A few ebay questions.
LamarTinson
507 Posts
What up with these 'private' ebay accounts? Seems way , and why do they always outbid me on shit?And for you status sellers.. do you guys offer refunds for the most part? I got a record Im unhappy with and dude won't offer a refund. , in my opinion.Peace out.
Comments
Yeah right.
thats why I always buy insurance. Even paypal has insurance...worth every penny.
I should rephrase to 'power seller' status.
They were chasing me down Pico last night.
when dudes are like "oh god, I'm so sorry -
I'll get a refund to you asap!"
And you're like, "wow, that's great - people are cool!"
And then 3 months and 10 e-mails later, they stop responding altogether,
and you know you are out $$$ and no record,
and say, "wow, that sucks - people are really assholes!"
Couldn't agree with you more, I'm prepared to file with paypal so quickly these days in the hope that even if I don't get my cash that it might cause the idiot I'm dealing with some inconvenience...
Mind does and I was able to file a complaint with them and got my money back.
Some cards offer things like an extra year warranty on items purchased with the card or even protection on anything lost, stolen or damaged up to a certain amount per year.
Check out ur options.
Good advice man but a lot of credit card firms do not extend that cover when using a third party like paypal due to fraud etc.
O'RLY?
In that case... Support real shops or online dealers that have great reps. Ones that will let you pay with ur CC.
Buying online from a good portion of people from shit like PO Boxes,etc could get you nothing but a hassle.
The lil extra money you might pay could offer you peace of mind in ur dealings.
and of course, when you are dealing with serious record collectors you are dealing sometimes with anal retentive freaks who care more about condition than music...and not just condition of the vinyl but the sleeve and label too. and if you are selling tons of records you don't have time to play every record through to listen before listing them. and also, i'm a dj, i have 1200s, collectors often have audiophile set-ups that reveal flaws in the vinyl more than 1200s.
just some things to consider...i try to only refund when i feel maybe i over-graded the record or didn't package it well enough and it gets damaged. but when stuff gets lost in the mail...and it does happen but not that often, then i try to offer another record. or a refund as a last result.
I've sold a few LP's on ebay but have always refused their offer to become a "Power Seller".....that's some phony ass elitist bullshit.....
I will always offer a 100% refund(including postage) if the customer is unhappy with my grading.
I will NOT offer a partial refund because the customer is unhappy with the condition...you either want the LP or you send it back for a 100% refund....none of this negotiating the price after the sale BS.
I will NOT offer a refund if you "don't like the music" or if the package was damaged during shipping and the customer chose not to buy insurance.
My pet peeve as a seller are the guys who are too cheap to pay for insurance and then expect ME to insure it for him if it's damaged during shipping. I have 5,000+ feedbacks and 4 Negatives of which 3 are because of this scenario.
Vinyl condition comes first, then jacket, then labels. I could actually care less about the labels.
But when dude says item is "excellent all around" I take that as VG+ vinyl, or higher. Record looks clean but doesn't sound clean, lots of surface noise from a bad needle type shit. And it isn't a raer or from overseas or anything. Dude just won't take it back.
I guess I could have asked more details during auction, but I didn't. Oh well, I've had nothing but good luck on ebay overall, I can't really complain.
i think buyers in general should acknowledge the subjective nature of record grading and the risk involved in buying thru the net and relying on the postal service, and then sellers should be as nit-picky as possible with grading and also be sypathetic to the risk the buyer is taking by shopping for vinyl thru the net.
i like to think of myself as doing this great service to the world by digging all over my are (nyc) and finding records i think other people would like to own. it's pretty cool to think about where the records end up and how much joy they may be bringing to their new owners...and how they originally came from some hole in the wall deep in brooklyn, queens, manhattan, whereever. of course i'm kidding about doing a great service to the world but still...it's nice to think that.
Some reasons for making your feedback private.....1) you have some comment that you don't want people to see 2) you don't want people to be able to see what you bought 3) you don't want people to be able to see which auctions you are bidding on that's not closed yet.
I just made my feedback private for reason no. 3. Maybe I'm just paranoid but if I find some auctions that's slept on then I don't want other people to locate them through me. I think it's rare that it goes on like that but some times it probably does. So when I don't use my account to sell stuff with then I can't see any downside to making it private.
If you use your account as seller then you should probably think twice about making your feedback private.
making your feedback (private) doesn't disallow other people from searching for items that you are bidding on.
the only way to accomplish that is to change your location within your ebay personal information to germany/austria, who are protected by privacy laws.
I couldn't do it when I tried with a guy who had private feedback so therefor I thought it was like that.
well, there's definitely some people who both make their feedback "private" and "move" to germany.
damn you're fast...I can see that, so I changed the post.