Does the new ebay feedback mean anything? What should a seller do?
I have had two recent transactions that leave me rather disdainful about ebay's new feedback policy.
I was the seller in both of the following cases:
1) I had a nonpaying bidder on a $2,000+ coin. After a phone conversation, we decided to initiate a mutual cancellation. Fearing a retaliatory neg, I declined to file a nonpaying bidder notice, and that was that.
2) I just sold a $1,000 coin and the transaction proceeded normally. I got a personal check and waited 10 days for the funds to clear, then I shipped the coin and immediately left a positive feedback.
Now, we are engaged in several emails discussing my mode of shipment - USPS Insured. He wants a tracking number and thinks that every insured shipment has one. I've explained that they only track an insured package if a claim has to be filed, and on, and on....
I'm sure that he will get his coin, either today or tomorrow. But, if he doesn't and a claim has to be filed - I've left a positive and he can neg the crap out of me. In fact, he can neg me just for waiting 10 days for the check to clear - or any other "reason".
What should a seller do? I mean, what should a seller do in ANY transaction, not just the two above examples?
It seems to me that the feedback is pretty bogus at this point in time. Any capricious buyer can play with any seller, for any reason.
I was the seller in both of the following cases:
1) I had a nonpaying bidder on a $2,000+ coin. After a phone conversation, we decided to initiate a mutual cancellation. Fearing a retaliatory neg, I declined to file a nonpaying bidder notice, and that was that.
2) I just sold a $1,000 coin and the transaction proceeded normally. I got a personal check and waited 10 days for the funds to clear, then I shipped the coin and immediately left a positive feedback.
Now, we are engaged in several emails discussing my mode of shipment - USPS Insured. He wants a tracking number and thinks that every insured shipment has one. I've explained that they only track an insured package if a claim has to be filed, and on, and on....
I'm sure that he will get his coin, either today or tomorrow. But, if he doesn't and a claim has to be filed - I've left a positive and he can neg the crap out of me. In fact, he can neg me just for waiting 10 days for the check to clear - or any other "reason".
What should a seller do? I mean, what should a seller do in ANY transaction, not just the two above examples?
It seems to me that the feedback is pretty bogus at this point in time. Any capricious buyer can play with any seller, for any reason.
Q: Are You Printing Money? Bernanke: Not Literally
I knew it would happen.
I knew it would happen.
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<< <i>It seems to me that the feedback is pretty bogus at this point in time. Any capricious buyer can play with any seller, for any reason. >>
I believe that just about sums it up. -Preussen
And, welcome to the new and improved eBay..
Recipient of the coveted "You Suck" award, April 2009 for cherrypicking a 1833 CBHD LM-5, and April 2022 for a 1835 LM-12, and again in Aug 2012 for picking off a 1952 FS-902.
1. Happens to me occasionally, I treat the customer profesionally and cheerfully file the mutual agreement. you'd be suprised how many timess these guys come back and buy if treated well.
2. I've never had one of these guys I couldn't make happy. Have you offered to scan and e-mail the insurance recpt? If you sent with paypal shipping just forward him the shipping recpt. Usually guys requesting this kind of thing have heard too many storied about scammers selling on ebay. He may need proof to show his fishwife who meets him at breakfast every morning with "see, that coin hasn't shown up yet. I told you ebay is full of scammers."
--Jerry
last year my ebay fees were over 12K.
Its not about the fees, its about the feedback..........
<< <i>
2) I just sold a $1,000 coin and the transaction proceeded normally. I got a personal check and waited 10 days for the funds to clear, then I shipped the coin and immediately left a positive feedback.
Now, we are engaged in several emails discussing my mode of shipment - USPS Insured. He wants a tracking number and thinks that every insured shipment has one. I've explained that they only track an insured package if a claim has to be filed, and on, and on....
>>
If you mailed it properly it should always have a tracking number.
<< <i>What should a seller do? >>
Stock up on vaseline.
mo
** I would take a shack on the Rock over a castle in the sand !! **
Don't take life so seriously...nobody gets out alive.
