Archive for the ‘eBay Tips & tricks’ Category

Extended Paypal Protection for PowerSellers available now

Friday, March 21st, 2008
Introducing an exclusive offer for eBay PowerSellers – free expanded seller protection for items sold on eBay. You’ll have the same coverage as with the Seller Protection Policy, and more.

What’s improved?

No more confirmed addresses. Your customers can choose any shipping address, which makes checkout easier.

No more coverage limit. The coverage limit under the Seller Protection Policy is $5,000 per year. Expanded seller protection has no annual limit.

Coverage in more places around the world. Coverage is now extended to 190 countries, so you can ship to buyers wherever they are.

What’s not covered?

- Local pickups or deliveries made in person.
- Virtual Terminal or Direct Payment transactions.
- Digital goods, services, or intangible items.

https://www.paypal.com/expandedsellerprotection

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Bonus FVF Discounts for Business Sellers in March

Friday, March 21st, 2008
We recently announced substantial changes to the eBay marketplace for 2008. These changes are designed to provide clear incentives and rewards for sellers to continue offering good service, and give buyers even greater confidence to come back more.Since we announced our Final Value Fee (FVF) discount scheme for high volume sellers who offer great customer service, we’ve been encouraged by the intense focus that our seller community have placed on improving their own Detailed Seller Ratings (DSRs). To support this effort, sellers will be excited to hear that we’ve set up an extra bonus discount for Final Value Fees recorded in March.If your 30-day DSRs score is higher than 4.6 across all four DSRs at the end of March, eBay will reward you with an extra 20-40% discount on your Final Value Fees for your selling activity in March. That means that sellers could earn up to 80% off Final Value Fees in March.
 
Click to Enlarge 

This offer is open to all business sellers who are currently eligible for FVF discounts on the UK or IE site, and is applicable to all formats. Items must be listed on either eBay.co.uk or eBay.ie. Bonus discounts will be paid as a credit in your May invoice.

Source

“Higher than 4.6″? so is that 4.7 and above?? If eBay are going to make significant announcements like this, a bit of clarity would not go amiss.

Perhaps it is a clue to the function of the forthcoming Seller DSR dashboards, where we can monitor DSR performance on a daily basis - reading between the lines, it could mean 4.61 and above. These dashboards are due to be rolled out “towards the end of the month” claim ebay in their usual vague announcements.

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Vzaar Launches Free Video Service in U.S

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

vzaar today announced the launch of its free video service for eBay listings in the United States. Using vzaar, eBay sellers can quickly and easily add video to their eBay listings to showcase their products and gain a competitive edge. The core service is available to all users for no charge. Special features tailored to the needs of PowerSellers are available for a low monthly fee.
 
Introducing Video for Commerce
Unlike other video services, vzaar’s video player has been designed specifically to aid commerce. For the first time vital information, such as seller feedback and bidding time left on the auction is automatically displayed at the end of every video. 
 
vzaar enables buyers to get a clear look at what they are purchasing and watch it in action. vzaar makes it easy for sellers to add video into their listings, drive bids and move more inventory. And unlike still images or slideshows, videos have audio, enabling sellers to communicate more effectively, describe their services and inspire trust.
 
vzaar has helped sellers in the beta program sell items ranging from a backhoe to jet skis, diamonds to art, and guitars to comics. vzaar was the first company to enable video listings on eBay UK.
  
vzaar is the brainchild of Ken Moss, a serial entrepreneur with 20 years of IT experience, and Adrian Sevitz, formerly of eBay and Accenture. Also on the team are eBay veterans Dan Wilson and Jamie Parkins. Wilson was part of the team that founded eBay.co.uk in 1999 and is the bestselling author of Make Serious Money on eBay UK. Parkins managed eBay.co.uk’s PowerSeller program and led the Top Seller team. vzaar is an accredited eBay Developer, approved video service provider and makes use of eBay’s API.

“Video is the perfect medium to demonstrate the condition of our products. It allows us to show potential buyers a 360 degree view of the product, to hear the machines or motors we sell, and the opportunity to get a feel for who we are as a seller,” said eBay seller Jack Fitzgerald from Industry Recycles. “When we post with a vzaar video, our item gets more visits, more bids and a higher sales price. Viewing the videos, our buyers see and hear exactly what they are getting for their money, and that means a lower return rate.”
 
