02-18-2025 07:07 AM
I’m sitting on tons and tons of stuff and few if any sales. I feel like chucking everything. I’ve been a seller since 06 and have never seen a slump like this. I believe everybody is so stressed out during these political and financial times. Oh and add the weather
02-18-2025 05:19 PM
@1224fischer wrote:I’m sitting on tons and tons of stuff and few if any sales. I feel like chucking everything. I’ve been a seller since 06 and have never seen a slump like this. I believe everybody is so stressed out during these political and financial times. Oh and add the weather
I live in New England - Your Lego listing priced at $29(much too high I think) would cost $64 to ship from your PA location via USPS Ground Advantage - Is that an error on your part? If so, maybe you have a lot more of them - I would check my listings to start...Good luck
02-18-2025 05:41 PM
@chariot_badges wrote:No matter how things are now -- just wait. It'll change.
If times are good ... they'll get bad.
If times are bad .... be patient, they'll get better.
Nothing good, or bad lasts forever.
I liked your post - We had similar "making too much money" problems back in the 2000's.
Though in respect to the last paragraph from your post quoted above...
I totally agree with the concept - But it doesn't mean this site will be around when the cycle runs its course. I believe the companys fate is inevitable due to too many MAJOR mistakes over the years - I'm seeing data showing US e-commerce market share for 2024 at approx 3%, down another .5% - Something else will likely take it's place - If it does, better be ready to get while the gettin' is good - That wax and wane cycle stops for no man...
02-18-2025 08:45 PM - edited 02-18-2025 08:49 PM
Your items are all long tail items, and just may take a long time to sell. I sell a lot of long tail items, and despite what some "eBay gurus" on social media say, "low sell through" items can still be profitable and worthwhile. Even great long tail items can still be frustrating at times because they sell so inconsistently. If worst comes to worst, you can always sell your items to another reseller and/or donate them (no need to "chuck" your items, we are living in times of extreme need and others can definitely use them.)
Just some advice from someone who sells similar items:
I'd bundle the Charlie Brown Cyclopedias into one lot, especially if you have a complete run or set of the books (volumes 1-8 etc.) They are super long tail, and the shipping cost versus individual value is very high, they are more desirable as a set and would be cheaper to ship them all at once.
I'd bundle the sewing patterns into lots of clothing of the same type (office wear, casual wear etc.) and of the same size range. (Plus size womens dressy and vintage styles tends to sell the best, in my experience.)
I'd try listing your Muppet Babies sewing pattern in a different category. The person who will buy that will probably be a Muppet Babies fan, not necessarily someone who is into sewing, and will want it as a collectible.
I'd put the date of your vintage dentistry book, welding structure book and copper book in the titles. Vintage science, industrial and medical books can sell well; put edition and printing information, author and publisher in the descriptions, people who collect those books want to see that information and may pass listings over that don't have that information. Take "GOOD" out of the title of the dermatology book, that is something the "media megaseller" listings have in their titles and some people avoid those sellers due to their unreliability.
02-18-2025 10:30 PM
@isaiah53-57 wrote:
@chariot_badges wrote:No matter how things are now -- just wait. It'll change.
If times are good ... they'll get bad.
If times are bad .... be patient, they'll get better.
Nothing good, or bad lasts forever.
I liked your post - We had similar "making too much money" problems back in the 2000's.
Though in respect to the last paragraph from your post quoted above...
I totally agree with the concept - But it doesn't mean this site will be around when the cycle runs its course. I believe the companys fate is inevitable due to too many MAJOR mistakes over the years - I'm seeing data showing US e-commerce market share for 2024 at approx 3%, down another .5% - Something else will likely take it's place - If it does, better be ready to get while the gettin' is good - That wax and wane cycle stops for no man...
eBay might not be around then.
I may not either ... I'm 72, so every day is a 'gift'.
All I'm saying is that if enough people 'drop out' of this business model, it will simply leave more business for those of us too stupid to quit.
02-18-2025 11:28 PM
@1224fischer wrote:Is eBay worth it
It is definitely worth it for me.
I have no idea if it is worth it for you.
Is it?
02-19-2025 02:18 AM
I price watch several things here and every other resales site on the net..
I've noticed here seems to only show a few and pretty much always priced similar while not so much on others.
