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Interesting article on eBay offer negotiations
I basically follow this formula to the T when making offers and have for many years. It’s interesting to see it broke down within the actual study at the bottom of the article.
If I am rejected immediately, I usually move on knowing we are just too far apart. If you take a day to think, or open an exchange of offers, it’s worth my time to continue with discussion. The one thing not mentioned is if you never respond to my offer at all and prevent me from making a different offer from a competitor and I have to wait for the offer to expire, possibly missing another because I don’t need two. Well you are deleted from the watch list and never returned. :cool: https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/othe...e-verthp-feeds |
It was intersting Justin. Kind of reminds me of the battle of wits death poison scene in The Princess Bride :)
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I must be slow.
Is a slow response from the seller a good thing or a bad thing? It almost seems like they suggest that it's both a good thing and a bad thing. Good (for the buyer) because it indicates that the seller is agonizing over the offer. But bad (for everyone) because the slowness of the response tends to agitate the buyer, causing the buyer to move on? |
I haven't read the link yet. The biggest think as an occasional seller I have noticed with sending offers is to do it on Thursday. I have easily a 90% success rate on Thursdays and low single digit on any other day.
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Data is from 2012/2013, has to be a somewhat different landscape on eBay now vs then. But maybe there are some universal and timeless trends in the data.
I’m more than happy to let an undesirable offer rot into expiration, I rarely decline them. Can’t hurt your card to have a “pending offer” on it. No sympathy for people who make a bad offer and any inconvenience it causes them. |
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(The auto-reject threshold feature is pretty good at weeding out, too.) |
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Personally, I don't recall seeing it a decade ago. I have an increasingly bad case of Internet Brain, though.
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* - On a re-read, there's yet another dataset, and the quote doesn't relate to the 2020-23 one. |
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:rolleyes: |
A couple of eBay points, from someone who has bought AND sold there since 1998, with 100 percent feedback:
If I, as buyer, make you an offer and you refuse to answer within several hours, then you as the seller are off the island. If you are away on vacation, then inform eBay of such. It isn't hard. If you decline, so be it, I will move on. If you're truly interested in selling, you will pay attention to your listings. I don't worry about hurt feelings when it comes to best offers. If you don't like my offer, fine, let me know and I will move on, untethered to your listing. |
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Ebay should also allow sellers to restart negotiations by allowing an offer to buyer if they change their mind and want to accept a buyer's offer previously rejected.
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I really wish the OBO would be eliminated for good. Additionally, if that actually happened, buyers would be given X number of warnings for sending PMs offering less before having their accounts suspended.
Straight prices across the board; no haggling, no wasted time with lowballers and tire kickers. If you're a potential buyer and the price is too high, you move on. If you're a seller and your piece isn't moving, either lower your price or give the item a rest for a set period of time. It would also spell the demise of the ridiculous six and seven figure "OBO" listings, just fishing for whatever the highest offer is that comes their way. This needs to stop. |
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In my opinion eBay shouldn’t let sellers turn on the auto-reject for offers of over, say, 75-80% of the list price. I’ve offered 90% and been auto-rejected multiple times. That’s not “or best offer” in any meaningful way. It is, however, a great way to assure that I’ll move on rather than consider paying the list price.
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I need to make it a point to respond to offers promptly. Especially on Thursdays.
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For some reason, people who buy cards and memorabilia have a completely different mindset. I never list anything on ebay with an OBO because all that does is broadcast my listed price isn't real. I don't enjoy the haggling process. See the price and either pay it or move on. |
Obvious flaw in the research is inductive reasoning. They conclude that a slow response is indicative of something about the offer when it may just be indicative of having to go to a family dinner, watch the kid's Little League game, go to a religious service, or work the day job. Or maybe just a product of different time zones. An offer made at 7:00 PST to a seller in NYC may not be dealt with until the next day. I've made offers in L.A. and gotten nothing back until the next morning, usually because the seller is back east and stopped working for the night.
