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#1
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Posted By: Jason L
By Catherine Holahan |
#2
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Interesting story....a few years ago I would have thought ebay to be untouchable in that nobody could compete with them, but I think the day is coming when ebay will no longer be king. It seems to me that nearly every decision they've made in the last year or so has hurt sellers. Sellers will find a new venue if they have to....and if "Fixed price" listings is the future and the auction is dead then it's going to be a lot harder to find a deal on anything...nearly every fixed price listing on ebay is above market value in the card section. |
#3
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Posted By: Jason L
until some of these folks realize they need to move their inventory, and if that needs to happen at a lower price, then maybe we will see a joined market again...we are certainly in a transition period. - which may well become more apparently strained as the recession progresses. |
#4
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Bidder sniping has much to do do with seller's moving away from the traditional auction format. I always said if all the bidding in a 7 day auction happens in the last two hours, don't call it a 7 day auction, call it a two hour auction. And if its a 2 hour auction, what's the point of having a 7 day auction? Sniping subverts the tradition auction and led to sellers moving away from that format. Sellers ending auctions early to sell off-auction is an example of a reaction to the covert bidding. By its nature and intention snipe bidding hides information from the seller until the very end-- as opposed to the tradition auction format where the seller could observe interest and rising pricing. Further, whether one considers this good or bad, sniping is designed to suppress the final price. Many sellers became unwilling to wait in the dark for the happy or unhappy last second surprise (final price) and either would end auctions early for decent price, add BINs to the auction our simply skip the auction format. |
#5
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Posted By: Bob
The inmates are now running the asylum at ebay. Corporate greed is going to spell their doon. I've been around since almost the beginning and each new change craps up what was once a great auction site. As both a seller and buyer, I can tell you that I am now shifting more and more to different sites to sell my prewar cards. |
#6
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Posted By: Jason L
let's bring more action there... |
#7
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Posted By: Eric
I agree....lets move to a different site. |
#8
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Posted By: Dustin
What other good sites are available and good to use when looking for cards that have the same policies regarding fraud as EBay? Just wondering, because when I try to sell items that don't sell I lose money, when I do sell items I usually lose money because of fees generated by Ebay and both PayPal. It seems as though its getting to where you can't "win" either way. - Dustin |
#9
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Posted By: Iggy
EBay as we knew it, is dying, but it's going to be a slow deliberate process. It is still the "alpha dog" of auctions. In no other online venue (outside of major auction houses) can a seller maximize his total sales. Sure, you could put some cards on the B/S/T board, or perhaps create your own web-site. But, for the most part your card is only reaching the veteran collector looking for a bargain or a real good price. So you better have sweet prices, or your item isn't selling and if it does sell.....well, sometimes a few weeks later you get to see how much more it sold for on ebay. A third party site is also an option but if you read the article, it mentioned how ebay has 90 million active users. Currently, no third party site can touch that number. |
#10
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Posted By: MikeU
What is old may become new again. I would love to see cards show flourish again. Maybe the eBay Executives can drive card collecting back to its roots. |
#11
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Posted By: cmoking
What's all the complaining about? How bad can ebay be when auction companies themselves (i.e. Mastro) run some items on ebay and get great prices? Ebay auctions are fine. Just because there is no growth doesn't mean things are going smoothly. |
#12
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Posted By: cmoking
"I'm also convinced that it is harder to find legitimate bargains. Which was part of the fun in the old days (5 to 10 years ago) and made browsing entertaining." |
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