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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

Hello,

 

I am getting less and less motivated to even list new items on eBay. I have been steadily selling on eBay since the early 2000's and opened my eBay store in 2009. As of last year, my sales have dramatically dropped. Currently I am at 47% below what I was doing last year at this time. I offer competitve pricing and even offer free shipping on all my listings. I do offer sales and do all the recommended eBay revisions including promoting listings, yet some days I am not even getting one sale. I feel as if I am barely making enough to even keep a store going. Any ideas what is going on or if I am missing something/doing something wrong? I cannot compete with a lot of these incredibly low prices given I have fees to pay and increases in postal costs. I have to make some profit. I am on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, etc social media platforms promoting the heck out of my store & listings. I see all these people with mounds packages from their sales for the day, yet mine sit dorment. Does anyone have any suggestions for me? I really hate being one to complain, but I love what I do and do not want to leave eBay. I just want to figure out what is going on or what I can do to improve my store.

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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

Last year searches became more mobile friendly.   

 

Dump the word New.     Having New in Item specifics is more effective.   Do not use dashes or other symbols in title.   

What you are selling should be in the first 21 spaces.    Most of yours are way down the end.   The first pass that an algorithm makes is for the very beginning on the title.

Use item specifics and use as many as you can.

Your descriptions are WAY too long.   Bullets and color fonts are considered clutter and a no  no.

 

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Message 4 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

I'm in the same boat and sell similar items like you do. I've seen the pics on Facebook of all the packages being mailed out - but we don't often hear what they are selling - just see stacks and stacks of boxes. Clothing is one of the most oversaturated and hard categories to sell in - but that's what I know.

 

I just think many people are overwhelmed with bills from Xmas and expenses caused by many of these natural disasters - plus stores are running huge sales to get rid of their stock that didn't sell. I'm doing 99 and $1.99 auctions to clean out inventory and get a boost and even those are failing - so I have no advice for you but want to let you know - you are not alone!

Message 2 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

Have you gone into your listings and did a search on comparables?

 

I did with one of your items, the bridal bustier - and it was priced on the high side compared to others listed.

Message 3 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

Last year searches became more mobile friendly.   

 

Dump the word New.     Having New in Item specifics is more effective.   Do not use dashes or other symbols in title.   

What you are selling should be in the first 21 spaces.    Most of yours are way down the end.   The first pass that an algorithm makes is for the very beginning on the title.

Use item specifics and use as many as you can.

Your descriptions are WAY too long.   Bullets and color fonts are considered clutter and a no  no.

 

Message 4 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

Hopefully not clothing. 

Message 5 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

There was a link to an article posted in one of these threads explaining about Cassini - it seems some of the "rules" have changed.

 

That is why we can find titles with all 4 words we searched for not as a result of our search  - but listed under similar items. Cassini is focusing more on item specifics rather than the words in the title. 

 

I see many listings using the word new, vintage,  EUC ect in the title - and this is not affecting their sales. Coupled with item specifics - Cassini is using TRS, buyer metrics, amt of good photos and closed cases in determining what is getting results in best search.

 

I had 3 returns right in a row in Sept and that is when my sales started to fail. It makes sense now why I wasn't selling as much - but I don't think buyer remorse returns should figure in with SNADs. I'm also wondering if there is a different algorithm for categories that may experience more returns like clothing than other categories.

Message 6 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

Here are some pointers to increase your visibility in search results. They were in an article posted in the forums yesterday, but it disappeared since: 

"The Big Picture: Understanding Cassini

eBay hasn't released in-depth, nuts-and-bolts documentation for how it calculates search results. Instead, eBay has given fundamental principles and some key metrics that are used in calculating search rankings for sellers.

 

Any seller that makes a substantial portion of his or her income on eBay needs to understand these basics:

  • Cassini is data-driven.Cassini is all about moving beyond listing titles and a direct correlation between the list of results and the word that a shopper has typed. eBay has a huge universe of data on hand—seller performance, buyer preferences, market trends, correlations of an infinite variety, and so on—and it wants to use these, rather than just a keyword match, to return results to buyers.

