07-31-2021 03:55 PM
hello. I am a new comer an d would like to speak to someone e
Solved! Go to Best Answer
08-01-2021 01:41 AM
Thank you ever so much for your hep I accidentally entered the US market however I thought listings was world wide anyway.
08-01-2021 01:45 AM
08-01-2021 02:05 AM
Personally, I think people should let you ask your question(s) before referring you to your native site. Who knows, perhaps it is something simple enough that anyone could answer, even me. 😁
08-01-2021 05:02 AM
It's doubtful that anyone here is preventing the OP from asking his/her questions.
It's just that, as you are aware, some things may be slightly different in the UK and it would be good for the OP to learn about selling on the UK site. I am thinking that there could be specifically questions about VAT, shipping etc that we may be unable to aswer.
08-01-2021 05:37 AM - edited 08-01-2021 05:40 AM
Correct - OP asked on the mentor board about opening an account and being suspended, most likely because they attempted to open it here when they are registered in the UK
https://community.ebay.com/t5/Ask-a-Mentor/LISTING-AN-ITEM-ON-EBAY-FOR-BSALE/td-p/32122963
and it is a different process opening an account regarding MP requirements in the UK than it is here
08-01-2021 07:08 AM
Better to direct the OP to ebay.co.uk discussion boards to get information and advice there than to have a bunch of US members--who may not have even noticed the OP is registered in the UK--give incorrect advice on some issue that is unique to that platform, and, thirty posts later, someone mentions that the OP is in the UK--after two pages of misleading "answers." That's just downright irresponsible, and no one who feels any sense of obligation to OPs getting complete and correct advice would encourage it.
There are plenty of threads started by US members that can keep posters occupied. Half the time, people aren't posting "advice" anyway; they're just posting some pointless social comment or trite eBay bash that we've all heard before.