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on 03-04-2015 12:37 PM
great news
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03-04-2015 01:22 PM - edited 03-04-2015 01:22 PM
It's not often that I have anything nice to say about eBay, but on this occasion I really have no choice, because not only have they removed the buyer's neg from your feedback, they've also removed the buyer, who is now NARU. Kudos to eBay for a change.
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on 03-04-2015 08:59 PM
wow this buyer really is vindictive. just got notification that my request for revision of feedback which I sent prior to further investigation their serial negs tendency was declined. interesting they must have got their account reinstated.
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on 03-04-2015 09:27 PM
So glad they removed your neg!
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03-04-2015 11:14 PM - edited 03-04-2015 11:15 PM
Look at my feedback from buyers. You cant see the names of the buyers who left it - ebay puts stars in their names to block them out, e.g G***X.
If you type the name of the buyer into your reply, when replying to their negative feedback, other sellers will be able to see who they are, and also block them.
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on 04-04-2015 12:21 AM
@lotsamagsnbags wrote:how do you check how a particular buyer has marked your dsrs low?
If i understand your question right? Hover over account tab on selling/sold page >>>>>> click seller dashboard >>>>>>>click % of your transactions had defects >>>>>>>underneath all of % data lists in small letter font >>>>>>>>download a report >>>>>> takes you to sign in, once signed in >>>>>>>>> click expand
Hopefully that is what you meant?
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04-04-2015 03:55 AM - edited 04-04-2015 03:56 AM
If you want to find out exactly what DSRs you've received from a buyer, you first need to find 10 previous feedbacks where you have received 5 stars for each category. You do this by going to your Seller Dashboard and running Detailed seller ratings reports (in the left column) in the "Item Numbers" mode, and creating reports by entering 10 item numbers at a time until you find 10 numbers where you have received 5 stars for all of them. This is very time consuming and can take quite a while before you find 10 numbers which have had all 4 categories marked with 5 stars (some buyers don't score DSRs at all).
When you do, save them to a separate file because from now on you'll use these particular numbers to check individual new item numbers from buyers, one at a time. To see what a buyer has given you, create a new report using 9 of the known perfect numbers, and the new number, and when the report is created, check the average DSRs. If your new buyer has given you all 5s then the average will be 5 for the entire 10 numbers.
However, if he's marked you down in any categories, the average will be less than 5, so you then open the results and you will immediately see exactly which score you've been given for each specific category. The only proviso is that you wait until about 24 hours after feedback has been left to give the system time to catch up, or the number may not yet be in the system.
Don't forget that you have to run one report for each new item number you receive, otherwise the results may be skewed, especially if more than one item has been scored at less than 5 in one or more categories. Also, it can sometimes take several minutes for a report to be created, so you need to be patient.
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on 04-04-2015 09:24 AM
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on 04-04-2015 09:36 AM
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on 04-04-2015 03:44 PM
Just to add to what CQ wrote, instead of saving those numbers to a file, when you have your 10 perfect scores, next to the results there is a drop down. Select run similar. That will open those numbers back up and you only have to rename and then add the new item number to the end. I find that usually once you've run a second report, the first one is ready to be read. If it comes up as saying no results (instead of completed), they either didn't rate your stars at all, or they didn't rate all of them. Once you've finished checking all your numbers, you can delete them all except the one you know is a perfect score....ready for next time.
I used to just name them with a number, like between 1 and 10, but now I use the last 4 digits of the item number I'm checking. I do that because when I do check, I could be running 20 reports. It allows me to see at a glance which item number marked my stars down. I discovered last week that a buyer marked me down on all 4 stars, despite posting within an hour of payment, despite communicating with him, despite charging exact postage (instead of having the fees added into the postage cost) and as far as I knew, the item was as described. I guess some people never leave 5 for anything, regardless of how good your service is.
I know people probably think I'm crazy running reports to see who gave what, but depending on the stars they left, depends on whether they get good feedback, great feedback, or none at all. Plus, it gives me something to do when I get home from work in the middle of the night!
My poor stars are looking sad at the moment. They are all missing their right arm thanks to matey the other day. I was proud of all my stars being a 5.