Pricing and Availability
The vzaar service is the easiest and quickest way for sellers to add video to their eBay listings. Their offerings are as follows:
 
Free Service
- Up to 30 videos/month
- Up to 1GB of total video. Each video can be up to two minutes long
- Video storage: 90 days
 
Plus Service—$10/month
- Up to 300 videos/month
- Up to 1GB of total video. Each video can be up to two minutes long
- Enhanced functionality: 
Users can search listings by seller name or item ID
Sellers can embed one video in multiple listings in one click
- Video storage: 180 days
 
Pro Service—$20/month
- Up to 3,000 videos/month
- Up to 2GB of total video. Each video can be up to three minutes long
- Enhanced functionality:
Users can search listings by seller name or item ID
Sellers can embed one video in multiple listings in one click
- Video storage: One year
 
About vzaar
vzaar is the leading provider of free video services for eBay sellers. Founded by IT and eBay veterans, the company created the first video service designed specifically for commerce. vzaar enables sellers to quickly and easily embed their videos in their eBay listings to show their products in action and help drive sales. For more information, visit www.vzaar.com.

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ebay Sellers strike 18-25 Feb

Sunday, February 10th, 2008

I’ve really got to question the thinking behind this.

Why would a self employed person go in strike? Who is going to feel the effect most from that action?

I won’t be listing, but only as I am on holiday, which is a shame as if the sellers strike is a successful as the protesters are claiming it will be, it would less competition and give me a lot more exposure to buyers, many of who are unaware of any changes. Even on the PS Board on ebay, there are still people with 10,000+ feedback coming on with the “OMG - feedback is changing” - 10 days after the news was announced. PSF may be a popular site, just as the ebay Q&A boards are, but do we really know what % of eBay members ever use forums or discussion sites? I would pushed to even believe 1% of all members have ever looked at or contributed to an eBay forum.

If these sellers can not cope with the change, then maybe ebay is not the best venue for them. It’s ebay’s site and ebays rules. We’ve all signed, and agreed to the T&C’s that say that they can change the rules as and when they want, and whilst we are playing with their ball, in their court, then we have to stick with it. If people want to leave, then that is their prerogative, but ebay has the biggest court to play on, and at the moment I am still happy to pay the price.

I’m even getting used to the feedback idea - afterall, how many other purchases online, or in B&M shops, do you make where feedback is left? I’m even wavering on whether to cancel my automated feedback - afterall, why should I penalise the vast majority of my buyers who cause no problem whatsoever? ebay maybe tarring all sellers with the same brush, but I am not going to drop to their level and do the same to my buyers.

Personally, the only people that will notice the sellers strike are those that are not listing. I very much doubt it will affect ebay, or their opinion, I doubt buyers will notice, but maybe some sellers may notice an upturn if their competition is reduced for a week. The whole thing has been a badly thought out and reactionary event.

Rather than not listing, and spending a week with the bottom lip out, grumping with other sellers, the whole idea would have been better organized as an exodus to Tazbar, 121bid, ebid etc, and sellers bringing their customers with them. These sites do offer better pricing and service than ebay, no doubt, but they do not have the traffic of buyers that ebay currently has.

What I am thinking though, is what will the striking sellers do after the strike? Come back to eBay, tail betwixt legs and saying very little? Surely any action should be a continual process until change or conformity is achieved.

Will there be ongoing strikes? Wildcat strikes? Work to Rule, overtime bans?!!!

It’s all very reactionary, and poorly thought out IMO. “Industrial action” needs to have a defined goal, and contingency plans. All I see so far is a few people saying “I’m not gonna list for a week” - but what then?

What are they going to do during that week?
What are they going to do afterwards?
Have they thought about alternative long term solutions?
If eBay don’t budge, then what happens?

Rather than a militant “I’m on strike, so there!” attitude, if a constructive plan of action had been put together, then it may hold a lot more credence.

Here’s an alternative proposal that may have had more credablity.

  1. ebay Sellers spend the next week moving their inventory to one pre-agreed alternative - ebid, tazbar, 121bid, whoever.
  2. That chosen site goes on a major offensive for new buyers, and all the sellers also contact their previous customers to let them know the arrangement.
  3. All possible media is used to broadcast the fact that sellers are on the exodus, and where they are headed - BBC, Sky news, the daily national papers etc. A major PR exercise is needed by the sellers to attract buyers to the alternative venue.
  4. Sellers strike goes ahead on the 18th, but continues until ebay decide to change policy.
  5. Striking sellers in the meantime are helping to build a credible alternative to eBay, which may make them reconsider their market position.

eBay can easily survive a week without a handful of sellers, and since they have all said that they will be back on the 25th, ebay have not got long to weather the storm, or drizzle as it may turn out to be.

