05-18-2021 02:57 PM - edited 05-18-2021 03:00 PM
I'm a former PowerSeller who only recently dipped my toe back in to selling on ebay. I'm having the hardest time understanding this new-to-me policy that the buyer is always right.
I sold a brand new sealed DVD to a buyer. The UPC, item image, and all of the details in my listing description are 100% accurate. The buyer filed a return request with these details:
Solved! Go to Best Answer
05-18-2021 05:50 PM
@digitdiscs wrote:3 different days that I talked on the phone with CS, so 3 different people. They all said I should be protected with an appeal. All 3 were lying?
Well, I would describe it more as "reading what they have been given." That is, they are most likely not actually eBay sellers or even buyers, but simply minimum wage workers (for whatever passes for minimum wage in their country) who got a job at an answering service and probably know little to nothing about eBay, and thus really have no idea that what they are reading to you as a response does not... comport with reality... in terms of whether what they are telling you is remotely accurate.
eBay has not been forthcoming about where they get their answering service(s), or what sort of expertise or knowledge their employees have about eBay processes and operation, but the anecdotal horror stories heard here have not been refuted.
(As an aside, it occurs to me that when the answering service job involves fielding complaints and problems about eBay for 8-10 hours a day, the last thing they would want to do is become eBay buyers or sellers themselves, so the odds of their becoming experts through experience are rather remote.)
What you heard is what they are coached to say, after which they move on to the next caller. They have no idea (and no followup to clue them in otherwise) that what they are telling you to do has little to no chance of success, in terms of achieving the desired outcome.
Conversely, we here have been in the trenches ourselves, and are better positioned to tell you what will happen in a given situation, because we are actual eBay... participants, let's say... and whatever you describe here has likely been seen many times over.
05-18-2021 06:31 PM
Very typical EBAY screw the seller, that is their default position. Not accepting returns only mean that the buyer as to lie and claim NOT AS DESCRIBED and then seller pays for shipping both ways. All thank to the MBG You can REPORT BUYER but what a joke means NOTHING unless they do it every week
05-18-2021 06:49 PM
All my listings include "Seller does not offer returns."
So you are willing to let the buyer keep the DVD and get their money back?
That would not be my choice, but okay...
You can refuse returns, but you cannot refuse refunds.
And that has been true since I started here in 1998.
If you do not refund promptly in exchange for the refunded payment, eBay will award you a Defect.
Defects can lead to higher fees, restrictions on the number and value of listings, and if the problem persists, a closed selling account.
Send the shipping label, get the DVD back, send the refund, block the buyer, relist the DVD, and move on.
It's business not personal.
05-18-2021 07:54 PM
What you heard is what they are coached to say, after which they move on to the next caller. They have no idea (and no followup to clue them in otherwise) that what they are telling you to do has little to no chance of success, in terms of achieving the desired outcome.
Not only is it predictable, but it is sad.
The only thing harder than learning this job (Seller on e-Bay) is un-learning what you used to know about this site. When you're new, you just kind of accept how it is. When you have history here, it makes it tough to apply logic to some of what is now reality.
Hopefully, the Op comes back and sells more and re-launches.
05-18-2021 08:57 PM
I had an experience with a refund because of problems with the global shipping program. The customer service rep that I was talking with was actually very calm and as helpful as he could be. It just that the decision was completely opposite to what logic would dictate as the outcome.
I asked to file an appeal, so he helped me with that and sent the request off. As we were closing out the call, I asked him something about what kind of weather he was seeing outside of his window because it was absolutely miserable where I was.
He laughed and told me what it was like, I told him what my weather was like, and then he wished me a good day. Just as I was hanging up the phone, I suddenly got an email from eBay that said my appeal had been denied. There's no possible way that someone could've received that appeal, read the case, and then made a decision in that short of time. It was all automated on the appeal process and the default is always 'thumbs-down'.
It was actually kind of funny how it finished up, if you dismiss the part about me losing money.
05-18-2021 10:29 PM
this is messed up. try to appeal, twice if you hafta
05-20-2021 03:44 PM
Consider the possibility that they buyer may have the ability to re-shrink rap empty DVD boxes. They likely copied the DVD as well.
You will need to find out if the returned item is complete. Odds are not wonderful that it is.