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The State of eBay
I troll ebay strictly for pennants and have done so pretty religiously for the past 10+ years. It used to be like shooting fish in a barrel, to the point I was spending way more money than my wife was comfortable with. There was just that much good stuff. But that all seemed to change during Covid.
I think the number of eBay trolls (this a term of endearment, not a critique) increased exponentially during lockdown and has never reverted back to the good old days when it was just me...and maybe one or two other guys. There was still plenty of good stuff, but you had to be quick on the draw to get it. Annoying for sure but not hopeless. Fast forward to today and eBay is dead. I can go hours without searching and still only find a handful of new listings when I go back. And the good stuff has largely diseappeared, replaced by a never ending supply of cheap, redundant, modern garbage. Even when I check the sold listings, I rarely find things I'm disappointed to have missed. Are other areas of collecting experiencing this as well? Are people not selling any more? If they are...Where? |
I do a lot of collecting on different Facebook groups or on here through Net54. That’s where the quality at scale is in my eyes. Shows are another good place to find good cards.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
noone wants to pay taxes on their sales.
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EDIT to add: They sent me an email yesterday saying they are going to change all my shipping fees to whatever they believe the price would be if I buy shipping from them. They said I can opt out for one month. Seems they are trying to force everyone to purchase shipping through them. |
Sometimes you get lucky, but for the most part, I call it the Card Museum. Museum cards, museum prices.
I also know lot of sellers list their cards to attract offers, but then work outside Ebay to sell cards. Can you imagine the uproar if Ebay charged members to list things? OMG |
I don't believe eBay will ever be what it was for the simple reason that stuff gets "collected up" over the years and by the time it comes back onto the market it's in a collection deemed valuable enough by auction houses to go into a catalog. For many years I made a living, more or less, off of bottom-feeding on eBay and selling at shows. Of course, I always had plenty of competition for the good stuff, but it felt like there was always plenty to go around. It helped that I had a niche--D.C. sports--that few others cared about (or knew the true market for), but still, it was amazing how easy it all seemed as long as you didn't mind spending a few hours a day scouring a ton of eBay bookmarks and then humping stuff on the road on the weekends. It sure beat having a real job, I figured! That all changed starting about ten years ago when eBay started squeezing sellers for more of their profits, resulting in fewer of them (duh!), and I also think that America's attics and basements began to be depleted of many kinds of things as word got around of their value. I can't tell you how many things I used to see with some regularity in the good old days that I will now realize it's been years since the last one surfaced. I'm retired now, but I still scan a few listings a day out of nostalgia and rarely see anything interesting anymore. And if there is something cool, it's usually wildly overpriced. Oh well, it was great while it lasted...
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It's a combination of things including, but not limited to these:
less sellers on eBay due to the 1099-K thresholds depending on their state more sellers going thru facebook groups, FB marketplace, etc,... more sellers consigning to auction houses more sellers setting up at local shows and/or regional shows However, for what you collect, Rob, local or regional shows really no longer seem to have much football memorabilia. :( |
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Facebook Marketplace is frustrating. First, there's not a ton of stuff out there and when there is, there's a 75% chance the seller won't ship. Thought I found a pennant on there a couple weeks ago and the guy was willing to ship, but wanted to cash only. I haven't been ripped off on marketplace yet, but I'm not ready to start mailing cash. |
ebay
I understand the complaints,
but I still say where can a collector go at anytime of the day or night and find for ex. - multiple Goudey cards of Ott, Foxx, Grove, etc., 52T high #s, thousands of Mantles, etc.....its ebay... yea it sucks with shipping and fees and the occasional rip off or shady dealer, but until another site can do it better...Im still going on three or four times a day...looking for " stuff" |
It's a feature, and we can debate just how buggy it is.