 

  • Cassini is values-driven.In a presentation on Cassini search, the director of search for eBay Australia, Todd Alexander, outlined four core values that drive eBay's development and tweaking of the Cassini system: Relevance, Value, Trust, and Convenience.
  • Cassini is shopper-oriented.eBay makes no bones about the fact that Cassini is all about serving eBay shoppers, with the presumption that this is what will be good for sellers in the long term. This means that when eBay talks about "relevance," they mean returning results that are relevant to the shopper's intentions as best as eBay can gauge them using the data that it has. When they say "value," they mean value from the shopper's perspective. When they say "trust," they mean that the want to show listings in results that will build trust between eBay and buyers. When they say "convenience," they mean that they want Cassini to make eBay more convenient for shoppers—not necessarily for sellers.

In the broadest possible terms, eBay has made clear that it wants Cassini to generate and rank search results in whatever way is most likely to generate an immediate sale and a happy transaction for the buyer following each search.

While some sellers may bemoan this orientation as yet another way in which eBay has chosen to place the needs of buyers over sellers, a more nuanced view makes sense here.

 

eBay is competing against Amazon and other major threats; in the long term, sellers will benefit only if buyers continue to buy on and come back to eBay. This means a priority on making an easy, convenient sale each time a buyer bothers to conduct a search and a priority on ensuring that the sale is given to a seller that won't have the buyer visiting Amazon instead for their next purchase.

Factor in These Considerations When Optimizing Your Listings for Cassini

The most important thing to understand about Cassini is that it not only fails to reward many old-school listing practices but may, in fact, punish them. Under Cassini, several factors that were not previously considered and/or given a high priority now matter for your visibility on eBay:

  • Sell-through-style data.Though from what eBay has said Cassini doesn't use a traditional sell-through calculation to rank listings for search results, Cassini does use a similar calculation: the relationship between how many times your listing has been seen and the number of sales you generate. This means that it is no longer a clearly good thing for your listing to be seen unless this visibility actually results in a transaction, a clear departure from the way that eBay has worked for many years.
  • Complete listing data, including item specifics and description.Cassini relies on data in the listing aside from the title alone in order to rank results. These include catalog and item specifics and item description. 
  • Category appropriateness.With Cassini, eBay began giving weight to the appropriateness of the category in which the listing has been placed. Listings that eBay calculates to be appropriate for the category will place higher than listings that it believes are miscategorized.
  • Seller performance.Cassini takes your performance as a seller, in all its many dimensions, into account when placing your listings in search results. This means going beyond feedback, top-rated status, and similar dimensions and into detailed seller ratings, customer service and disputes history, including things like buyer protection outcomes and responsiveness to eBay message system communication and other similar metrics.

Avoid These No-Nos to Impress Cassini 

These changes mean that all of the following are definite no-nos that may effectively, and in context, harm your ranking:

  • No-no: Keyword stuffing.Under Cassini, the last thing that you want to do is get as many varied keywords into your listings as possible. Even if eBay doesn't directly penalize the practice, having your listings show up in response to every last search regardless of outcome is no longer a good thing. Just imagine this scenario: You add the keyword "iPhone" to listings for Android phones. Sure, your listings may be visible initially to anyone searching for an iPhone, but each time someone sees your listing and doesn't actually click through or make a purchase, it's going to hurt your impressions-to-transactions ratio, pushing you downward in rankings. The old hope that you might just change the mind of one in every thousand iPhone shoppers is now offset by the fact that those other 999 iPhone shoppers that didn't buy your Android phone after seeing your listing are actively hurting your search placement.
  • No-no: Category stuffing.The same thing goes for listing in multiple categories. With Cassini, it's more and more important to avoid listing items in categories "just because" those categories are hot. Put your phones in the category for phones and your accessories in the category for accessories, or risk having your search placement in both hurt.
  • No-no: Terse listings.If you've hesitated to use the catalog or item specifics until now or have been loathing to create visually nice, informative, and detailed item descriptions, you're at a disadvantage under Cassini relative to sellers that do use or do these things. When all of these things are fodder for search matches, you're in trouble if your competitors have tons of information and keywords to match in these areas and you've left them essentially blank.
  • No-no: Poor images and lazy listings.Now that every click and buy counts, you can't afford to turn up in search listings but get ignored or passed over by shoppers. Photos need to be big, clear, and appealing, and listing text needs to be well-organized, well-formatted and free of grammatical or spelling errors that might give a shopper pause. Remember, under Cassini, it can be worse to place well in search results and not earn a sale from a shopper than to have not appeared at all.
  • No-no: Poor customer service.With seller performance and trust now figuring into search ranking, you've got to pay attention to more than your basic feedback score and DSR numbers and they matter for more than just winning the battle for the buyer's bid. Sellers that demonstrate consistently customer-friendly practices are going to be much more visible, while sellers that don't are going to struggle to be seen in the first place.