ALL VALLEY COIN AND JEWELRY
28480 B OLD TOWN FRONT ST
TEMECULA, CA 92590
(951) 757-0334
www.allvalleycoinandjewelry.com
<< <i>
<< <i>What should a seller do? >>
Stock up on vaseline.
mo >>
Sit in a corner and wring one's hands?
<< <i>
<< <i>
2) I just sold a $1,000 coin and the transaction proceeded normally. I got a personal check and waited 10 days for the funds to clear, then I shipped the coin and immediately left a positive feedback.
Now, we are engaged in several emails discussing my mode of shipment - USPS Insured. He wants a tracking number and thinks that every insured shipment has one. I've explained that they only track an insured package if a claim has to be filed, and on, and on....
>>
If you mailed it properly it should always have a tracking number. >>
It can be mailed first class(or priority)insured.
Or, it can be mailed first class(or priority)insured (with tracking# for an additional fee).
I do not understand the how the OP improperly mailed his package.
Should I use vaseline for my hands, too? Or can you recommend a good hand lotion?
My point had to do with ebay's worthless feedback system, not my angst over any transaction. My only neg has been from a non-paying bidder who is now NARU'd, but it occurs to me that trying to maintain a positive feedback record is pointless and definitely not worth a second thought.
It's more a concern now when buying, when you stop to think about it.
The point is that ebay tries to make a big deal out of feedback, when it's essentially less than worthless.
I knew it would happen.
As for selling, when I get around to it, I will sell paper money on my site. Just not a priority these days.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
Russ, NCNE
bob
I really hope they take the next step and not allow sellers to leave buyers any feedback at all, good or bad.
Spoken like someone who has no experience selling in any significant way.
I really hope they take the next step and not allow sellers to leave buyers any feedback at all, good or bad.
It actually would make a lot of sense to do that, since the current buyer fb is meaningless anyway. It won't happen though, because Ebay is supposedly trying to protect the fragile self-esteem of their buyers. To make a purchase and not receive positive fb would not be a "positive buying experience", and would cause the buyer to abandon Ebay forever, at least according to Ebay.
That is what a seller can do.
Steve
<< <i>since the current buyer fb is meaningless anyway. >>
That's not true. I know the feedback HAS to be positive, but sellers don't HAVE to leave feedback at all, so if the feedback is there for a buyer, sellers can be somewhat assured that the buyer is a good person to work with. Also, sellers can leave NPB strikes, etc, so no, buyer feedback is not meaningless.
<< <i>I am actually a little glad when I see posts/rants like this as it proves once again that Ebay has made the right decision to not allow bad feedback from sellers.
Spoken like someone who has no experience selling in any significant way. >>
Fundamentally, I happen to agree with him. The feedback system became nothing more than a mechanism for sellers to threaten and intimidate buyers and phoney up their feedback by forcing mutual withdrawals. And, BTW, I have sold a few things.
Russ, NCNE
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
Spoken like someone who has no experience selling in any significant way. >>
Fundamentally, I happen to agree with him. The feedback system became nothing more than a mechanism for sellers to threaten and intimidate buyers and phoney up their feedback by forcing mutual withdrawals. And, BTW, I have sold a few things.
That's a pretty broad idictment of sellers - I don't think that's how YOU use the feedback system, is it? Of course there are bad sellers, as well as bad buyers. My points are 1) Now you can't tell good buyers from bad, and 2) Most sellers have also been buyers. But many buyers are EXCLUSIVELY buyers, and don't have experience on the other side of the counter. Some of them love the new system that allows them to behave as badly as they want to, and not get dinged for it. Having said that, I think it's a small minority. But they can still hurt an honest seller's reputation.
I am a smal buyer on the bay and don't play in the league you folks do but I pride myself on my feedback (as a buyer).
I basically think it is just wrong.........down to fundamentally wrong, that a seller can NOT leave an honest feedback. If that is a neg........then that's what it is.
Now I, as a small time buyer, may not even get any feedback when I buy something. So I think the new system is wrong for me also.
1-Dammit Boy Oct 14,2003
International Coins
"A work in progress"
Wayne
eBay registered name:
Hard_ Search (buyer/bidder, a small time seller)
e-mail: wayne.whatley@gmail.com
<< <i>That's a pretty broad idictment of sellers - I don't think that's how YOU use the feedback system, is it? >>
I've never done a mutual withdrawal. Ever.