I’m not denying that ebay are without fault, far from it, but I just do not see the purpose in the strike in the way it has been organised.

Teddies are out of the pram, but on the 25th, it looks like they’ll all be quietly put back in again.

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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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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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Negative Feedback removal - when do eBay take action?

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

Something I learnt today was that eBay will remove feedback if contains mention of Paypal disputes or investigations. A certain seller suddenly fell ill a few weeks ago, and came out of hospital on Christmas Eve to find 18 negatives on his account for non-receipt of items, and most mentioned that a Paypal dispute had been opened to resolve.

After emailing each buyer with an apology and offer to resolve, he then contacted Live Help to see if there was anything else that could be done, as his account was restricted under the Seller Non-Performance Policy.

It turns out that the buyers’ feedback mentioning the disputes were eligible to be removed under the Feedback Abuse and Removal Policy!!

Feedback that meets any of the circumstances below is Feedback abuse and both the rating and the comment may be subject to removal. Feedback that doesn’t meet any of the reasons outlined below will not be removed under the abuse policy:

- The Feedback comment contains profane, vulgar, obscene, or racist language or adult material. Inflammatory language, such as “fraud, liar, cheater, scam artist, con man” etc, while discouraged, will not be removed.

- The Feedback comment contains personal identifying information about another member, including real name, address, phone number, or email address.

- The Feedback makes reference to an eBay, PayPal or law enforcement organisation investigation.

- The Feedback comment contains links or scripts.

- Negative Feedback intended for another member will be considered for removal only in situations where the member responsible for the mistaken posting informs eBay of the error and has already placed the same feedback for the correct member.

- Feedback left by a person who was ineligible to participate in an eBay transaction at the time of the transaction or at the time the Feedback was left. The eBay User Agreement provides that a person may not use the Site if he or she is under the age of 18 or he or she is not able to form legally binding contracts, or if his or her eBay membership has been suspended.

- Feedback left by a member who provided eBay with false contact information (i.e. a false email address) and could not be contacted by eBay. In general, the transaction period is considered to be 90 days from the end of the listing or 30 days from the date the Feedback was left, whichever was longer.

- Feedback left by a member who bid on or purchased an item solely to have the opportunity to leave negative Feedback for the seller, with no intention of completing the transaction. This will be determined on a case-by-case basis, and the final decision will be made by eBay.

- eBay will automatically remove Feedback from members indefinitely suspended within 90 days of registration. Not all suspension types qualify for automatic Feedback removal. For example, accounts that are suspended for non-payment of eBay fees and instances when eBay provides the member with the opportunity to fix the issue (and be reinstated), do not qualify for automatic removal. This will be determined on a case-by-case basis, and the final decision will be made by eBay.

- eBay is provided with a valid court order finding that the disputed Feedback is slanderous, libellous, defamatory or otherwise illegal. Claims of defamation submitted by solicitor do not constitute valid court orders. While such a claim will result in Feedback comment removal, the rating will not be removed without a court order.

This is something sellers also have to be wary about when leaving Negatives for non-paying bidders, especially those that have not responded to the Unpaid Item Dispute.

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*** 10p Listing day - Saturday 29th December ***

Saturday, December 22nd, 2007

What is it?

For the entire day of Saturday 29th December 2007 (local UK time), sellers who list one or more items in an eligible category using the Auction-style, Auction-with-Buy It Now or Buy It Now Only (Fixed Price) formats will pay a 10 pence Insertion Fee per item they list. Please see below for more details.

When is it?

Saturday 29th December 2007 from 00:00:01 GMT until 23:59:59 GMT (promotional period).

What’s included?

Only items listed in British Pounds Sterling on eBay.co.uk using the Auction-style, Auction-with-Buy It Now or Buy It Now Only (Fixed Price) formats are included. 
Sellers can list items with any starting price to qualify for the promotion.
Any item previously scheduled to go live on Saturday 29th December 2007 will qualify for the promotion.
If sellers re-list an item on Saturday 29th December 2007 that had previously closed without a successful sale, the re-listed item will qualify for the promotion. If the re-listed item sells and is eligible under the eBay re-list policy, eBay will refund the Insertion Fee at the Promotional Insertion Fee price of 10 pence.
Items listed in the ”Parts & Accessories” sub-categories of the Motors Category are included.
Items listed in the Photography and Toys & Games categories are included.