By its very nature, stuff that is over-priced will malinger for ages. Stuff that is correctly priced will get snapped up pretty quick. Auctions only last for 7-10 days, so even those are over pretty quick, and therefore the window where that specific item is available is pretty limited. It also doesn't help that one of the biggest former eBay auction operators is now off the platform (PWCC), which dramatically reduces the number of items sold by the auction format. Bottom line is that as a result of these dynamics, coupled with some others mentioned earlier, most of the time when you check eBay, you're going to see the same overpriced stuff. And it will keep annoying you every time you see it. Blink and you might miss anything else that isn't tragically overpriced, as if it was never really even there. |
Ebay has become a terrible venue for sellers across all categories, not just vintage baseball . The categories have been destroyed and ebay is basically a word search site. Sellers are treated poorly unless you are a giant seller then even shill bidding and dishonest behavior is winked at. Buyers have all the rights and the seller has none. Buyers are allowed to remove their bid on an auction. WOW.
Negative feedback is permitted by buyers only. I typically offer 14 day returns which is plenty of time to determine whether someone wants the item. Ebay gives them an additional 14 days to ship the item back making the 14 days really 28 . None of that means anything as ebay has a 30 day return policy that includes free return shipping ebay forces the seller to pay even if your item states buyer pays for return shipping. In addition to ebays 30 day free pass allows the buyer an additional 30 days to return the item . All the buyer has to do is hit the right button claiming inaccurate website description. Big dealers may list 100's of items at inflated prices. Most people just bypass ebay and go to the big dealers website whether that seller is Clean Sweep, Tony E Trade or others. I sell legacy parts for businesses I am in a few baseball items and various odd stuff. The baseball items never get returned. Legacy parts never get returned. My spring cleaning stuff like old anything that works fine like electronic equipment or a designer scarf or shoes from my wife is all subjected to unfair buyers whose remorse returns are forced on sellers and the policy does not cost ebay 1 penny. All this and I offer returns . I can imagine the sellers not offering returns how mad they must be when ebay overrides their policy |
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I've read Net54 for a long time, but it wasn't until the prices and amount of bidders on EBay got crazy that I decided to join up here. Being able to see the pictures hosted locally after joining is a nice perk.
I wanted to get in on that "How much you want if you're selling outside of EBay?" action. |
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According to eBay: "...Starting May 15, 2024, your listings with calculated shipping will default to show eBay discounted shipping rates. By filling out this form by May 13, 2024, you are confirming that you would like to be excluded from this change... |
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Covid changed the whole price landscape throughout virtually any type of collectable. Sellers are still selling but at crazy prices. I'm just thankful I have what I have and purchased at reasonable prices "back in the day". Just like my house which has shot up price wise as well..
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If you offer a flat rate shipping cost or free shipping, you're not impacted. |
I've been selling on eBay for 21 years and have seen the changes. When I first started, eBay made Sellers feel wanted. If you had a question, you could easily pick up the phone and speak to someone who speaks English. If you had a bad Buyer, you were able to leave negative feedback. Seller fees were reasonable. Buyers were not taxed. The only competition out there were just other Sellers with a small business trying to make an extra buck.
Today, all of that is gone. The fun in selling is gone. eBay makes my life miserable. I have done over 7 figures in sales, yet I am treated like I do not exist. I am a 1 man company but can no longer compete with companies that are fully staffed plus plenty of dough to run their business. They list thousands of cards while small companies like mine can only list about a dozen per day. The rising eBay fees and postage rates take most of your profit. Whatever is left, Uncle Sam takes a bite. eBay is flooded with modern cards. Difficult to find vintage cards to sell. They are just hard to find and are priced too high. Yes, eBay has changed and not for the better. I had a good run but will be closing shop in the next month or two. |
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By the time 2020-2021 rolled around I had a good amount of regret not chasing down some of the "bigger" names I was holding out on. That said, it was nice to finally get rid of a ton of junk wax graded that had been sitting around for decades. That helped take the sting out of the explosive prices and new auction competition for my buying. |
I see a few cards (lately vintage hockey to finish sets) i am interested in once in a while, but if half decent i cannot win an auction no matter how strong i feel i am bidding. I will no longer waste my time bidding on stuff. I think it’s made up auctions, not real sellers on the vintage stuff on EBAY.
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Buyers were not taxed.
