on 03-08-2022 12:17 PM
Selling limits are designed to help us grow our business in a manageable way and ensure us can give our buyers great service. As we get more comfortable meeting buyer demand, eBay will increase our limit.
eBay review our account every month and adjust the limits automatically based on our volume of sales and the Feedback we've received from buyers.
In addition to this, are there any other good ways to increase the selling limits?
Thank you all in advance.
You have over 1,000 listings at the moment, but the amount of negs and neutrals are doing you no favours at all, and your DSR's on description are not good at all.
Perhaps have a look at what your selling and get rid of the low-priced junk, or the listings that are causing problems for you.
@celestialinter0,
I didn't look through all of your items, but what I saw was unbranded/generic. In particular, that blood pressure arm monitor...? Not something I would ever recommend; health is too serious an issue, and people need to be sure that such equipment meets TGA's standards. If I were you, I would cease selling that item immediately.
For the rest, you have a pleasant way of responding to feedback... Better lines of stock would be useful.
Best of luck.
I agree. I wouldn't trust my health with any of those el cheapo items. Especially a $40 - $70 so called smart watch, that apparently does everything a $1,000 smart watch does.
I guess the big glossy photos and the large font makes them sound superb. Then if you search for "blood pressure" on the OP's items, the top item shows a doctor in the photo. That must make it legit for a $24 BP machine!
Some of their items look good, but they really need to ditch the junk.
It would have an ARTG number...
It is worrying when sellers on eBay just merrily list medical devices that should be approved for use in Australia and have an ARTG number - but which don't.
Lots of information, celestialinter0 and anyone else interested in this, on this page: https://www.tga.gov.au/community-qa/buying-medical-devices
In particular,
Unless a specific exemption has been granted, it is a criminal offence under the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989 to import into, supply in or export from Australia, a medical device that has not been entered onto the ARTG. |