09-27-2019 10:31 AM
With the recent change in eBay leadership, nervous sellers off loading product to other sites and buyer disinterest, it is paramount that eBay deliver an outstanding 4th quarter sales improvement.
What will it take to generate buyer excitement and bring them back to the site?
Forget seller issues like MP, GTC, etc for this thread please.
I'd like to hear thoughts on buyer enticements, loyalty programs, advertising and marketplace presentation.
09-28-2019 07:49 AM
@pburn wrote:
@b86fiero wrote:
What will it take to generate buyer excitement and bring them back to the site?
Speaking strictly for myself, the addition of sales tax and the increase in postal rates (neither of which are eBay's doing) have come pretty close to pricing me out of the eBay market.
On top of that, some of the items I look for are offered at laughable prices: certain discontinued items listed at $50--used--that I can get on Amazon for under $20 brand new, for example. Lately, I've checked for specific books, DVDs, jigsaw puzzles, and a small kitchen appliance at least, and all were priced way above Amazon. That's not encouraging for a buyer.
As a final straw, probably eight of my last ten transactions have been disappointing in one aspect or another--with the seller misrepresenting an item or packaging it poorly or whatever. Problems with my last two sellers pretty turned me off eBay. I know eBay is made up of good sellers, too, but I've had a pretty bad run of luck lately, even after doing all the appropriate "due diligence." A buyer can only give eBay sellers so many chances before deciding to go elsewhere.
So, as a buyer, I'm not sure what would rekindle my interest in eBay. An 80% "disappointment" rate is just too high for me to continue to buy here consistently. I might check it now and then for some obscure item, but I won't be checking it routinely anymore. The %-off discount offers used to spark my interest, but they've stopped doing those. The other ideas you mentioned are great, but, for me, they're not enough to put up with mediocre purchases or transactions.
What is ebay supposed to do, about sellers selling items for more than you feel they are worth? If no one is buying from these sellers, then they wouldn't be selling. So clearly, the prices are worth it to someone. You can't control the costs a seller has in doing business.
09-28-2019 07:51 AM
@ed8108 wrote:A few
@b86fiero wrote:
What will it take to generate buyer excitement and bring them back to the site?
A few EBay promotions 10% off anything & everthing
There's been like 4 of those this month alone. Hell, ebay is doing a promotion in fashion right now, giving buyers 15% off, period. Remember that the more promotions ebay gives, the more they will have to charge YOU eventually. Nothing in life is free. Just like free shipping and returns aren't free. Everything free, will always roll over into costs.
09-28-2019 07:53 AM
@lex-talon wrote:
@ed8108 wrote:A few
@b86fiero wrote:
What will it take to generate buyer excitement and bring them back to the site?
A few EBay promotions 10% off anything & everthingI haven't seen any of those for quite awhile. It would help.
Literally got 4 of them this month. Ebay doesn't send them to everyone tho. I have multiple buying accounts. Sometimes one gets one, sometimes the other doesn't.
09-28-2019 07:54 AM
@myjunqueyourtreasure wrote:I'm with you on the "disappointing" buyer experiences.
As a seller I'm tired of busting my hump after working an 8 hour shift to get orders out the door as fast as possible only to then turn around as a buyer here and see sellers print a label then wait up to 5 days to get around to mailing it.
If that was the case, their service metric would be destroyed. You're being a bit hyperbolic there. It might happen sometimes, sure, but it's certainty not the norm.
09-28-2019 08:04 AM
09-28-2019 08:04 AM
Stop hiding the correct search term results, don't show me lower priced same items you hid from me the first time around after I've purchased already. It's like laughing in my face.
09-28-2019 08:18 AM
09-28-2019 01:06 PM
@leadgard9 wrote:
@myjunqueyourtreasure wrote:I'm with you on the "disappointing" buyer experiences.
As a seller I'm tired of busting my hump after working an 8 hour shift to get orders out the door as fast as possible only to then turn around as a buyer here and see sellers print a label then wait up to 5 days to get around to mailing it.
