What's Your eBay Reputation Really
Worth?
Your eBay reputation is everything you are on eBay - without it, you're
nothing. Your reputation is worth as much as every sale you will ever
make.
If you've ever bought anything on eBay (and the chances are you have),
then think about your own behaviour. Buying from a seller with a low
feedback rating makes you feel a little nervous and insecure, while
buying from a PowerSeller with their reputation in the thousands
doesn't require any thought or fear - it feels just like buying from a
shop.
A Bad Reputation Will Lose You Sales.
In fact, a bad reputation will lose you almost all your sales. If
someone leaves you negative feedback, you will feel the pain straight
away, as that rating will go right at the top of your user page for
everyone to see. Who's going to want to do business with you when
they've just read that you "took a month to deliver the item", or that
you had "bad communication and sent a damaged item"? The answer is
no-one.
Your next few items will need to be very cheap things, just to push
that negative down the page. You might have to spend days or even weeks
selling cheap stuff to get enough positive feedback to make anyone deal
with you again.
It's even worse if you consistently let buyers leave negative feedback
- once you get below 90% positive ratings, you might as well be
invisible.
You Can't Just Open a New Account.
Besides eBay's rules about only having one account, there are far more
downsides than that to getting a new account. You literally have to
start all over again from scratch.
You won't be able to use all the different eBay features. Your existing
customers won't be able to find you any more. Your auctions will finish
at a lower price because of your low feedback rating. Opening a new
account is like moving to a new town to get away from a few people who
are spreading rumours about you: it's throwing out the baby with the
bathwater.
A Good Reputation Will Get You Sales.
When a PowerSeller tells me something, I tend to believe them. They can
be selling a pretty unlikely item, but if they guarantee it is what
they say it is, then I trust them - they're not going to risk their
reputation, after all. This is the power of a reputation: people know
you want to keep it, and they know you'll go to almost any lengths to
do so.
This is true even to the point that I would sooner buy something for
$20 from a seller I know I can trust than for $15 from someone with
average feedback. It's worth the extra money to feel like the seller
knows what they're doing, has all their systems in place and will get
me the item quickly and efficiently.
You really will find selling on eBay so much easier, and there's only
way to get a good reputation: make sure you please your customers every
time. But some customers can be, well, just a little difficult to
please. In the next email, we ask: is the eBay customer always right?
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