02-19-2025 03:03 AM
Maybe just devote a couple of hours a day listing/shipping the stuff and spend your time on something else. After all, it's already bought and paid for, might as well make it a source of semi-passive income.
02-19-2025 12:00 PM - edited 02-19-2025 12:01 PM
02-19-2025 02:50 PM
And exactly what is eBay them selves doing to create traffic. I have been saying this for years. You look at other sites and they advertise. The only time I hear or see anything eBay is when it is made in regards of a joke , or when your on line and the cookies track you around. All eBay has done for me is take their cut. Sales year by year are going in the downward trend. Never recovered after the housing crises of 2008
02-19-2025 03:50 PM
Is it worth what? Do you have better things you could be doing with your time? If so, then do them. Personally, I've never found an easier way to earn a living. It's a little stressful when things are slow, but in the forty plus years I've been earning money for myself, nothing else has provided me as much freedom with as little drudgery, aggravation, or physical discomfort. I've been paid to learn, teach, lift, throw, drive, sort, and write...all of which required me to answer to some a**hat or other. So, yeah, for me "it" is definitely worth it.
02-23-2025 03:10 PM
I have been listing 250 consistently and had a good pre Christmas but I think several things are colliding at once
Facebook Marketplace
a general anxiety over politics and the economy
The fact that sellers have to jack prices up for higher postage
And. And this is not the least, some sellers like thrift books charge so little it’s not worth listing
And the inroads of Temu I think mean lower sales. I’m still hanging in there but it’s getting old delisting nice things at a low price. Kitty
02-23-2025 03:53 PM
how can anyone expect the prices to come down until new practices are given a chance to work - after all it took 4 years to increase them without too much complaining the prices were too high
02-24-2025 10:19 AM
Ya'll are starting to scare me.
02-24-2025 11:26 AM
@mod_50 wrote:In my experience, it just takes longer now. There are just too many other internets out there. There are 500 more online distractions today versus the good days of 25 years ago. Some categories are very hard, and others still work fairly well. Ebay has made it harder to list items, because they have sanctioned keyword spamming, where as it formerly could get your listing taken down. I am mostly a vintage seller, and my items get 400-500 less views then 25 years ago. There are still buyers searching out there, but you might have to wait for them for months. I am switching to the M-place and C-list formats more, and have that working well as a replacement, you might take less, but have less grief.
My moto is don't price below what you will really accept. List items at auction mostly, as it may help to appear new to the few remaining searching eyes. Pray your bidder buyer isn't a psycho.
Categories made harder:
Car parts... --- just look at the item specifics one must work on, and do a search for vintage 1964 corvette shifter, you will get results for hundreds of items that don't have your keywords! The database and search game is horrible.... and they they did it to their own system. A seller has to spend too much time filling these specifics out, or no one will find your item.
HIFI stereo gear and vintage electronics: --- these items do good still do well, but the problem is selling items that are very vulnerable to bogus returns. The search engine works better here, less automated search results, but sellers often lack descriptions of the item in all categories. AI descriptions make me hurl, and ai will only further suck this experience into the toilet.
Mid Century modern furniture: --- the market is saturated with cheap repos, so you need to wait for the right buyer here, and identify the maker and present the item as vintage. Use all the keywords you can, and you must have an exact shipping plan in place for the lower 48 US states.
Used machine and tool parts: --- Still good as Joe lunchbox buyers can find parts and tools for obsolete items. Sometimes they even know the part number, and have a saved search. Vintage Delta DP-220 drills is a good search, as it actually brings back old drill machine parts, for the guys repairing machines. Same with vintage sewing machines.
I believe ebay has vaporized the GSP program, global shipping program, and global sales. The old GSP Kentucky international outlet for exports, got buried with no real explanation, and its EIS replacement must not be good enough. I formerly (pre 2010) did my own boxing, and customs exporting, then switched to GSP, then to EIS, and now nothing gets exported, after the pandemic. Also killing exports are the return rules. Now you are expected to take returns like we are amazon junk peddlers ? Really the export market was killed by them, not us. Returns is what ebay is all about now. I don't take returns, offer returns, but they still can force them on good sellers. I have worked to keep an ethical standard above normal, but its hard to keep the 1% psycho buyers from killing my desire to carry on. So in conclusion, I am leaning towards giving up finding items to sell and wind this down.
This should be the best answer IMO.