Learned a lesson today.....
Never bid on an EBAY auction that doesn't have a listed shipping price. I won an auction for a three coin modern comm set which cost roughly $180. The auction said the shipping figure would be emailed. The shipping turned out to be $15.50! $15 f'ing 50 for shipping a $180 item. I have won $20 gold double eagles and not paid that much for insured shipping. Can you say fee advoidance? Needless to say I am not paying that.
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Comments
Russ, NCNE
<< <i>I stumbled across the auction with less about 3 minutes left. I didn't notice the lack of shipping until after the auction was over. >>
And your upset about what? Regardless of the time left in an auction, It's YOUR responsibility to find out the particulars BEFORE you bid, not after.
This is exactly why e-Bay has to come up with rule after rule, to protect buyers from themselves.
<< <i>Needless to say I am not paying that. >>
You deserve all the negative feedback you will surely get.
"I has a bucket." - Minazo.
Minazo the LOLRUS, 1994-2005
<< <i> Needless to say I am not paying that. >>
i'm not siding with the seller as I agree that this is too high an by not disclosing it they are purposely planning to charge high shipping and pad the sale price. Probably more padding than fee avoidance. But i bet you end up paying it or close to it. Buy from reputable sellers who disclose shipping. --jerry
Excellent point to remember.
WTB: Barber Quarters XF
<< <i>any shipping charge ending in a ".95" is not legit...it's inflated. >>
If you pay me by check or money order, I charge $1.95 for insured shipping to US and Canada addresses. I'm curious- how, exactly, would that be considered "inflated"?
Welcome to the school of Hard Knocks!
Just pay your tuition and move along..................
The name is LEE!
<< <i> that ticks me off the most: any shipping charge ending in a ".95" is not legit...it's inflated. >>
As a seller I know I can't make all the people happy all the time but I thought I'd pursue this a little further. It is a longstanding business practice to end prices in .99 or .95 to make them seem lower to the buyer. Most if not all of my competition on ebay does this and so do I. So you're saying you'd rather see $5 for shipping rather than $4.95?
If he wants these real costs put in the sale price of the item rather than shipping I say that he must be an ebay stockholder and wants them to get an adder on sellers' handling costs.
--jerry
I always check the shipping before I bid
You sound very much like the guy that sent me this ebay question last night....
<<Why do all the other bidders have an *** in their names? They arnt shill biiders are they?>>
Bidders that go off half baked on ebay without knowing what they are talking about are the biggest pain to sellers. Because of people like that I send all my packages priority, signature confirmation, insured. I sold a coin last night that sold for $304. and charged $9.25 for shipping, my actual cost......$11.85
Thats one reason I don't calculate the postage because, true, it comes out correctly, but it doesn't take into account the fee's associated with PayPal which a lot of bidders and buyers expect!
The name is LEE!
<< <i>any shipping charge ending in a ".95" is not legit...it's inflated. >>
I will immediately lower mine to ".94".
Russ, NCNE
That "long standing business practice" is a marketing trick to get people to buy something. Why not just charge what the actually shipping is? Why do you have to trick them? I'm not talking to this one particular individual, I'm talking to everybody. I don't charge for "gas" and "my time driving to the post office." Anytime you upcharge on shipping, it's dishonest. There are no ifs ands or buts about it. Black and White.
And yes, not everything that ends in .95 is inflated (flat rate boxes). I was making a generalization and as we all know, "All generalizations are false, including this one."
<< <i>And yes, not everything that ends in .95 is inflated >>
All my shipping amounts end in ".95", and year to date I'm in the red on shipping to the tune of $1238.17. In case you don't know what in the red means, I've paid out $1238.17 more in shipping expenses then I've received in shipping charges.
Russ, NCNE
I always ship free and insurance too.
but that just me... the sale price is usually way more than necessary to cover shipping.
i'm just one that doesn't feel it necessary to turn a buck on every turn of the crank!
then again ...i don't really sell that much.
Russ, NCNE
Exactly! Man up and move on.
Shipping was listed as $5.40 with insurance included for any amount, one or all. He then tried to charge me $54 to ship them all. We went around and around with him threatening feedback retaliation. I had to get eBay involved and he finally got very reasonable when they contacted him. I agreed that he couldn't ship all of them at that price with the weight around 7+ pounds plus insurance but that was what he listed. I let him off the hook and paid him the exact shipping costs, around $19 or so. The real hassle was that it took nearly a month to finally receive them after all the emails and squabbling. We both gave positive feedback after all was said and done.
This is a perfect example of why I should have contacted him first regarding buying the entire lot.
Aways check shipping before bidding. In this case, even though it was listed, I knew it was way too low. A quick message to him could have saved all the extra work. Ounce of prevention and all that, you know.
John Marnard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace, 1920, page 235ff