What’s excluded?

Apart from items listed in the “Parts & Accessories” sub-categories of the Motors Category (detailed in the “What’s Included?” Section above), all other items listed in the Motors Category are excluded.
Items listed in the “Residential Property” sub-category of the “Home & Garden” category.
Items listed in the “Mobile Phones with Contract” sub-category of the “Mobile & Home Phones” category.
Items listed using the eBay Express Only format.
Multiple-Item listings in all formats. This includes both Auction-style (also known as Dutch Auctions) and Fixed Price formats. See the full details about Multiple-Item listings.
Identical listings that do not comply with our Duplicate Listings policy. See the full details about our Duplicate Listings policy.
Shops Inventory Format listings. See the full details about listing items using the Shops Inventory Format.
Any item listed on Saturday 29th December 2007 but scheduled to start after the promotional period will NOT qualify for the promotion.
Any items listed which do not comply with eBay’s Listing Policies or Prohibited and Restricted Items Policies.
Only the basic eBay Insertion Fee will be 10 pence. All other eBay fees will still apply, including but not limited to Final Value Fees, optional Reserve Price Fees and all Listing Upgrade Fees such as “Gallery”, “Subtitle”, “Bold” or “Highlight”. See the full details about eBay fees. 
Sellers listing using the Auction-with-Buy It Now format will still be charged the Listing Upgrade Fee for Buy It Now.

Source

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How to offer Seller Eligibility for PayPal Buyer Protection

Friday, November 16th, 2007

PayPal Buyer Protection is designed to help increase buyer confidence on eBay. By accepting PayPal on your eBay listings, your buyers will receive free purchase protection from PayPal on qualified transactions for up to £150

When buyers see PayPal Buyer Protection on your eBay listings, they’ll feel more secure - and place more bids - knowing that their purchases are covered.

To increase your Buyer Protection to £500, you need to verify your paypal account, then link it to your eBay Selling ID.

For the first step to becoming Verified, you must add and your bank account and set up Direct Debit. For Premier and Business accounts only, you will need to complete Supplemental Merchant Information

To become Verified, log in to your PayPal account and click the Unverified link in the Activate Account box on your Account Overview page.

To add your eBay ID’s (up to 8 ID’s can be attached to one paypal account)

Click the My Account tab.
Click the Profile subtab.
Click Auctions located in the Selling Preferences column.
Click Add
Enter your eBay User ID and password.
Click Add

Finally, to ensure the full Buyer protection level is displayed on all listings,

Click the Profile tab
Click Auctions - under the Selling Preferences column
Select the logos you wish to amend by clicking the on/off link

Once all has been set in place, your buyers will have the extra confidence when making purchases from you.

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How to find the best keywords for your eBay listing title

Friday, November 16th, 2007

KEYWORDS SELL - that is an undisputed fact of eBay. The vast majority of all purchases made on eBay are used by item searches, not category searches. A keyword is simply a popular word or phrase used to search for any particular item. This is also why so many sites and products specialising mis-spelt title searches are around.

When writing your listing title, first look to see what other people are selling, but also think how are you going to search for it. By name, brand, size, colour etc. That’s your first idea for your title.

When you have found the item, look at how they are being described - New, Mint, BNIB (Brand New In Box) or BNWT (Brand New With Tags). From the search results you will also see which items have the most bids. This should also help you on your way to a perfect title! It is important to point out at this stage - Do Not Copy Another Listing Word For Word! You are only asking for a slap from eBay and your listing will be removed - then nobody will be able to find it!

Whilst looking at the search results, look at the left Navi-bar to see what categories your item falls into. There may be one clear obvious choice, but likewise, you may have 250 matches on two separate categories. In this case, it is definitely worth listing your item in both to maximise viewers.

If you already have a shop, you can look at your Omniture Traffic Reports to gain an idea of what people are searching for to come to you - use your existing customer information and build on it.
So now you know how the other sellers are listing similar items, but what are the buyers searching for ? You have already previously identified possible categories from the left navi-bar, but now you need to know what buyers are looking for in those categories…

Helpfully, eBay has a section that lists the most popular keywords - the link is hidden away at the bottom of the homepage, but to save you looking - HERE IT IS! This will show you the weeks most searched for terms overall, but THIS LINK breaks it down by specific category, and even sub-categories!

Now you have everything you need to write a good title for your listing - your own perspective as a buyer, other sellers’ successful titles, shop traffic reports and even other buyers’ choice of search words!

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