Note to Howard *and others* having owned a store at one point in my life and as someone who does appreciate having LCS (Local card stores) nearby, I'm actually in favor of the taxes being charged. It levels the playing field to some extent and EBay does take care of computing taxes for the buyers and sellers. Rich |
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What about the vault-dwellers? |
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Is there a single vault in a place that is taxed? The whole point is avoiding having to pay off the state.
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Ebay
eBay is to card/collectible sales, as WalMart is to shopping. It’s a necessary evil, with emphasis on “evil”. Are there good people there? Sure. There are also lots of people in pajama pants screaming at their toddlers. Private sales>eBay all day. Trent King
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I was just telling some friends that eBay has become completely worthless for buying memorabilia. The endless supply of overpriced common, mass-produced crap dwarfs anything of rarity/quality/value that might be hiding there. The searches have become a complete waste of time.
Yes, the supply may have dried up a bit, but re-selling has always been a "thing" until now. It's because of the 1099-K forms and lowering the reporting threshold to its ridiculous new level. NOBODY wants to sell under these conditions, and is crazy to do so under their current policies. I used to do very well, selling on eBay. It was quick, easy and inexpensive. But with the new "rules" I do not have the time or ability to scrounge up non-existent records of what I paid for something 30+ years ago. Much of the stuff has actually gone DOWN in value (Hartlands, Stanford Pottery, etc.) and if you can't prove it, you are completely screwed. Not to mention that you typically need to sell something for 40-50% more than you originally paid, just to break even! You must sell a given item for enough money to overcome the original purchase price, the sales tax, the Buyers Premium, the original shipping and insurance charges, etc. And then when re-selling, you have to cover the eBay and PayPal Seller's fees, which exceed 15%. NOT WORTH IT! To Howards point... eBay has taken ALL of the fun (and profit) out of selling. Perhaps it's still okay for cards (which have appreciated more and cost little to ship), but that's the reason most sellers have left the platform. |
The best part of the eBay museum is the sellers who ban you after refusing your reasonable offer.
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Doesn't cost anything to look. I have probably logged onto the site 3-4 times a day since 2002. It does suck how it's turned into a museum. But every once in a while something surfaces and if you are at the right place at the right time you can grab it. Got a nice Jackie rookie type 1 photo recently for a very fair price, probably 1/2 or even 1/3 of what it might get at a top AH.
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Darryl---do you get notification when you are banned by a seller or just find out when you try to bid on another one of their auctions or make another offer ?
Steve +1... except on the Jackie part :) |
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Hey Al, there’s no notification. I just see this when I try to make another offer: https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...1a8e6288b8.jpg |
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eBay seller policies are so punitive and unfair that eBay relocated from CA to UT, where policies that are blatantly illegal under CA commercial law are much harder to prove. My column on it:
https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.c...seller-penalty I got into 'below standard' status nearly a year ago because of a blown set break and I have barely sold on eBay since as a result. I am hopefully back to normal fees next month. The tax stuff is a canard. The real issue is that eBay has raised its fees to the point that listing there for less than museum prices isn’t worth the hassle. I’ve sold hundreds of cards with auction houses over the last year instead of on eBay and the results have been very good. eBay works best now for obscure things and lower priced cards that need to be sold as singles rather than lumped into an auction house grab bag. |
While I left a scorching post about the difficulty of being a seller on ebay with no rights, I believe being a buyer on ebay still is fruitful. While not as good or plentiful as it used to be there are good items that can be purchased below market value if you spend the time looking. Ebay has destroyed the category search and ease of finding good items. It requires what I refer to as ebay mining. You have to dig with clever word searches and techniques to find the rare treasures. I still find good stuff, it's just harder.