There's a coin seller who was showing 100% feedback. My feedback is 99.9%. His feedback was phonied up because he retaliated and publically threatened lawsuits against his buyers, and forced 60 mutual withdrawals. His was fake, mine is real. Now his will be real. And, there are plenty of sellers just like him.
Russ, NCNE
<< <i>Now you can't tell good buyers from bad, >>
You've said that twice now, but have yet to give any reason for why you think that. I'll repeat what I said before: "I know the feedback HAS to be positive, but sellers don't HAVE to leave feedback at all, so if the feedback is there for a buyer, sellers can be somewhat assured that the buyer is a good person to work with."
Neither have I, and I'm not in any way accusing you of that behavior.
There's a coin seller who was showing 100% feedback. My feedback is 99.9%. His feedback was phonied up because he retaliated and publically threatened lawsuits against his buyers, and forced 60 mutual withdrawals. His was fake, mine is real. Now his will be real. And, there are plenty of sellers just like him.
Russ, NCNE
That's pathetic, and it just shows how negligent Ebay is at policing it's site. At least of few of those buyers must have complained, and yet someone like that is allowed to continue to do business there. But does Ebay really have to rely on feedback and DSR's to ban crooks from selling?
You've said that twice now, but have yet to give any reason for why you think that. I'll repeat what I said before: "I know the feedback HAS to be positive, but sellers don't HAVE to leave feedback at all, so if the feedback is there for a buyer, sellers can be somewhat assured that the buyer is a good person to work with."
Every buyer's feedback will be 100% positive, whether every seller he's dealt with has left feedback for him, or only 1% of those sellers have.
<< <i>Every buyer's feedback will be 100% positive, whether every seller he's dealt with has left feedback for him, or only 1% of those sellers have. >>
In theory you're right. In practice, however, at least a few of those 99% of people who didn't leave him a feedback would complain to eBay and that buyer would be suspended.
<< <i>Every buyer's feedback will be 100% positive, whether every seller he's dealt with has left feedback for him, or only 1% of those sellers have. >>
And every buyer's feedback left for others will be visible for any seller to see.
Russ, NCNE
In theory you're right. In practice, however, at least a few of those 99% of people who didn't leave him a feedback would complain to eBay and that buyer would be suspended.
Hopefully you're right, but I'm a little doubtful, especially when you consider situations like Russ mentioned in his post.
"In theory you're right. In practice, however, at least a few of those 99% of people who didn't leave him a feedback would complain to eBay and that buyer would be suspended. "
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At this point, EBAY is much more likely to suspend sellers for complaining about SCUMMY buyers,
than they are to dump the SCUMMY buyers.
I have thousands of transactions. Never left/rcd a NEG/NEUT in any account selling collectibles.
Bad buyers are totally out of control in MANY categories. Happily, collectible buyers are among
the best EBAYers. In designer-fashion and electronics, it is open season on sellers; scamsters
are running wild, since May 19.
The ONLY defense sellers now have is to examine the FB left for others by bidders. If they
are NEG/NEUT happy, their bids can be cancelled and they can be blocked.
Sometime in July, categorized lists will be available for rent/sale. They will note buyers who
have left NEGS/NEUTS; such folks will be blocked by many sellers.
<< <i>What should a seller do? The same thing they've always done. Take good care of their customers.
Russ, NCNE >>
Words of wisdom.
You can't please everyone but if you treat everyone well most will be very satisfied and comeback.
<< <i>Happily, collectible buyers are among
the best EBAYers. >>
This is very true. Collectibles in general tends to be genteel categories compared to some others that are just flat brutal. DVD's and games, for example, are crawling with trigger happy idiots.
Russ, NCNE
the best EBAYers. >>
This is very true. Collectibles in general tends to be genteel categories compared to some others that are just flat brutal. DVD's and games, for example, are crawling with trigger happy idiots.
I haven't sold in those other categories, but I agree that most of the coin buyers I've dealt with have been top notch. I would speculate that maybe the problems in DVD's and games are due to the age and transient nature of those buyers, with a few Far East sellers thrown into the mix.