What You Should Do

If this list of factors and no-nos has your head spinning, it might be simpler to boil this all down to something more basic. That something is this: as eBay search continues to evolve, it's clear that the sellers that are going to do best are those that engage in good, old-fashioned customer-centric business practices.

Strive to be seen only by buyers that are actually looking for what you have to sell. Then, be sure that you've got the best pitch around for why they should buy your item rather than someone else's. Make great listings—meaning listings that are honest, focused, aesthetically appealing, complete, detailed, and informative. Then, provide great customer service and customer-friendly policies."

 

 
Message 7 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

Seems like 90% of the posts complaining of low sales are selling clothing. The market is saturated with sellers right now so that's a negative right off the bat. If you buy stuff to resell, why not look into other categories.

Message 8 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store


@beautifulmystery31 wrote:

Hello,

 

I am getting less and less motivated to even list new items on eBay. I have been steadily selling on eBay since the early 2000's and opened my eBay store in 2009. As of last year, my sales have dramatically dropped. Currently I am at 47% below what I was doing last year at this time. I offer competitve pricing and even offer free shipping on all my listings. I do offer sales and do all the recommended eBay revisions including promoting listings, yet some days I am not even getting one sale. I feel as if I am barely making enough to even keep a store going. Any ideas what is going on or if I am missing something/doing something wrong? I cannot compete with a lot of these incredibly low prices given I have fees to pay and increases in postal costs. I have to make some profit. I am on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, etc social media platforms promoting the heck out of my store & listings. I see all these people with mounds packages from their sales for the day, yet mine sit dorment. Does anyone have any suggestions for me? I really hate being one to complain, but I love what I do and do not want to leave eBay. I just want to figure out what is going on or what I can do to improve my store.


I am also down from last year. I sell books. Kinda tough market like clothing.  Also I am sitting on unpaid items. One is a Canadian with no FB who didn't ask up front the shipping amount.  Another two are high-dollar items that may involve buyer remorse.  So my items are being tied up for days instead of being paid for. I really need to use the immediate payment feature. 

 

Another observation: I did a search yesterday as part of comparison research and my search resulted in tons of irrelevent items. I do not know how they even came up, they were so off (search for books resulting in a lot of listings for coins). Are listings being buried because of too many wrong hits?

Message 9 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store


@keziak wrote:

@beautifulmystery31 wrote:

Hello,

 

I am getting less and less motivated to even list new items on eBay. I have been steadily selling on eBay since the early 2000's and opened my eBay store in 2009. As of last year, my sales have dramatically dropped. Currently I am at 47% below what I was doing last year at this time. I offer competitve pricing and even offer free shipping on all my listings. I do offer sales and do all the recommended eBay revisions including promoting listings, yet some days I am not even getting one sale. I feel as if I am barely making enough to even keep a store going. Any ideas what is going on or if I am missing something/doing something wrong? I cannot compete with a lot of these incredibly low prices given I have fees to pay and increases in postal costs. I have to make some profit. I am on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, etc social media platforms promoting the heck out of my store & listings. I see all these people with mounds packages from their sales for the day, yet mine sit dorment. Does anyone have any suggestions for me? I really hate being one to complain, but I love what I do and do not want to leave eBay. I just want to figure out what is going on or what I can do to improve my store.