I agree with Adam. Ebay is punitive to their sellers in the ways he describes in his blog and additional ways. The 30 day ebay return policy is a happy button that is similar to Amazon or Macys. Amazon and Macys policies and business model is fine with their money. Ebay offers the same policies with my money. Buyers ignore the sellers' policies as they don't matter. I have received 3 returns in the last two months. All for fake reasons and ebay sides with low feedback moronic buyers with fake claims even past my return deadline. Claims of damage or doesn't match sellers description is used to get free return shipping on my dime. I actually lose money. Ebay loses nothing . When I get the item back and there is no damage, item works fine etc I can get a homework assignment from ebay to request my 15.00 of shipping returned which may or may not happen. The amount of time it takes to track and follow up isn't worth 15.00. I am out the time it takes to do the listing, handling the return, packaging time and materials relisting and shipping again. I laugh when I call and they say thank you for your 25 years . The seller has no rights. There is no dispute process as they don't allow it. I will say selling baseball cards aside from the fees is usually hassle free but I prefer selling elsewhere like the board or Auctions Houses that appreciate the consignments |
It is an unwelcoming experience being a seller on eBay. You have little recourse and even if you want to complain, after the thank you for being with them for XX years, your call is routed to someone in another country who truly does not give a shit and is likely working for 20% of what they would have to pay someone doing the same job in the states.
A few of my favorite things: 1) Not being able to leave negatives to buyers who do not perform. 2) eBay's refusal to ban someone after chronically not paying. 3) The bullshit returns policy that is usually nothing more than buyer's remorse or an inability to flip the item they bought and the leniency and ease with which they give buyers the ability to lie about the reason for the return. 4) As Adam points out ya have to be virtually 100% right in each sale transaction from start to finish or risk serious infractions that last for an unreasonable amount of time. I am sure it is less abusive when you get to where PWCC got or Greg Morris or Probstien123 are but that I am able to navigate the uneven playing field when I sell is strictly luck. If I sold there regularly I am sure that would have a very short life there. |
All of the complaints against eBay are 100% spot on and I agree with everything stated. But all of those factors have been in place for years and ebay, until the last year or so, was still a place I could find good stuff pretty frequently.
Something more recent changed all that and I think it has to be the new reporting requirements. I agree that people are likely selling elsewhere but for my niche...pennants...they aren't showing up elsewhere. It's like people just stopped selling altogether. Either that or I already bought them all. :) |
I think a whole lot of this inactivity is due to the 1099s. I don't want to have to deal with selling something I don't know what I paid for, and try to put a cost on it.
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I sell much less on Ebay then I used to and reporting requirements have nothing to do with it. I've been reporting my Sales on Ebay since 1998 or so (as I also do when I sell stuff on Net54), regardless of their requirements. I just assumed all that could be tracked if they wanted to, anyways.
Also has nothing to do with return or feedback policies, which I learned haven't really affected me over the long haul. Listing takes twice as long as it used to for unique items, requirements for item specifics is a pain in the ass. I used to be able to just type out very detailed descriptions, and a search engine that used to actually make sense, would be able to find your item easily, through either a Title or a Title/Description search. The search now is awful. They've prioritized making people sift through pages and pages of unrelated stuff, rather then picking out the very specific terms I've thought hard about putting in my listings, so the right people find my items easily. They've also made it harder for me to put my unique spin, graphics and stamp on my listings, by prioritizing "Specifics", over an actual, well thought out and professional looking "Description". I've tried using their "AI" tool to write descriptions, and it was almost comical how much more time it took me to go in and edit the inanities that it would spit out for me. :rolleyes: Item categories have been bastardized to become almost indistinguishable, in the search to complicate things with "Item Specifics". Attempts to integrate combined shipping into your shopping cart has become a complete mess, whether it be with auctions, or BIN's. I spend an inordinate amount of the trying to get shipping policies to "match up", until I just throw my hands in the air and go "F#%k it!". It is what it is, and I'll deal with it when it becomes an issue. And the fees......they go up up up, even when they don't go up. They just figure out something else to ding you for, and pretend it's still the status quo. Every time I get a payout now from Ebay, I scratch my head and go to myself "That's it...they must have made a mistake?". They claim their fees are in the 12.35% in most categories (15% in Books and Magazines for some damn reason). Then there's the monthly store fees to get those rates. Then there's the fact they take a full final value fee cut out of Shipping Costs/Tax Collection/VAT Collection for overseas customers...and you discover that heavyish piece of memorabilia you sent to Washington State/Louisiana/Oklahoma/Ireland/etc..., cost you 20%+++ what you sold it for.....and they did exactly zero work for you, outside of providing a simple software platform for you. (ok ok, they did the incredibly generous task of collecting and reporting the sales taxes for me from other states, since they no longer wanted to just be a "venue", and wanted ME to also be their "Brand", for the bargain basement price of a 12%-15% vig, of revenue that I don't see at all.) Also lost my meager 10% discount on final value fees (though that only applies to the item itself, and not the final value fees on the shipping and tax charges), when I lost my "Powerseller" (groan) status, because I didn't have enough "transactions". Had plenty of revenue to meet the requirements, but apparently Ebay is more impressed if you have (200) $10 transactions, then if you have 50 $100 transactions. Also, I'm pretty sure I discovered, if a single buyer purchases/wins 5 different things from you, and you ship those items to them in a combined package, that only counts as (1) transaction in their reports. Sigh! Rant over. :D Fini! |
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And I too alluded to the search feature in another recent thread. Figured it was just me since nobody commented but when you search, you get back results that include items whose titles do not share a common word of what you typed in the search along with other unrelated items. |
Hey guys the search engine is now horrific horrible
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Yes that is a fact. An ebay search usually returns items that have nothing to do with your search . The items likely come from people who pay ebay promotional fees.
