on 29-12-2017 08:39 PM
29-12-2017 09:07 PM - edited 29-12-2017 09:10 PM
eBay has a habit of encouraging poor selling practices like offering free postage and 99c start auctions. Newbies fall for that rubbish and list items that are worth a lot with a 99c start bid and when there is only one bidder they feel that it is not fair.
I am not defending your seller or any seller that refuses to send because of a low price, but I don’t have all the facts surrounding your transaction. I am going to ask a few questions so that anyone else who replies to your Opening Post will have more details about the listing.
You wrote that you offered to pay the postage, so was it a free postage or pickup item?
Was it an auction or Buy-It-Now item? If auction, was it a 99c start bid auction?
How experienced is the seller?
How much is the item worth and how much was your winning bid (if auction)?
on 29-12-2017 09:14 PM
Whilst it's not good form and sellers are required to complete the transaction, eBay are partly to blame as mentioned.
New sellers are roped into eBay's suggestions of starting auctions low with no reserves on eBay Aus.
Or new sellers add a BIN thinking it's a reserve.
We were all newbies and made learning curve mistakes no doubt so don't get angry, just move on and find another.
To tell you the truth if I get a great item at a very low price I feel embarrased and often offer a little more or suggest the seller relist if they are a newbie.
(waves to Sir sales)
on 29-12-2017 09:25 PM
@gagmck wrote:
I'm so angry that eBay allows a seller to sell an item and then after I paid for it the seller then sends me a message that she didn't get enough money for the item so it won't be sent.
eBay don't allow it, it's more a case of they can't do anything to force someone to keep your payment and send you an item, short of having goons 'Bay Squads - i.e. people employed for the sole purpose of going 'round knocking on people's doors and forcing offering both the cash and knee jobs strong encouragement to do the "right thing" (as is being interpreted on the day 🙂 ).
But, then that would be ebay deciding on behalf of everyone, and outside of the law, what is enforced and what is not, which is treading some murky (if not dangerous) waters, albeit familiar.
on 29-12-2017 09:57 PM
on 29-12-2017 09:59 PM
on 29-12-2017 10:04 PM
@gagmck wrote:
Yes but feedback should be allowed
It is, the transaction goes from your recent purchase history, but it can be accessed via the feedback forum.
Feedback is best when it isn't angry and / or reactionary, so I'd always recommend waiting for a day or two before leaving it, that way it stands a better chance of being calm, factual, and not susceptible for removal if it's important for you that it stay.
As for the other thing... if the seller's actions got you this angry about it, why would you want to do that to someone else, regardless of whether there's any consequences? (I recognise you're probably being facetious, but just thought I'd add that, anyway, on the off-chance you're not).
on 29-12-2017 10:08 PM
on 29-12-2017 10:19 PM
You have already been told that there are consequences for what the seller has done.....you can leave feedback to let others know that they do not follow through with sales.
But just a warning....keep it calm and factual. If you spit the dummy as you have on this thread the seller will probably be able to have it removed.
29-12-2017 10:26 PM - edited 29-12-2017 10:27 PM
@gagmck wrote:
They were not new and it was free postage. The item was worth a lot more but that's why you start at a price you are comfortable with. She actually said to me in a message that she was not going to send it because she thought it would sell for a lot more and it should have covered postage. Not my problem. You post the auction. Deal with your actions. I have sent things before when i forgot to fill in the postage properly and lost out. Not any more. I just won't send and nothing anyone does about it. Ridiculous. This is why the world is turning to **bleep** because there is no consequence for actions and it all starts with getting away with little things like this on eBay and escalates into do what you like because cops can't touch you. Bla bla.
bit of a stretch