10 Tips for Maximizing eBay Profits

by anna on 12.08.2008

in debt

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OK, so now that you’ve been working on your debt snowball, you might be wondering how we can get this whole debt-repayment process moving a bit faster. One of the easiest ways to do this is to look around your house for things to sell. On Friday, I outlined some tips for selling books, DVDs and CDs on Amazon, and today I’m going to give you some tips on how to use eBay to your best advantage when trying to sell off household goods.

  1. Always consider shipping costs when listing an item on eBay. Not only do you need to have a shipping cost listed with your item’s auction, you need to keep an eye on price and ease of shipment with all items you list for sale on eBay. Learn to appreciate the value of selling small, light items–it is on these items that you will make your highest profits. Maybe you have a valuable piece of furniture you’d like to sell, but eBay is probably not going to be the best place for this kind of sale. Even if you use the ‘local sales only’ feature on eBay, the fact is that the market shrinks considerably when you are dealing with large items that will require the buyer to pick up the item or pay exorbitant shipping costs. Consider Craigslist or local consignment stores for these types of sales.
  2. Be careful with fragile items. Though there is a good market for pieces of art and other fragile items on eBay, you have to be careful with selling this type of stuff, just ask anyone who has had to deal with breakage! The best bet with these items is to insure heavily or, again, look to a local selling option to avoid the headache.
  3. Use 7-day auctions. Different ebay sellers have different strategies, but my experience is that the longer the item is up, the more time you have to attract sellers and drive up the price. There are people who say that setting your auctions to end on a Sunday night is a good strategy as well, since more people seem to be online and looking to buy on those days.
  4. Communication is key. Letting your buyer know what is going on is the easiest way to keep them happy. After a successful auction, email the buyer and let them know when they can expect their item to be shipped, and via what method, etc. Remember to always receive your payment before shipping anything.
  5. Do your market research. Some things don’t sell well on eBay for some reason–an example, generally speaking, is fine jewelry. Similarly, some things sell very well for a certain time, and then the sales die off. We can only offer conjecture as to why this is–sometimes it has to do with availability on the regular retail marketplace, as is the case with the sales of Ugg boots and Wiis for inflated prices before Christmas. Other times, it has to do with buyer confidence–there are some things people want to see up close before they commit to buying (again, this may be the case with the jewelry example). You should always look up an item on eBay before you attempt to sell it–find out what it is going for (price point), how many are on the market already (the competition), what the interest in the item is (are there any bids?). All of these factors should be considered in listing–in some cases, these numbers will guide you in setting a price, and in others, they will tell you whether it’s worth it to list the item at all. Other things that market research can tell you include: 1) should you sell an item as a set, or individually; 2) will the item get more if sold in a lot with other like items?; and 3) what is the best category for an item that could be listed several places?
  6. Use low start-off prices and avoid using reserves. This is a largely psychological issue, but for some reason buyers feel like they’re getting a better deal when items start low, even if the end price is the same. For the same reason, I would often list items with a start price of 9.99 instead of 10.00, even though it seems like a superficial difference–there is a reason people have done this in advertising for years. My rule of thumb was to start off a low priced item at $1.99 or $4.99, depending upon the basic idea of what I expected to get for it. A higher priced item might start off at $9.99. Only in a very extreme situation would I inflate the initial price–let the market do its work in driving up the price (if you’ve done the research, you should be more comfortable with this). Similarly, only in a very extreme situation would I use a reserve (like a very valuable piece of jewelry or something, which I probably wouldn’t be selling on eBay anyway), because it turns buyers off and costs more to list.
  7. Provide clear, high-quality pictures of the exact item you are selling. People like to see what they are buying. Don’t make them wonder–take a good quality picture and put it in your ad. Do not take other people’s pictures, or pictures off the web.
  8. Right or wrong, feedback is king. There are a bunch of crazy feedback mafia types out there these days, I’ve heard, who will withhold feedback and/or threaten bad feedback if you don’t bend to their will. I’ve never personally encountered such people, but if you’re communicating well with your buyers and providing good products as advertised, you should be OK on this front. Make sure to leave feedback and try to please your customers–your rating does affect people’s confidence in buying from you.
  9. Do your best to estimate a fair and reasonable shipping cost. One trick for getting more money per item on eBay is to inflate the shipping cost, and people have been doing this since the beginning days of eBay. Now that shipping costs are listed right next to the item price, it’s much more difficult for sellers to take advantage this way. Do your best to estimate what a fair shipping price will be. You should include materials (if any) in the shipping cost, and let your buyers know that the price includes these incidentals.
  10. Utilize free shipping supplies whenever possible. The post office has standard sized priority mail boxes that go for a flat rate regardless of weight. These can be used for free when using priority mail–but you can also get a supply of them to use for your own regular parcels–just cover up the priority mail stuff with a brown paper bag (shhh!) or a priority mail Tyvek envelope (also free) that you’ve cut open and wrapped around the box. If you are questioned by any postal employees, don’t say you got the idea from me, though. :)

Happy eBaying!

