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why not use buy it now or say "advertised locally for £500, Right to end early"
Oh yes. One of my real pet hates is people asking 'how much?' when I have an auction. My reply is usually rather blunt!
Quote from: V8MoneyPit on July 17, 2008, 10:50:37Oh yes. One of my real pet hates is people asking 'how much?' when I have an auction. My reply is usually rather blunt!Why ?? I am more than happy to let prospective bidders who ask what my reserve is - that way, they know if it likely to be in their price range or not, and will weed out the pointless watchers/lurkersIf they want to make me an offer then that's fine too - before listing anything I know how much I will be happy to accept for an itemThere are far too many idiots on ebay to knock back offers you are happy with to then run the risk of the item not sellingEbay has long since stopped being an auction site and become no more than a shop window
I listed a car trailer that I bought with an over optimistic description. I listed it with a very thorough description that was very pessimistic. I was only expecting a few hundered quid but it sold for £570 over £120 more than I paid for it and the buyer was v.happy. So it goes to show that honesty is still a good policy.Also the "everyone else is doing it so if I dont I loose out" routine is whats making this country go to hell. I am allways honest always give 150% to my work and I like to think thats why im doing ok, other people who do the bare minimum (or less), expect everyone else to be a crook and only want to pay the minimum for anything are driving the words quality and integrity form the language.
You can accept an offer and still play by the rulesThere is (or was ?) a way of sending an individual a BIN option which obviously went through the ebay systemMust admit I have not used it for a while so it may have been withdrawn by now
Quote from: v8kenny on July 17, 2008, 19:10:36You can accept an offer and still play by the rulesThere is (or was ?) a way of sending an individual a BIN option which obviously went through the ebay systemMust admit I have not used it for a while so it may have been withdrawn by nowI've not seen that one. You may well be right. I'm just not aware of it.
I would also like you to explain what is dishonest about accepting an offer for goods that are being sold ?
the rules our silly have to admit . u find a rare part bid then next day auction over or its silly money for stuff at times
....... But i always put in the Auction advertised else were but then ebay being them decided they dont like this no more.
I think the problem with ebay is it has lost all credibility - there are far too many scammers and con men on it these daysAlso, between listing fees, final value fees and paypal fees it aint cheap to sell larger items
Can everyone who has commented on this post HONESTLY say that if they had a car listed and a viewer arrived and offered £100 over what you expected to get for the car in hard cash, on the spot, that you would turn them down ?
About 18 months ago, I put my SeriesII V8 on eBay. I'd bought it privately for £400, did a bit of tiding up (not a lot) and stuck it on eBay at 99p, no reserve.I was expecting £1,500. Someone offered me £1,500 but I said no, thanks. He then came back with £2,300 cash and would I stop the auction.I had to think about it for roughly three seconds.......... :lol:EBay fees are too high, so I will not lose any sleep over them missing out on a few quid.
So what you are saying is that you are happy to use their services, as long as you don't have to pay for them. I have to agree with Carbore: that kind of behaviour equals to a breach of contract, and is at the very least, inmoral.Also, I find it quite funny that most of the people who complain about ebay's fees, services, etc... are the ones who gladly admit they are willing to defraud it. Me, cynical as I am, would say that the aforementioned people are actually guilty of ruining ebay for those of us who play by the rules.
EBay have made hundreds from me over the years so, no, I will not lose sleep over it! Anyway, it costs money to list something so they are making money from you anyway.
If you use it then do so legally and not with intent to commit fraud.
QuoteIf you use it then do so legally and not with intent to commit fraud.You're missing the point a bit Redhand.In an auction, the item is your until the hammer falls. Before that, you can sell it else where, keep it, or take it outside and set fire to it.Take house auctions: it always says 'for sale by auction, unless sold beforehand' or some such like.EBay have stuck in a rule, which is to their benefit, and their benefit only (it might even be illegal...?) which says you cannot do with your property as you wish, because they might lose out on some money. If you are happy with that then fine: most people aren't.