Ending an auction early ... Etiquette?
catalist
1,373 Posts
I think i spelled etiquette wrong, but anyways....I put up some new auctions last night and this morning I had a very nice offer from someone to end one auction early if they pay me right away through paypal.The bidder has perfect feedback so I ended the auction and am awaiting payment. I have never ended auctions early , do any of you have experience doing this and do you think it has an effect on how bidders look at your trust/reliability as a seller?the item had no bids and was only about 14 hours old...
Comments
you snooze you lose.
From ebay:
http://pages.ebay.com/help/sell/questions/endlist-now.html
You can end the auction even if there are bids on it... the only time you cannot is if there are less than 12 hours remaining and there is a high bidder/bidder that has met the reserve.
they had a shot and slept on it. ebay rewards men of action.
and, to a lesser degree, women and even children of action.
If there was a bid on the item i probably would not have ended the item early but I was presented with "an offer I couldn't refuse" as they say in various films.
I was just asked to do this a few hours ago. but ehhhh, I dont know.
Also, a few days ago I received a message with the classic line: "my father would really enjoy this record, blah blah blah". When I wrote back and asked why he would enjoy the record, I got nothing.
people, cut that shit out.
SHADY! not to mention utter nonsense since you already told someone it's a deal and they have paid you.
Take the 250 and walk.
Note to self: do not bid on crazypoprock's auctions.
Kidding... but seriosuly, once you commit to an offer, considering other offers is where NAGL begins.
On an unrelated note, my fiance's daughter gave me attitude the other day and I responded with "V... this is really not a good look."
judging by the smiley face I would say you are joking when you say this right?
I got luckier with mine because the initial offer was $400 and I'm happy.
Surriously. Take a step back and think logically here: If a dude goes out of his way to send you an offer on the record to end early, he is OBVIOUSLY lowballing and is thinking that the record might go for more than what he's offering you. He also is clearly sweating the record real hard, and will put up a major bid on it. There really isn't much sense in it.
but I don't think you can always assume that it will
end for more than what is being offered ... of course,
I would assume more often than not that IS the case, but
if I were to make an offer I would probably make it in
the range that I think it would end for, maybe even a
few bucks more to try to sweeten the pot. As a seller,
I usually have an idea of what I would ideally get for
an item - if somebody offers in that area, I might consider
it.
Well considering the last copy of the record I was selling went for 300 USD and the dude offers me 400 , I am content saying yes to that. If he had offered me 300 I probably would have said no based on the fact that it doesn't show up at all so it could go slightly higher or equal to 3.
Also the guy who offered the cash to me had very reputable feedback rating so I was n't worried in that respect.
Something about instant money that feels so right.
one guy just gave me a story today how he has been looking for a record in such nice condition that it doesn't come often and that he needed this record for the cover to frame in his garage (a hotrodderrackord).
now i ask, why would anyone care what condition the lp is in if they are just going to frame the cover anyways? someone may have their reasons, but i call bs on that.
and the one time i made major $$$ was when i was offered 5k for 2 records by someone about a day before end of auction with close to 100 watchers--it was certainly tempting to end early, but i couldn't. people would have been pissed with that many watchers. and then i got over 10,400 for the both of them--- a 5,400 dollar difference!
it pays to wait usually.