I think you should also be targetting PayPal as well.  When I sell an item I am advised by PayPal of the address to send the item to.


 



No you're not.. The address you get given is the buyers registered eBay address; it shows on the PayPal invoice but the address is actually your default postage address in eBay.. 




The address from Paypal is the address that the Buyer has provided as the delivery address for that particular order. It does not have to be your default postage address on ebay. It can be any address you choose to enter when you go through checkout.



I think you should also be targetting PayPal as well.  When I sell an item I am advised by PayPal of the address to send the item to.  I always address the item exactly as it appears in the PayPal advice.  This includes the use of lower case for names and the inclusion of capital city on addresses to capital city suburbs e.g. "Springvale Melbourne" or "Petersham Sydney".


 


The eparcel system will not accept this format - it has to be entered the exact way that Australia Post recommend. If the postcode doesn't match the suburb it will also not accept that.



We have to correct approximately 25% of buyers addresses where there are errors in either or both of the suburb and postcodes. It is no wonder so many parcels goes astray with so many buyers not even knowing what their postcode is.



The eparcel system doesn't correct street names so it makes you wonder how many buyers have those details incorrect as well.






The eparcel system will not accept this format - it has to be entered the exact way that Australia Post recommend. If the postcode doesn't match the suburb it will also not accept that.



 


For those that use eparcel this would be a nuisance, but many of us that are casual sellers do not use eparcel or click and send.  I know many casual sellers do use C&S, but many do not.


 


I hand write all of my satchels, envelopes and boxes.  This means that casual sellers like me can address their items exactly the way the address appears on the PayPal advice with the address to be sent to supplied by the buyer.  I do usually write the capital city in smaller print to avoid confusion, but I have met my PayPal obligation by addressing it exactly as it appears on the payment advice.

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"if a story doesn't make sense . . . . then it is not true" - Judge Judy

I use a label printer, and take the trouble to correct every address that needs it ... we capitalise first letters, we remove city names where there is a suburb, we replace the ebay generated state with the abbreviatiins and capitalise the last line ... so everything is in line with Oz post. We also cross check postcodes where we have anydoubt.



Yes its a bit of extra wjork, but since we started doing this our delivery times have significantly improved.

I can't understand why anybody would use standard satchels when C&S is cheaper and safer. As long as you have a printer and are prepared to spend $1.25 for stock.



A big advantage, as said above, is that you can't put a non-compliant address in. Apart from the suburb/city I've had incorrect postcodes, wrong suburb (and that was to a business address. Luckily the business knew where they are located, according to their website, anyway), so regardless of Paypal I prefer to send goods to where the buyer is, rather than where they think they are.


 


For those that use eparcel this would be a nuisance, but many of us that are casual sellers do not use eparcel or click and send.  I know many casual sellers do use C&S, but many do not.


 


I hand write all of my satchels, envelopes and boxes.  This means that casual sellers like me can address their items exactly the way the address appears on the PayPal advice with the address to be sent to supplied by the buyer.  I do usually write the capital city in smaller print to avoid confusion, but I have met my PayPal obligation by addressing it exactly as it appears on the payment advice.



 


Unless you register every single one of those parcels it makes no difference anyway.


Meeting the PP address guideline won't matter if you can't provide proof of shipment.