01-25-2018 11:01 AM
I have a bidder from china that BO on a lot of my items but super low. ($100 item, bids $20)
I have my best offer set so they are automatically declined
but, as I mentioned in another thread, 'review all offers' stays in My ebay in the first column
so, when I go through my offers occasionally to see if maybe i will decide to take a best offer that was declined but was pretty close, many times it is this person and I waste a lot of time
sure, it would be nice if ebay programmers put back 'EDIT' when I've looked at the offers but that is obviously not happening
I don't want to annoy someone needlessly but then again, I doubt they will ever actually buy anything
plus, I don't ship to china
and, speaking of that, why are they allowed to bid anyway?
01-25-2018 11:03 AM
In response to the question asked in your post title:
Yes.
01-25-2018 11:33 AM
Anytime you have to ask if you should block a buyer ...
You should block the buyer.
Go with your gut.
01-25-2018 11:38 AM
01-25-2018 11:40 AM
01-25-2018 11:51 AM
Always go with your intial though or reaction because usually it is the correct one. I rarely block people for low balling but I did it once. I had a $100 item up and someone offered $25. I made a reasonable counter offer and the response to that was an offer lower than the $25. At that point, BBL that "buyer" went.
01-25-2018 04:04 PM
If you don't want to ship to China:
My ebay > Account > Site Preferences > Selling Preferences > Buyer requirements > Show > Edit
Here are my buyer requirements:
Have received 2 Unpaid Item strike(s) within 6 Month(s)
Have a primary shipping address in a location I don't ship to
Have 4 Policy Violation report(s) within 6 Month(s)
Have a feedback score of -1 or lower
Are currently winning or have bought 6 of my items in the last 10 days and have a feedback score of 5 or lower
01-25-2018 04:12 PM
Yes, I do so all the time.
01-25-2018 05:32 PM
I block any buyer who annoys me and wastes my time.
01-25-2018 05:54 PM
Don't think of blocking as handing out a stiff sentence. You have the potential of 5000 and that's a TON. Don't worry about losing any sales. They will just go offer low somewhere else. And demand free shipping etc. These habits don't change. Good luck~
01-25-2018 06:30 PM
A question:
When you buy (Or bid) on something to resale don't you try to get it as cheaply as possible ???
No difference ...
01-25-2018 06:31 PM
@audioarchive wrote:
I would and I have.
I have a vintage jacket up on my other account at a very fair price ($30.00 plus shipping). I had someone offer $16.00 shipped. I declined. He then offered $20.00 shipped. I blocked.
Only time will tell if that was a good decision ...
01-25-2018 06:39 PM
I would block this bidder if it is consuming your time. I would also go to my site preferences and block these bidders through your buyers requirements as well. I know these blocks work because when I go to my buyers requirements activity log I can see that it is in fact blocking bidders who have too many unpaid item cases or too many policy violations; those who don't have a paypal account; and those who have an primary address where I don't ship. I don't do any shipping internationally. I decided against that when eBay required sellers to pay for return shipping on claims. Depending on the weight of an item I also don't ship to P.O. Boxes, Alaska Hawaii & US Protectorates. I have buyers who contact me and ask for an exception and sometimes I will make an exception depending on what I see in their feedback and the type of item they want. I will ship to Canada, UK and Australia for some items if they are willing to pay for trackable shipping. I don't block non US Paypal payments so people using freight forwarders can still bid on my items. As far as I know I am only required to make returns to the address that I shipped to which could be a problem for the buyer.
01-25-2018 06:55 PM
This appears to be a waste of your time, and is concerning.
Go with your gut. That way you will have no regrets.
BBL.
01-25-2018 07:00 PM