on 06-01-2013 11:34 AM
As a store holder, it can be quiet frustrating having all these watches and not been able to communicate with them.
An example of what I mean;
I have on average 50++ watches, as it's Ebay’s rules and regulations that they cannot disclose the customers (watchers) Ebay user ID so I’m unable to ask the customer (watcher), if they need any assistance.
I would like to treat my customers (watches), like a customer walking into my shop and they start browsing (watching) and I ask them if they need any help. On some occasions they are just happy to browse but in other instances they are more than happy to accept your help. In the end the customer is happy as they received the service that they deserve along with their item(s) and the shop is happy as they received a sale.
My point is I would very much like to assist my customers (watches), however Ebay makes this quiet difficult.
Just wondering if there are any fellow store holders that share the same frustration.
Your comments, would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you 🙂
on 06-01-2013 02:54 PM
Unsolicited contact may be viewed as spamming.
I was looking through some eBay pages and found the following that may apply here
http://pages.ebay.com.au/help/policies/rfe-spam-ov.html
Now I know you are just wanting to the best by your potential customers who place your item on their watch list, but being able to contact watchers would be abused by many sellers if it were available.
It may also mean that sellers organise "off-eBay" sales which would undermine the viability of eBay should it start to lose profits through fee evasion.
on 06-01-2013 03:18 PM
I love my anonymous watchers - I have loads of them too :-x:-x:-x
I betcha I would have a lot fewer watchers, if I could view their ids or send them a message spruking my items. A change like that would make me very frustrated as a seller and as a buyer X-(
Yeah, I'd probably end up doing that too. One time I had about 13 watchers but only one bid.
on 06-01-2013 04:21 PM
I have actually brough 5 or 6 watches from ebay in the last few months.
and i too , watch several items at the same time, firstly it puts it on my list so i dont have to search for it again.
secondly, the way ebay is, and has recently been brought to my attention, there is no point ( infact it can be detrimental to you if you do ) in placing an early bid , well except to make it become an active bid on auction. As with the withdrawrall of a bid, it can make you become the highest bidder again, after you think you are out of an auction and have moved on to bid on the same item with someone else, potentially making you liable to buy 2 of the same thing.
so i will watch everything i am interested in, and place the majority of my bids in the last minute of an auction if not the last seconds.
and you will find the majority of your watchers are waiting to the last possible moment, to bid, if the price doesnt go beyond what they are prepared to pay.
if you have an auction running for 5 days you can bet only 5% of the action happening on your item happens in the first 4 days and 23 hours and 30 minutes , 95% of the action will happen in the last minutes
on 06-01-2013 06:43 PM
if you have an auction running for 5 days you can bet only 5% of the action happening on your item happens in the first 4 days and 23 hours and 30 minutes , 95% of the action will happen in the last minutes
In the majority of cases, you're probably right. There are always exceptions, though. There's one very successful seller who gets bids typically with days to go on alot of their items, which usually sell for more than they're generally worth as far as the median price. It's good if you can get to that stage as far as having a perceived high standard and likability across most of your listings.
on 06-01-2013 10:12 PM
And that only applies to auctions. As the OP has a store, I imagine the bulk of their listings are BIN.
on 06-01-2013 10:42 PM
And that only applies to auctions. As the OP has a store, I imagine the bulk of their listings are BIN.
True. To get those watchers actively participating in a BIN, it might be a good idea to add Best Offer if not already added. Even if it's below their ideal price, they can still make an offer. If some people think it might be gone soon because of all of the offers, it can have a similar effect to a bidding frenzy on an auction and someone might snap up the BIN price. That happened to me once when I was trying to get something cheap and it was gone moments later.
on 04-02-2013 05:54 PM
I watch many things I never bid on, like when I am interested in a item and start looking I will add all the items I am interested in to my watch list and then go through that to work out which one is the best value for money, seller location, seller feedback, best item description with the least terms & conditions and then buy, the rejected items remain in my watch list untill ebay removes them;-)
If a seller re lists that can be a very long time 😉
on 04-02-2013 09:08 PM
If I walk into a B&M shop, and even before i have a time to look what they sell, I am accosted by several members of their staff trying to "help", i am out of there....
If eBay sellers would would be able to contact me just because I put something on my watch list, I would be seriously not pleased 🙂
on 04-02-2013 09:18 PM
I agree with super_nova, but you don't have to put them on your watch list.. If you want to save things to buy later you can make a new list and add them to that...
For example, I buy Magic the Gathering cards and I am often looking at multiple lots of cards at one time; so I just made a list called "Magic" and add them to that
on 04-02-2013 09:30 PM
i find watchers annoying it doesnt usally result in sales