on โ18-07-2017 09:43 PM
Hi, I have bought a heap of items from o'seas. I am quite used to the fact that many items don't arrive in the 'estimated time of delivery' and I don't penalise sellers for this if an item is "late".
I am honest & do click the "NO" button when it asks 'Did this item arrive by XYZ" but I don't penalise the seller by leaving a neutral or negative if it's just 'late'.
SO...I have several items that are outstanding by 3+ weeks. (Bought around 25-28 May. Due by 14-27 & 28 June - so I have waited 3 weeks beyond the 'last day to arrive' expectation.)
My question is, does the 'right/ability' to claim a "did not receive" ever expire?
I am happy to be patient as I know international mail can be fickle, so i don't make a claim the day (or week) after an item is 'expected' to arrive. How long is reasonable? Will my right/ability to make a claim expire?
Thanks ๐
on โ18-07-2017 09:54 PM
Yes 30 days after the estimated date of arrival
on โ18-07-2017 09:56 PM
on โ18-07-2017 09:57 PM
Cheers! Thanks for that! ๐
on โ18-07-2017 09:57 PM
Thanks so much for the extra info! ๐
on โ18-07-2017 10:29 PM
While you say you do not penalise the seller if the item arrives after the date estimated by ebay, you are in fact penalising them by being "honest" and clicking No to the ebay question. The seller gets a defect which can be far more damaging to their ability to sell than any red dot in their feedback.
on โ18-07-2017 11:23 PM
What do you suggest? I can't seem to get it 'right' in your eyes! LOL! I am just answering the question 'did it arrive within the specified time. It it's a day or two out I click yes but 2 weeks out I click no. I didn't realise it was a 'defect' against the seller...i thought it was just answering a question. Until i came to the forums I had no idea of the 'conswequences' of each 'click' I make. It's not explained anywhere that I recall.
on โ19-07-2017 12:10 AM
It is not whether you get it right or wrong in my eyes.....I have just stated the cold hard facts and how your "honesty" can have consequences for the seller whether intentional or not.
If you really want to "get it right" you should look at whether the seller has posted the item within their stated timeframe. If yes, then give them positive and 5 stars for postage. And ignore the question....just don't answer it.
By doing this you are actually rating the seller....not Australia Post's erratic delivery system.
on โ19-07-2017 10:15 AM
OK, thanks for that. ๐ Cheers!
on โ19-07-2017 10:20 AM
As I understood it lyndal, if the seller has posted within their handling time over the counter and uploaded the tracking number that question doesn't appear.
The problem arises when either posting parcels in the red box where scanning is unlikely to happen for a while, or sending in a letter when there's no tracking anyway, the seller can get penalised for so-called late postage by eBay due to their unrealistic ETA's.