If that was the case, their service metric would be destroyed. You're being a bit hyperbolic there. It might happen sometimes, sure, but it's certainty not the norm.
Who are you to say a poster's experience as a buyer is "hyperbolic"?
If that is what they have found to be the 'norm', then that's what it is (for them).
09-28-2019 01:57 PM
@albany_sellers wrote:I'd like to see the buyer's confidence when all of the good sellers are ran off by bad policy and only the reject sellers that nobody else will allow on their platform remain. eBay should be bending over backwards to keep sellers who buyers actually want to buy from.
If they are as bad as you say Ebay will run them off also. We have post all the time sellers complaining of being booted. Actually I have bee buying on Ebay for 20 years and do not notice any difference between the beginning and now. The site is full of good and bad sellers.
09-28-2019 02:01 PM
@dreamalittledream wrote:
The greatest enticement to me as a buyer would be to show me search results that match my search terms. If I search for a particular brand of dog figurines, don't show me tablecloths with dogs on them. I don't buy much here anymore because of the frustration that results from irrelevant listings. (Sorry AI, but you really don't know better than I.)
Ebay defaults to the basic key words you typed. After you hit search and see all those tablecloths just go to the left of the page and hit "figurines". Problem solved.
09-28-2019 03:21 PM
@albany_sellers wrote:
@greg5000 wrote:This is coming from a very frequent Buyer from 2010 until 2019 (when eBay imploded).
Although there were some issues over the years, it wasn't until 2019 when I chose to stop buying here.
The reasons were:
- A very bad buying experience that wasn't handled properly.
- eBay allowing bad high volume sellers to remain on the site.
- Improper Feedback Removal, and eBay not following their own policies.
- Unacceptable and Frequent Technical Issues and Glitches.
- Poor Customer Service to address my concerns (and I'm a Concierge Member).
100% agree with the bad high volume sellers part. That is why I refuse to buy almost anything on eBay now and use Amazon instead. My last straw was buying bubble wrap from a big seller who we all know as the one who sends only half the order and then lies to eBay about you only sending half back when you return it, the same seller who has almost every negative feedback scrubbed from their account.
That one transaction pretty much hit all the bullet points. They removed my perfectly legal negative feedback from that seller's feedback, and then when I called to find out why they would do that, I was told how it was "within policy" and because this large volume seller suffered a "Natural calamity" that made them send me only half my order, ignore me, sent an insufficient return label, ignore me AND eBay some more, and then lie. This same seller who every single day seems to suffer natural calamities that requires the daily negatives they get to be removed.
After that fiasco, I was done. I lost trust in the feedback scores that were being manipulated to sucker people into buying from sellers they would have avoided like cancer had they been able to see the real picture.
I had a very similar experience (bad high volume seller/valid feedback removal) and that was the main reason I stopped buying here. We are two out of many Good Longstanding Buyers, who have left or are leaving.
Since eBay's Interim CEO is a Numbers Guy ... I hope he can see this quickly ... the Board finally saw something.
09-28-2019 03:27 PM
@coolections wrote:Actually no matter who is in charge it is buyer confidence that makes $$. I doubt Ebay cares a whole lot about seller confidence. Sellers are a dime a dozen so unless thousands leave and no new ones come not much will change.
Every Good Seller on eBay is Valued Highly by all Good Buyers.
Every Good Seller that leaves is a loss Buyers and eBay can't afford.
09-28-2019 03:32 PM
@albany_sellers wrote:If eBay wanted to create a better environment, they could, but history has show me that they don't care much about that and only care about how many fees they can extract. Everything else is an afterthought.
You're just now figuring this out?
Ebay doesn't care about buyers or sellers. They care about their pocketbook, period. I figured this out over a decade ago.
09-28-2019 04:10 PM
Disagree. There are too many sellers selling the same thing as it is. Buyers would not even notice and those that think Ebay hides their listings will start getting sales.
09-28-2019 04:27 PM
Why should any buyer have to do that to get the results that they searched for to begin with?