It is also a fact that listing an item has become more difficult and time consuming. They also tweak the listing process regularly. Items do sell and there is no similar site to change to and they know it |
I'm glad to see I'm not the only one having trouble with search results. I have some very specific saved searches and a few of my searches often get results that don't exactly match.
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I think the lack of quality listings is mostly due to the fee increases and hassle of listing. When my real cost approaches 20% why would I DIY eBay list when I can consign instead?
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I’ve bought a couple of things, but haven’t sold on eBay in many many years. Probably won’t ever again. I loved it in the beginning when you could just sell your personal property without government interference. It’s a mess.
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eBay has gotten worse in silly ways.
Others have mentioned a number of them: - Items sit for years. No cost for listing means no incentive to lower prices or remove things that you have up and are not in a rush to sell - Ruined search - I have no idea what is actually going on when you search particular words, but it certainly is not pulling up items with those words. They removed the askerisk option years ago which was a massive help and it has gotten worse and worse - They started allowing people to send offers to others who viewed the item, even if the item is not watched. Another example of pushing items in front of people that they likely don't want. All that said, it is still a platform that occasionally turns up gems. A large percentage of my collection comes from eBay over the years. In the last few months (which has been a very good stretch by eBay standards for the last few years, I've won around 10 auctions, each of which was a reasonably difficult item to find. (I do have a number of collecting focuses, so there are more options out there for me.) |
Part of the issue with the search is all of the "item specifics" they've added over the years which gives sellers multiple opportunities to shoehorn in extra keywords, etc. That's compounded by the fact that many sellers list their items by copying existing listings.
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I first joined eBay in 1997. Up until 5'ish years ago I was still checking eBay 5-6 times a day and was still buying and selling all the time. Now, with the search engine being jacked up, the museum prices, high (IMO) seller fee's, and the fact that eBay not only allows but forces me to accept ridiculous returns, I've completely stopped selling on their platform and my purchases have gone from an average of 1 a day to 2-4 a month. Like others have said, you can still find quality items at fair prices at times, but I've found this to only be through the auction format. I never really use the Buy It Now feature anymore.
With REA now doing the Encore auctions I'd rather consign to them, ship one box, and have ZERO headache. |
From what I can tell, based on the things I look for and buy, and talking to my friends who also are into these old things, eBay is taking something that worked and ruining it. For a multitude of reasons. No one I know buys or sells there much anymore. I am the last of the holdouts, but even I admit it's become difficult. Nothing lasts forever.
I will add that the cards I have bought lately have come from sellers who do have an eBay presence but also have their own web sites (such as Kit Young Cards) and from sellers on this forum. |
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Seems almost uniamous. Being a seller on ebay sucks and their return policies terrible. Why they even have 14 day returns when they offer a bypass. 30 day return ( plus 15 working days to ship back) . Just push the button that says "doesn't match website description, or bought by mistake." Allowing bidders to withdrawal bids on auctions is outrageous. All this an ebay customer service claim is they trust their buyers to be honest. Seriously?
