Service & Safety in 2008***

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008
Last year saw many changes to eBay.co.uk designed to make it simpler, safer and more fun, resulting in more buyers coming to the site than ever before - 15.2m in November 2007 alone (unique visitors, Nielsen / Netratings).

The majority of buyers are able to buy what they want, at a great price, from a trusted seller with great service, and this helps keep them coming back again and again.

However, a small but unacceptable number of buyers continue to have bad experiences when they make purchases, and end up buying less or leaving the site altogether. Although these bad experiences come from a minority of sellers, the impact is unfairly felt by everyone.

As a result, this year we will be introducing exciting changes that will reward and support sellers who provide buyers with a good service, giving them better access to those buyers.

Similarly, the minority of sellers who give bad service will be disadvantaged, with less access to buyers and lower visibility. On eBay.co.uk, we have already reduced the visibility of sellers who offer unfair postage and packaging charges.

Using Detailed Seller Ratings

We’ll increasingly use Detailed Seller Ratings (DSRs) as the mechanism to recognise sellers who offer good service, and
will be launching a new way for sellers to monitor and act on their ratings. In the meantime we encourage all sellers to review their DSRs on a regular basis. We’ll also continue to educate buyers on DSRs and how best to leave these ratings.

We look forward to explaining these changes in more detail in the coming months. Ultimately, the more good experiences that buyers have from good sellers, the more they’ll return to shop again, and the more successful sellers will be.

Best wishes for 2008.

The eBay Team

Source

The first Official announcement for 2008, and nothing new with the “improvements to the buying experience” but it will be very interesting to see exactly how sellers will be able to monitor and act on their DSR’s. Will this remove the buyer anonymity, will it show dsr’s by category or selling format, or will it simply be accurate to more decimal places than current - similar to DSRWatch ?

It does at least show that eBay have started to recognise that the DSR system still needs some development if it is to become the useful indicators that they had envisaged. Perhaps focusing on P&P charges so close to a Royal Mail price increase is somewhat insensitive to sellers. P&P stars are falling, so reduce the price charged to the buyer despite risings postal costs to the seller?

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eBay “Ticket Touts” in the news again.

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

It’s been a while, but the subject of concert and event tickets being sold on eBay has reared it’s head again in Parliament and in the news.

Internet auction sites have exploited fans by allowing touts to re-sell event tickets at inflated prices, an MPs’ report is expected to say. The Culture, Media and Sport select committee will call for an industry code of conduct for reselling.

In the report, to be published on Thursday, MPs are also expected to call for the threat of action by the Office of Fair Trading if no code is agreed.

The government has always stopped short of making ticket touting illegal.

However, tickets for football matches and the London 2012 Games cannot be re-sold.

While it is legal for anyone who has bought other kinds of tickets to sell them on - referred to as the secondary market - there are concerns that the system is being exploited by organised criminals who attempt to buy tickets to sell on at a large profit.

The committee is also expected to say that the Office of Fair Trading should investigate the legality of the secondary market if an agreement on a code cannot be reached.

Websites such as eBay say there is no evidence that organised gangs are selling large numbers of tickets online.

Since May, the committee has been investigating whether the re-sale of tickets is acceptable, and whether a ban on touting at football matches should be extended to other events.

It looked at the underlying causes of ticket touting, and its impact on performers, promoters and the public.

It also examined whether resale of a ticket, at face value or at a higher value, should be permitted in principle, and the impact of the internet upon trade in tickets.

Source

“Ticket touting” takes many forms, but this seems to be calling for a blanket ban on the resale of tickets. I have no doubt there are many people out there who have ticket agencies on speed dial ready for the next big event release, but to go as far as saying it is organised criminal gangs? The majority of ticket sellers on eBay are individuals who have had the foresight to book tickets as early as possible in the hope that the gig sells out and a profit can be made.

I’ve bought and sold tickets in the past and I don’t see myself as a tout - I have started the auctions at 99p and let market forces dictate the final price. If a less organised person than myself wishes to pay over the odds for a ticket, who am I to stop them? It’s supply and demand, and exemplifies the fundamental principle of an eBay auction - an item is only worth what people are willing to pay for it.

By making ticket re-selling illegal will push it underground, then it will be more likely to be in the hands of the criminal gangs and scammers. I’d rather buy a ticket from an eBay seller than some dodgy geezer in a back street pub…

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eBay Selling Fees Structure changes for January 1st 2008

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008

Towards the end of last year, a number of changes to the Insertion Fee structure were announced by eBay - Media & Collectable Gallery Fee was reduced from 15p to 5p from September 1st, and from October, the Toys & Games and Photography categories enjoyed reduced Insertion Fees at the expense of a higher Final Value Fee.

A number of members of the PowerSellersForum are active DVD sellers, and we have noticed that the Gallery Fee has now reverted back to 15p since yesterday, just as the original announcement confirmed.

It would have been appreciated to see a General Announcement after Christmas to remind the vast number of sellers in these two categories that the fee structure was changing back. A lot of sellers revised their own pricing strategy to factor the savings or costs from the original change, and it’s likely will not have remembered that the changes were due. 

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