Whats your success rate with counter offers?

Mine have bin 10% Go, 80% NO! 10% No response.
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- Marcus Tullius Cicero, 106-43 BC
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BTW first offers were at about 80% of the listed retail price of the items.
counter-offers in ALL venues for me have an extremely low success rate if you mean my counter to someone's offer, so technically my counter is a re-counter since their counter is to my original ask price
initially i accept a decent percentage of offers lower than my asking price, but when my counter comes, whoo, can't have that L-O-L
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There is one note I put in a counter offer on about six months ago. It was a very reasonable offer. It was turned down. The note continues to be listed over and over again at the same price and never sells.
This type of item is hurting eBay since it just creates clutter on the site.
I guess tokens are not popular right now???
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As a seller, I've received offers all over the range but in all cases I appreicate the offers, even those I consider way too low, and I consider it free market info that is given to me. I also take those offers as an opportunity to counter and in the counteroffer I explain why I think it's worth much more and sometimes I'm able to make a deal happen.
Probably 1/3 of the sales I've done on eBay are when people just hit buy it now, the other 2/3 or so have come through the best offer process. Some at near the full price, some much lower.
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At shows I sell at retail only as I am there mainly to buy good deals. I may take say 10% below market retail but thats it. If they won't pay the money then they can go away. I make a lot of money buying deals at shows and then flipping them or retailing the nicer stuff and have done well on some crackout upgrades (stuff offered to me at shows which I purchased, cracked out for higher grade, uptick in grade results in more money) which can be where the most serious money in numismatics can be made and which of course has the highest risk.
A counter offer say to meet a buyer halfway can be successful assuming the original offer was not some outlandish low ball amount. I have found the people offering low amounts to start off with are not really worth fooling with. I recently sold a coin as a show for $375 which I offered to the buyer at $400 (CW Market Price) and he offered $350. I counterffered at $375 and he accepted. I had $233 in it and made good retail money.
Example: You offer a guy a coin for $495 (CW values is $525). and you have $350 in it. The buyer counteroffers at $400 a rather lowball offer. You decide to ounteroffer at $450 "this is my best price, I operate on a narrow spread" and he accepts. The $100 you made on the coin is not that bad of a deal as you only had it a couple of months. Don't let them manipulate you with a greysheet as in many instances this is nothing more than a wish list. I have had people pull out their smart phone telling me "well it want for auction x at such and such." I just tell them "well maybe you should go bid in that auction then" or "do you have one you want to sell me at that."
Lets say you have a really nice 1882-CC MS65 dollar in your case at a show and a big gun national dealer (who is known as a sharp grader) is highly interested in it. Do you offer it to him at CDN ask? NO - his interested could be a red flag he spots a crackout and easy upgrade - big money for him. You may want to do a pump fake and simply tell him "its for a customer" and put it away as soon as he leaves. Then when you have a chance you can take a look at it and see if it is possibly undergraded with upgrade potential. He is probably not there to buy it because he thinks its pretty.
Example: You offer a guy a coin for $495 (CW values is $525). and you have $350 in it. The buyer counteroffers at $400 a rather lowball offer. You decide to ounteroffer at $450 "this is my best price, I operate on a narrow spread" and he accepts. The $100 you made on the coin is not that bad of a deal as you only had it a couple of months. Don't let them manipulate you with a greysheet as in many instances this is nothing more than a wish list. I have had people pull out their smart phone telling me "well it want for auction x at such and such." I just tell them "well maybe you should go bid in that auction then" or "do you have one you want to sell me at that."
400 is the new retail. lol
The problem is a large percent of buyers out there know you have given a max high of 350 on the item to as low as 100 bucks for it. They are not to concerned with CW trends.
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