Mark, I don't generally use best offers but will send offers when eBay informs me that I can send an offer to watchers. Converts to a sale maybe 5% of the time. Has anyone tried to set a Best Offer with a price way above the auction minimum? I've done that a few times when I put up an item that I think will get a lot of interest and that someone might pay a premium for it. I usually write what I am doing into the description. Doesn't work; usually it just confuses and then pisses off people. |
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I agree with you that this study makes assumptions on why a seller might delay responding. Among the reasons you mention having to do with different time zones, family activities and so on, I would add that all sellers do not approach the process the same. For example, several times when I've made my offer, the seller never replies. The study might suggest he was considering the offer, but the other explanation would be that he rejected it and letting it expire was his way of declining. People go to Best Buy and never haggle over the sticker price of a TV or computer. The same people go to a car dealership and haggle over the sticker price of a new car. It's an oddity of our culture I suppose. In some situations, haggling is nonexistent; in others, it's a game that's always expected to be played. |
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I'm not sure why cards, cars and houses have an expectation of negotiation over the price (at least for most people), but it is definitely a part of US culture. |
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When I bought cars in the past I did very little haggling. I remember when I got my conversion van, I asked the seller if the price was firm, he said yes, and I paid it. |
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Some interesting takes on here, particularly for people who have been willing to express an opinion regarding ratios and percentages. I'll share a sale from just 2 days ago on eBay, and the negotiation that occurred.
I had a nice little PSA-graded Mays exhibit for sale, not real common for the grade, with a couple of recent sales on eBay at that grade. One recent sale at $360, and another at $357. Knowing that everyone loves to play the game and feel like they got a deal by talking me down, I priced it slightly above this level at $390, and included the possibility to make offers. Can't remember where I set the automatic rejection level, but it was probably around $330 or $340. I figure anything below that, it's not worth even trying to counter. Couple of days ago, I received an offer at $350. It looks like his first few offers were autorejected, as he had just 2 offers left. For those of you doing the math at home, this is a 10.25% discount off of the asking price. So for some who expect a bigger discount when making offers, I suppose this would have been aggravating. Knowing that he and I probably weren't far apart, but wanting to get right up to where the last few sales had occurred, I countered within about 30 mins at $360. He accepted, and I shipped it off to him yesterday. If he had countered at $355, would I have accepted? Probably? I guess we'll never know, since he didn't try. I suspect he decided that $5 wasn't enough to bother arguing about, although other buyers have certainly haggled with me back and forth with offers over such small pricing differences in the past. In many ways, the whole thing seemed a lot less exciting than most of the comments on this thread. But maybe it's because my asking price wasn't much more than comps, and I was happy to come down to comps, whereas the buyer was happy to come up to comps after probing me at a little below comps, and in spite of a couple of autorejections. In the end, no one got banned, and I was happy with the sale. With any luck, the buyer will be happy with his purchase, at least once it gets there after going through the authentication process. |
This post and article are timely for me. I am a reseller on eBay and was just today laughing about a best offer that I received.
I have an unusual item with no comps listed for $49.95. The item has been listed for less than 24 hours and I’ve had five views. Today someone offered me $25. That’s a 50% offer. I countered with $35 and a nice message saying thank you for your offer, I’ll be happy to meet you in the middle at $35. Now that’s really not in the middle and it’s giving more for the buyer and less for me but I was willing to take $35. They countered my offer of $35 and went up three bucks to $28. I have a hard time believing they think that three dollar bump is really going to win the item for them when their initial offer was at 50% of my asking price. Lowballers really seem to not want to win the item sometimes. ETA - 5 minutes after I posted this someone offered me $45 for the item and I took it. |
I must be getting offers from different people than y’all. I routinely get offers that are just ridiculous, like sub-$3000 for a decent 1933 Goudey Ruth. When I see that notification on my phone, I don’t even bother going into the app to reject it. I always list mine at quite a bit more than I’m willing to take for it since I know people will haggle no matter how fair the starting price is, so I usually have a pretty sizable percentage I’m willing to go down. But when I get goofy offers like that, I don’t bother acknowledging them. I suppose I could set up automatic rejections, but sometimes it’s entertaining seeing what people will offer.