As a buyer the difficulty to search has taken the fun out of looking at ebay. There still are hidden gems amongst the countless overpriced items |
"He who controls the
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eBay
Wow, reading the comments is a little eye opening. While I have bought on there, I haven't sold on there in years. I didn't realize it had gotten that bad.
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I bought a lot of pins on ebay for $39.00 and they're worth probably $300. Well, the seller canceled the sale and refunded my money. He told me he "misplaced" the pins. That didn't sit well with me. I looked at his feedback and saw there was someone who left neutral feedback because he canceled that guys auction too within the last month. I looked at the item he canceled and it was a zippo lighter worth probably $120 or so but sold for $45 in an auction. I looked at his other sales and he was getting top dollar for everything. He knows the values, he's an antique dealer. He wanted to get full value for his items. He knew those two items went too cheaply, so he canceled the sales. That's a violation of ebay's selling policies. It's also just a very weaselly thing to do.
I reported him. People who do that shouldn't be selling on Ebay. This is the message I sent him: I don't believe for a second that you "misplaced" those pins. You feel like you didn't get enough for them so you cancelled the sale. Maybe you should start them at a price that's more acceptable to you to begin with, that way you don't have to cancel sales. Not that hard to figure out. Personally, my reputation is worth more than a few dollars so I would honor the sale even though I know I could get more for the item. But, that's me and apparently not you. I'm guessing you also "misplaced" that Vietnam lighter that you cancelled the sale on earlier this month too. You've earned the negative feedback I'm about to leave. This is my first time leaving negative feedback after thousands of transactions. Learn to do better. |
In defense of eBay
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I buy and mostly sell on eBay, and I love the platform. I make about 100 sales each week on eBay and 70% of the sales are from repeat customers. I can see where it is difficult to find great buys on eBay. The search engine is not easy to set up to look for deals, and the prices are mostly at full retail. So, if you are looking for bargains on prewar cards, eBay is probably not for you. But there are a lot of collectors, that don't have the access to card shows. Or they don't want to buy large lots of cards and then try to sell the cards that they don't want. They are willing to pay more to get exactly what the card they want. These are the customers that eBay is catering to. We would have a lot less people enjoying the hobby if eBay was not available. As a seller, it does take some effort to create listings and deal with the occasional problem buyer, but for the most part if you treat the customer the way that you would like to be treated, you don't have many problems. Overall, eBay's fees are reasonable for what you get. They do allow you to display thousands of items in your store for a small monthly fee. You are only charged the final value fee if the item sells. The fee structure does make it difficult to discount off the listed price when you take in the actual cost of selling the item. I don't sell at shows, but I'm sure that the vendors at shows have to deal with the costs of travel and setting up a booth. In any case, people always complain about the high cost of cards at shows, too. In my opinion, although eBay is not perfect, I'm happy that eBay is here, and doing well. Best regards, Joe |
I list a lot of $50-$500 cards on eBay. My take on things currently is if you are priced at and keep up to date with recent comps, you stand a good chance of moving a good percentage of your stuff within a few months of listing it. If you price at 2021 levels, you sell next to nothing. But, that is no different than the current state of card shows either. No one knows better than me what it is like to grudgingly list your cards for sale taking significant losses but if you are in that position, that’s what you have to do. Otherwise, don’t blame eBay/buyers for your lack of sales, it’s your own fault.
