03-02-2021 10:36 PM
I have been seeing this more and more. Sellers post the first image on the listing as a close up of part of the postcard. I find it annoying and distracting.
Isn't the first image supposed to the full item being offered?
and subsequent images can be close ups or it is a free for all and any image will due?
When will images that are not the item be the first image?
When I am looking to buy a postcard of a cat and in the search results I see a cat's eye or an ear, how is it that I can make a judgement if it is what I want to buy? Isn't it baiting me to click to see what it is and isn't that against eBay rules? I have been tricked into clicking on the link to the listing to get there only to see it is something I already have or am not interested in, the title is sometimes vague and one has no clue what they will find by viewing the listing.
Does that really increase sales? or is it like I said, click bait, a way to get more views and hopefully a sale?
I have been seeing this showing up on other sites too. Is it just postcards or is it other items too?
you can see an example by viewing this listing
Does anyone agree with me? Does anyone find it annoying too?
If you do that and it is not click bait, please explain the purpose it serves.
03-03-2021 03:20 AM
It can either work for or against the seller if they crop part of the postcard and use it as their main image. If you just see a cats ear as the main pic it may turn many buyers away. But it may also prompt a buyer to open the listing and look for the full image. It would be better for all postcard sellers to use the main full postcard image as the 1st image, however sellers can do what they want in their own listings. There are no ebay rules specifying they can't use what ever image they want for the 1st image.
03-03-2021 03:55 AM
There is not much you can do other than waste two seconds clicking the image, and then another two seconds hitting the back button if you do not like what you see.
03-03-2021 05:21 AM
I'm not aware of any rule that requires the first photo to be a full shot of the item.
03-03-2021 06:32 AM
I sell in postcards (obviously) and I haven't really searched in the category much.....but I understand what might be happening...
In a Facebook group I belong to, someone posted and stated they stole a picture from the internet to share with the group. They (and some of their friends) consider anything posted to the internet as okay to 'steal' no matter what the copyright laws say. I can see people copying the eBay picture instead of paying for the postcard. OP you and I may not do this, but others do.
Second, and I am not sure about this, I believe only the first picture in a listing goes into the eBay catalog. eBay catalog is available for any seller to use any other seller's picture when listing the same item. By using a partial picture, sellers who have worked hard to produce a quality picture are keeping it from others.
03-03-2021 06:39 AM
There is NO requirement that the first image be a photo of the entire item. Choosing which item is first is up to the seller. In some cases, it is is smart marketing to use a detail rather than the entire item. In other cases, not so smart. But either way, it is the seller's choice.
03-03-2021 12:09 PM
I don't see what the issue is if others are able to use the image. If it about all the work taking a photo and making is work for the listing, use a watermark or put your username across it. that would keep others from using your image.
03-03-2021 12:10 PM
you have the 4 seconds, as you describe, to waste? Care to share some of those free seconds?
03-03-2021 12:11 PM
"it may also prompt a buyer to open the listing and look for the full image" = click bait
03-03-2021 12:19 PM
my bad the policy has changed https://www.ebay.com/help/policies/listing-policies/picture-policy?id=4370
03-03-2021 11:10 PM
Yes I do. It looks like you do also as it took way more than 4 seconds to discuss this. When you see a partial picture of a dog but are looking for a penguin no need to even waste 4 seconds.
03-07-2021 03:59 AM
you don't get it