I am also down from last year. I sell books. Kinda tough market like clothing.  Also I am sitting on unpaid items. One is a Canadian with no FB who didn't ask up front the shipping amount.  Another two are high-dollar items that may involve buyer remorse.  So my items are being tied up for days instead of being paid for. I really need to use the immediate payment feature. 

 

Another observation: I did a search yesterday as part of comparison research and my search resulted in tons of irrelevent items. I do not know how they even came up, they were so off (search for books resulting in a lot of listings for coins). Are listings being buried because of too many wrong hits?


Apparently, what may be 'relevant' to Cassini may not even be in a relevant category? How is that even good for the buyers?

Message 10 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store


@best_vintage_photos wrote:

@keziak wrote:

@beautifulmystery31 wrote:

Hello,

 

I am getting less and less motivated to even list new items on eBay. I have been steadily selling on eBay since the early 2000's and opened my eBay store in 2009. As of last year, my sales have dramatically dropped. Currently I am at 47% below what I was doing last year at this time. I offer competitve pricing and even offer free shipping on all my listings. I do offer sales and do all the recommended eBay revisions including promoting listings, yet some days I am not even getting one sale. I feel as if I am barely making enough to even keep a store going. Any ideas what is going on or if I am missing something/doing something wrong? I cannot compete with a lot of these incredibly low prices given I have fees to pay and increases in postal costs. I have to make some profit. I am on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, etc social media platforms promoting the heck out of my store & listings. I see all these people with mounds packages from their sales for the day, yet mine sit dorment. Does anyone have any suggestions for me? I really hate being one to complain, but I love what I do and do not want to leave eBay. I just want to figure out what is going on or what I can do to improve my store.


I am also down from last year. I sell books. Kinda tough market like clothing.  Also I am sitting on unpaid items. One is a Canadian with no FB who didn't ask up front the shipping amount.  Another two are high-dollar items that may involve buyer remorse.  So my items are being tied up for days instead of being paid for. I really need to use the immediate payment feature. 

 

Another observation: I did a search yesterday as part of comparison research and my search resulted in tons of irrelevent items. I do not know how they even came up, they were so off (search for books resulting in a lot of listings for coins). Are listings being buried because of too many wrong hits?


Apparently, what may be 'relevant' to Cassini may not even be in a relevant category? How is that even good for the buyers?


I could see (sort of) getting hits on book lots that weren't really what I wanted. Of course what I needed to do was click on Nonfiction in the item specifics list. One hopes buyers do that.

Message 11 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

Maybe tweaking your listings would help?  

Message 12 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

Anonymous
Not applicable

From what I can see, Alot of Great sellers have left , You know The ones who also were Buyers. So not as much Traffic. Hard to sell when you only have 5 views.... I am holding on I am More a Buyer then a Seller,  Good Luck All!

Message 13 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

I am wondering that as well. I sell mostly pre-owned clothing and do not sell a lot of knits, sweaters, or other "easy fit" clothing because most of that stuff looks worn out after just one washing. I have been getting more returns, all for fit, none of them have been for SNAD. I have noticed that even fit returns are being called "cases" now that are escalated before being closed even when the entire process is automatic, there is no dispute and if there is any contact from the buyer, they are apologizing for returning it. My sales have pretty much stopped. I don't mind fit returns, but I now am finding myself afraid to list anything that has any shape or is not stretch for fear that it will not fit and be returned and cause my sales to decrease even more. I understand that I need to sell more to improve the return ratio, but nothing is selling because of the ratio. I don't know what to do.
Message 14 of 15
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Major decrease in sales and views for my store

Never understood how people can buy clothes online. Usually it take me 3-4 tries in a store before I find a pants that fit.

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