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Funny that (the other) Rob just started this thread today. Before I just saw it, I had discussed my ebay frustrations earlier today with two other collector friends…
As a seller, ebay’s fees are ridiculous. They could cut their fees by 75% and still be rolling in the dough. I don’t sell enough to deal with the tax reporting but the fees are enough of a detriment. As a buyer, my biggest beef is the proliferation of 24/7 trolls either jumping on every underpriced BIN within seconds or “getting to” sellers with offers that end auctions. I understand that some of the trolls buy and then sell as a way of making a living but others seem to be borderline hoarders. As a collector without the time to constantly be on ebay, it frustrates the hell out of me. I would love to see no BIN’s (at least on anything “pre-owned”) and an all auction format that would give us all a chance at the good stuff that comes up with ever decreasing frequency. Do the high end auction houses have BIN’s? I don’t think so. :p I just long for the days when collecting was a leisurely pastime and not a cutthroat business |
As I recited (in excruciating detail in my article on eBay seller punishment fees), I spent a year in the surcharge doghouse and basically sold next to nothing on eBay. That ended on the 1st and I started selling immediately. My sales absolutely exploded after I started listing again. There is nowhere else I am aware of where I could have turned out a mix of items like this and had them sell quickly and for top dollar:
--1977 Topps Star Wars sets, display boxes, stickers --Sports cards --1st edition hardcover of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory --1959 NBA program --1950s-1960s Oldsmobile postcards --Mutoscope pin-up cards --Academy Awards tickets --WWII photos --Rock and roll memorabilia Yes, the fees end up as high as AH fees when it comes to lower end items, and it is annoying as hell to pay a final value fee on sales taxes and shipping costs, but if you have good items and price them well, it is a hell of a marketplace. I sell a lot of esoteric items and cards that would be lotted into 'shoeboxes' in most auctions to generate the minimum per lot that AHs like. Some were even turned down by AHs. There is also the friction of it; some eBay buyers are dweebs and others are obviously need major mental health care, but dealing with the occasional non-paying bidder or jerk is worth it. |
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Also the auction industry in general is starting to use BIN's in conjunction with the auction method. It's not everywhere yet, I haven't seen it in the sports collectibles category, but it's gaining traction overall. (I am not a fan) |
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eBay sucks for all the reasons stated, but it also seems to be the only place left where I can still close deals without bending over backward. I suspect it's a combination of much lower traffic on other sites and Facebook algorithms burying some posts.
Here are the shipped prices for all my eBay sales going back to last month, with what the same items were listed for on Facebook and other forums: 1500 (highest offer 1000) --> eBay 1803 3650 (highest offer 3400) --> eBay 4475 4300 (highest offer 3500) --> eBay 5083 2200 (tirekickers, no takers) --> eBay 2508 340 (no offers) --> eBay 434 415 (tirekickers, no takers) --> eBay 499 750 (no offers) --> eBay 1076 Outside eBay, most of the offers I receive come from high-volume resellers, and the negotiations generally involve them pointing out why my card looks worse than another card that sold for the same price two years ago. And the prices speak for themselves. Collectively, eBay buyers spent $15,878 on my items, which they could have had for $13,105 if they simply knew to where to look. But they don't know where to look (or don't want to bother), so they pay a 21% fee. |
I have sold a lot on eBay in the past, not so much in recent years due to many factors (most mentioned above). However, when I sell items recently I get tons of messages from buyers: where's my item? did you ship? despite always being delivered within the window eBay specifies, sometimes by several days.
Not one buyer of mine has ever received an item late, yet I get several of these messages a week. Even after a telling a buyer "you will receive your item on time" I get more messages about the shipment. Now I understand why one of the largest sellers of autographed cards on eBay blocks buyers from bidding after messaging one of these questions. Drives me nuts! Rant over lol. |
Ebay Search
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This may be well known (apologies if it is), but regarding eBay search, I have -had some- success using " " in my search. For example I just searched: 1953 Bowman Psa 8 (using auction listings). The results were from 1953 Bowman cards, but none of the first five listings were PSA 5 If I search: 1953 Bowman "PSA 5", both the listings are PSA 5. Of course, this doesn't always work and sometimes I literally have to search: "1953" "Bowman" "PSA 5" to get what I want to see. |
For me the biggest difference between eBay now and a few years ago is that for about 20 years I could make a living dealing in vintage memorabilia with eBay a primary source of inventory. Even though I was a bottom-feeder on most items, I won enough at a good enough price to keep my show inventory stocked with some basic things that I knew would move, in addition to the occasional big hit on something that fell through the cracks for some reason or because it was in my wheelhouse of knowledge of a niche area or two. That all stopped being the case somewhere around ten years ago, but by then it was time for me to retire anyway, so it was OK. No way I could do that today. For a number of reasons that have been discussed here, there are just a lot fewer vintage, and in particular rare, items available to pick up on eBay these days. I still have a number of categories I scan just about every day, and still manage to pick up some very cool stuff from time to time, but it's more a matter of serendipity than anything else, and that suits me fine at this stage.
