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-   -   Question for EBay sellers (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=242227)

Jim65 07-11-2017 04:28 AM

Question for EBay sellers
 
Say you list an item and a buyer pays but then you realize you made a mistake and the Buy It Now was too low. At what point do you say its my fault and take the loss? At what point is the risk of taking a possible negative feedback better than the monetary loss?

Aquarian Sports Cards 07-11-2017 05:10 AM

If it's a price I listed I honor it, period.

ibuysportsephemera 07-11-2017 06:11 AM

I totally agree with Scott. Own your mistake and treat it as an important future lesson. It has nothing to do with the negative, it has to do with the way that you conduct yourself and your business.

Just my 2¢. I hope it wasn't too costly.

Jeff

Jim65 07-11-2017 08:28 AM

I am the buyer. Seller listed card for $10, I paid, he cancelled the transaction and relisted for $30. He apologized but I think he should honor the transaction.

samosa4u 07-11-2017 08:40 AM

Neg his @ss then.

bobbyw8469 07-11-2017 08:54 AM

I once sold a $1,000 card for $600. It was when Ebay was having glitches and no one could access the site on one evening in particular. Did I really want to ship a $1,000 card and take a huge loss? HELL NO.....Did I ship the card?? Of course I did....the winning bidder flipped it immediately for $1,100. I remember it to this day. It leaves a salty taste in your mouth, but Ebay, unfortunately, sets it up that way when they give the buyer all the power.

Jim65 07-11-2017 09:20 AM

The card in question is a PSA 8 1968 OPC common so the $10 is not an unrealistic price. Worth a negative feedback? I still have not decided.

nebboy 07-11-2017 10:06 AM

This just happened to me yesterday. I bought a nice card on BIN payed right away and then I get a email saying card was listed in error and please cancel transaction. I know the seller has a good repayable business and I knew the price was low. So after a few emails the auction was cancelled because people do make mistakes and I'm not going to profit on his mistake. The good part is that I asked for a price on the card and he resold it to me for a fair price for both of us. Bottom line is I'm happy and did the right thing and so did he.

slinger23 07-11-2017 10:23 AM

If I am the seller. I own it the mistake since I priced it. No need to punish the buyer. So, the buyer got a "good deal". You ship the product and move on. We all learn from our seller mistakes.

Jim65 07-11-2017 11:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nebboy (Post 1679682)
This just happened to me yesterday. I bought a nice card on BIN payed right away and then I get a email saying card was listed in error and please cancel transaction. I know the seller has a good repayable business and I knew the price was low. So after a few emails the auction was cancelled because people do make mistakes and I'm not going to profit on his mistake. The good part is that I asked for a price on the card and he resold it to me for a fair price for both of us. Bottom line is I'm happy and did the right thing and so did he.

I contacted the seller and offered $20, I figured its a good compromise, he comes back with an offer of $25. Really have to milk an extra $5 out of me?

Jim65 07-11-2017 11:41 AM

Does anyone know if there is a way to report this guy? He lied for the reason he cancelled the sale, he said the item was damaged. If I won did not pay I would get a NPB strike, there must be some penalty when the seller refuses to sell.

bobbyw8469 07-11-2017 01:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim65 (Post 1679709)
I contacted the seller and offered $20, I figured its a good compromise, he comes back with an offer of $25. Really have to milk an extra $5 out of me?

THAT is uncalled for...I would hit him with a NEG so fast it would make his head spin.....and buy the same card from someone else.

Peter_Spaeth 07-11-2017 01:39 PM

If it's a very obvious mistake on the seller's part, I think it's ok not to honor the price, because it should be obvious to the buyer it's a mistake. I admit I did it once -- I was careless and I listed a $1200 gold bar or coin for $120, just wasn't paying attention to the number of zeros. Someone instantly bought it, but I cancelled it.

x2drich2000 07-14-2017 04:47 PM

I think there are a couple factors to consider. 1) Was it an obvious pricing mistake like Peter said 2) What's the dollar amount involved? $5 or $10 not really a big deal, just sell the card and move on. Several hundred dollars, that's a different story. 3) How long was the card listed? If it was bought 5 minutes after being listied, the seller didn't really have a chance to review his listings to make sure it was accurate. If its been listed for 3 days, they shad time to find the error. I know I review my listing once I upload them just to make sure everything shows as I intended.

DJ

JollyElm 07-14-2017 05:18 PM

People can't always make everything so black and white. Sometimes it's easy to see that there are grey areas.

Everyone needs to have and show integrity. If a seller lists something at the obviously wrong price, there is no reason why he would have to honor the price, because it was, in fact, a mistake. Everyone makes mistakes. Integrity always has to run both ways. In this case, it would be up to the buyer to have integrity and accept the seller's explanation that the price was unintentionally wrong. (I am, of course, talking about a relatively wild discrepancy in price here, not an almost negligible difference in price or a case of the seller playing Monday morning quarterback.)

If, on the other hand, the seller knowingly lists an item at a certain price, but only later realizes he should have tried to get more for it, then it would be shame on him and he would have to show integrity and accept the final sale price.

Jim65 07-14-2017 06:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by x2drich2000 (Post 1680988)
I think there are a couple factors to consider. 1) Was it an obvious pricing mistake like Peter said 2) What's the dollar amount involved? $5 or $10 not really a big deal, just sell the card and move on. Several hundred dollars, that's a different story. 3) How long was the card listed? If it was bought 5 minutes after being listied, the seller didn't really have a chance to review his listings to make sure it was accurate. If its been listed for 3 days, they shad time to find the error. I know I review my listing once I upload them just to make sure everything shows as I intended.

DJ

The card was a PSA8 1968 OPC Bud Harrelson for $10, I knew I was getting an good deal but not ripping off the seller. The card was listed at least 2 full days before I pulled the trigger.

EBay is making me wait 7 days before I can leave negative feedback, which I will be doing.


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