03-19-2021 02:57 PM
Hello, I want to ask how it is better to make offers to sellers to accept my offer and at least to lower the price to correspond to the original price?
03-19-2021 03:14 PM
To make an offer with variable cost profits according to the average mark up would be the best percentage.
03-19-2021 03:15 PM
Personally, I am very open to negotiation with a customer if they come to me in a cordial way. When I get messages that are demanding a lower price I will not work with that customer.
03-19-2021 03:27 PM
I don't see any listings under this ID. Do you have listings set with OBO? Are you asking how to send offers on BIN listings? Are you asking how to revise (lower) your price? I'm confused...
03-19-2021 03:30 PM
Is that what he meant?
In that case. I don't accept offers, period. If i receive any offer via ebay message, i reply with this generic message:
"Thank you for your interest in my product. Sorry but i am not accepting offers at this time. Aloha, James"
03-19-2021 04:21 PM
to lower the price to correspond to the original price?
Do you mean that sellers should not price things higher than the original price?
03-19-2021 04:38 PM
You are a buyer?
You want to make an offer to a seller that is lower than his posted price?
EBay now allows you to do that. Many sellers are not pleased about it.
If there is a Best Offer button enabled just click on it and follow the steps.
The seller can then accept, reject, counter-offer or ignore your Offer.
If the Offer is too low, the seller may have an automatic Reject set up. Or he may be annoyed and add you to his Block list.
You can make several Offers, but two or at most three are negotiating. More than that would be rude.
You are a seller?
You want your buyers to make Offers?
You can set that option when you fill the Sell Your Item form.
The option is right below the Asking Price.
You can also set an automatic acceptance and an automatic rejection level.
03-19-2021 04:41 PM
What would be the original price?
The price the manufacturer charges the retailer for wholesale quantities?
The retail price forty years ago?
The price at the thrift store?
The original price of a used item?
The retail price of a limited edition Barbie in pristine condition NIB, out of production for ten years?
03-19-2021 05:39 PM
lol.....stamps, I was just trying to figure out what he was asking.........
03-19-2021 08:39 PM
@archi_1708 wrote:lower the price to correspond to the original price?
The price does not need to correspond to the original price, it needs to correspond to the market price. Well, not even that, for the most part a seller can ask whatever they want.