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I generally do not sell much, but listen to random Podcasts about the hobby. I am sure I am not speaking to the right crowd, but does anyone see Fanaticscollect taking over more vintage? I know they grabbed a major player in Burbank exclusive off eBay, so will frustrated eBay sellers move if the platform is better/cheaper etc.
I believe they have some rules in place to try and not make it a museum. https://www.cllct.com/sports-collect...exclusive-deal |
And on authentication...I get the shipping to authenticator thing but should consider raising the threshold for graded at least for sellers with 100+ historical sales ?
Seeing my card shipping to California only to come back to the end customer in a nearby state after 2 weeks seems inefficient to me. |
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I cannot fathom why years ago, eBay removed the wild card (*) search. This allowed you to search auto* for example and get autograph, autographed, autographs, auto etc. Now they have just tried to make the search pick up more things, and it picks up completely irrelevant items. It's still the place to look because the sheer number of sellers means that there can be gems that turn up any time. And selling elsewhere remains challenging (though I still have some success on Facebook). But the moves they have made are baffling. |
I notice lately that eBay searches often return items from different years than specified in the search terms. Search for 2014, get 2020. I took a few examples and thoroughly searched the listing to see if my search term was hidden somewhere, but no.
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I joined eBay around 1998, for buying primarily. I don't sell too much, mostly just to help fund my colleting habit. Every year or so I do check to see if there are any good alternatives for selling collectibles. I haven't seen any yet. Back around 2010 when I had to quit my job due to a health problem, I developed my own e-commerce website and sold mostly sports cards. I continued to sell some cards on eBay just to compare. After about 2 years I discontinued my e-commerce website because I realized I just couldn't compete with the sheer volume of "eyes" eBay gets on it's auctions/stores. Even with decent SEO and some marketing of my website. E-commerce security also became way too time consuming, in my efforts to try to protect the customer database associated with my e-commerce website. So I returned to just selling on eBay. I've used Craigslist for some bigger items, but that became too stressful worrying about being robbed, or something worse. I haven't tried Facebook marketplace yet, but that seems a lot like Craigslist. So since about 1998, I have not seen any real good alternatives to eBay. eBay has dominated the e-commerce collectibles market for over 25 years, which I find surprising since e-commerce has been so dominate during this technology revolution. And particularly since the pandemic. I understand that Amazon & eBay, etc. got in early, which really, really helped. But I feel like there must be/have been some really creative minds and start-ups during this period who can/could have broken this monopoly. Perhaps the plethora of auction houses picked up a lot of the collectibles buyer/seller market. I've never purchased via an online auction house as most seem to cater to the affluent, add their buyer premiums and I believe it is too costly for the average Joe, IMO. Perhaps the AI revolution will change some of this. But I'm not optimistic. So, am I missing a real good alternative to buying/selling collectibles on eBay? Perhaps I'm looking in the wrong place?
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Yeah the actual Facebook Marketplace is not great at all, but there are some good Buy/Sell/Trade Facebook groups that are well established with a lot of members. Can find ones specific to a sport or just “vintage” in general as far as cards go. |
Highly recommend this facebook group for any cracker jack collectors
https://www.facebook.com/groups/crac...rdsmarketplace |
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I’m a reseller in my spare time. After being on eBay many years ago, I took a long break from buying and selling there…and I mean years. I would occasionally buy some thing there if it was something my kids were looking for but for the most part, eBay was forgotten in my house. Until recently, I started back at eBay and have been disappointed with how poor my sales have been. I have a wide variety of things that I pick up and my prices are very fair, I feel. I even leave the make an offer feature open on just about anything because most of the stuff I buy at such low prices and even if someone offers under what I’m asking, I’m still making a profit. That’s my only complaint so far is the lack of sales.
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