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I also don’t have any Ruth playing days cards for sale. The last Ruth I sold went for $25 a few months ago. |
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Just noticed a weird one on eBay. Yesterday I was searching for Wade Boggs bats and found one I don't have. At this point that is a fairly rare occurrence. The bat was a little more than I wanted to pay and didn't have an OBO so I bookmarked it hoping the seller would send me an offer.
I just logged into eBay and sure enough the owner of the bat sent me an offer and it was an amount I would pay. So I hit the Review Offer link to buy it. Turns out the seller sent me the offer(12% discount) and then within minutes somehow ended the listing and relisted the bat so the offer was no good now.:confused: So F them I will wait and buy the same model the next time it shows up for sale from someone else. I don't care enough about my collection to buy from low level trash. I guess they could be one of those people that if you don't accept their offer in 5 minutes they can't mentally handle it and have to withdraw their offer.:( |
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A card I wanted hit ebay yesterday. $70. It’s worth $30. Many sales to justify that price too. In fact the RC doesn’t sell as high as this particular 2nd year card. As expected, seller is ignoring my offer and it expires shortly. When it does I won’t ever make another offer. Had he responded with a counter and a simple note saying “sorry I can’t go that low” I may have offered $40 and then let it sit for a couple months before offering again. |
Reading some of the comments here, I don’t think I appreciated just how much of a blood sport offers can be on eBay. I can certainly understand the challenges with unreasonable offers or astronomical asking prices. The solution seems pretty simple - move on.
But I guess I don’t understand why it has to devolve into such tragic calamity that the counterparty is now dead to you based on one interaction. Now, if they had insulted you personally, called you names, accused you of listening to country music, or questioned your paternity and integrity, then by all means, get your dander up and block them. Life is just way too short to get this agitated over something as quotidian as a failed eBay negotiation over piffle such as cardboard. |
eBay offers
This is a topic that has boggled my mind for years. In the first place, eBay built its empire on auctions, not flat sales. I have submitted offers for collectibles for one of two basic reasons. First is that the item has gone unsold month after month, which should tell the seller something about his item. The second is that the item is not realistically priced, and I’m trying to get it there. I have met both reasonable and unreasonable sellers this way. I deal with reasonable ones and jettison the others…Someone above mentioned negotiating a lower price and wondering why this happens with collectibles. That’s easy- nobody needs an extravagant collectible, nobody. Buyers also know that sellers often invest much less in an extravagant collectible than their selling price. As a buyer, there’s nothing wrong with testing the waters to see what a seller’s floor is- especially if the seller is cooperative and the floor actually matches the ongoing value of the item. Sellers who receive offers and don’t bother to acknowledge them are often hurting their own interest (with collectibles). After all, the potential buyer on the other side is at least intrigued enough to offer. For the truly unrealistic or rude seller, I usually default to daring them to take their item off eBay autopilot- month after month of not selling and keeping the same price despite this- and to actually auction the darn thing. The responses are often straight from The Chuckle Hut:). Trent King
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a good hobby friend of mine does a daily webcast about hobby stuff. He has done over 1400 episodes now and his primary focus as a seller is through EBay.
He is mostly lower end material but does post some good cards at times. One of things he always states is he knows he probably priced something too cheaply when an "OBO" is sent almost immediately after he posted an item. That usually alerts him that something may be worth more than he posted it for, And I've noticed the same thing over the years as a COMC seller (even long before I worked there) If you get an offer the second you posted something, you just might want to see what the "Comps" are. I've always wondered if something is too cheap, why not just buy it instead of negotiating downwards Rich |
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