In the post that launched ABDPBT’s Personal Finance, I told you about how I sold off extra stuff in order to help myself get out of credit card debt. In addition to eBay, Craigslist, and the ever-popular yard sale, I used Amazon Marketplace as a means of selling off the many extra books I had, as a recovering graduate student in need of some extra cash. Along the way, I picked up some pointers on the best, easiest, most cost-effective, and quickest ways to sell stuff on Amazon, and today I plan to share my vast wealth of knowledge with you to enable you to pick up some extra cash just in time for the holidays.

If you’ve never sold anything on Amazon before, then you will want to set up an Amazon Seller Account. This can just be linked to your regular account, or you can keep it separate. They will ask you for some bank information, but this is just so that they can credit your account once you get some sales.

You can list your stuff by looking it up in the Amazon database. The easiest way to do this, by far, is to use ISBN numbers for books. Look for the ISBN on the back cover, or inside the book in the first few pages by the publisher’s information. DVDs and CDs also have standardized numbers to use. It is preferrable to use these numbers because, believe it or not, there are about eighty million different versions of the books/CDs/DVDs you have, and many of them look the same. To avoid problems down the road, you will want to make sure you’re listing the exact item, since people can get pissy about that type of thing.

Here are some generalized tips that I’ve gathered over the course of my experience of selling (and buying) on Amazon’s user interface. Take what you like and leave the rest, since your mileage may vary:

  1. Try not to be too attached to the price of the item. The easiest and fastest way to sell on amazon is to look up what the cheapest price is for your item, and mark yours for one cent less than that lowest price. Many people will balk at this, especially when their book is being sold for $0.29. Listen, that book is worth nothing to you sitting on the shelf, or else you wouldn’t have decided to sell it. This is an exercise in decluttering as much as it is in trying to generate revenue–if you’re too attached to sell the book for less than you paid for it, then don’t list it. But you need to get honest with yourself about whether or not you need the book in the first place.
  2. Remember that you will get some more money, in addition to the price of the book, from Amazon’s “shipping credit.” Amazon credits sellers in good standing for the price of shipping, and usually it costs slightly less to ship a book than they credit you for. So, if you play your cards right, you will get a little more on the back end than it initially appears. Bear in mind, though, that Amazon takes a cut of all your sales, and they also will pull your shipping credits if you fuck with them, so try to stay clean.
  3. Be honest about the condition of the book. The easiest way to get yourself in trouble with buyers is to try to sell items that are in “average” shape as if they are “like new” or “good.” Try to be as descriptive as possible in your relation of the condition of the item.
  4. The best selling items are relatively new paperbacks. This is because they are easier to ship, and because people see them on TV (Oprah or whatever), and so there is a big market for them. You do want to unload these books as quickly as possible, because once they’ve been around for awhile and their sales have gone down, they will be tough to unload, since the market will be saturated. So strike while the iron is hot.
  5. Academic books might not sell, or they might take a long time to sell. But when they do sell, you get a good price. I had a bunch of my dissertation books on Amazon for months and months without selling, but every once in a while a library or someone will be looking for that book and take it off your hands for a premium. For that reason, I think it’s worth the wait.
  6. Don’t blow your profits on shipping acoutrements! Remember that any money you put out on these things is coming out of your profit. For that reason, I like to ship things wrapped in paper towels, and then in brown paper bags, or better yet–get the free Priority Mail Tyvek envelopes from the post office, cut them open, and use them to wrap the books. It doesn’t have to be pretty, it just needs to get there in one piece.
  7. Maximize your use of the mail classes for ideal profit. If you are shipping a book, it is almost always going to go “media mail” for the cheapest price. The only exception to this would be a very small paperback book, like a kids book or something, that might actually go regular first class for the same price or less. With DVDs and CDs, ask the postal worker the prices for first class v. media mail. Sometimes they are almost the same price, and media mail takes waaaaay longer, so to keep your buyers happy, it’s a good idea to choose regular mail. Media mail takes 10-14 *business* days, so a lot of times you’re going to get some buyers bugging you about the whereabouts of their merchandise–in these cases, just nicely explain to them how long it takes and thank them for their purchases.
  8. Figure out one or two days you are going to go to the post office per week and stick to that schedule. Amazon expects you to mail out orders within two business days of receipt. If you’re not careful, you will end up going to the post office too often. The best way to handle this is to decide to go on Mondays and Thursdays (or whatever works for you), and only those days–that way, you aren’t making extra trips, but you have enough trips to make all the deadlines.
  9. Remember that every little cent counts. It’s easy to get discouraged because a lot of the amounts you sell books for seem so small. But remember that they all add up and get your closer to your goal–whether that is to be debt free, or just to pay for Christmas this year.

Happy selling!