I think PayPal is worse if you're the buyer than if you're the seller. Peronally, I've never had a problem on EBAY as a buyer.
I've been selling on ebay for 3 years, and the one tip I give to potential sellers is to have good feedback as a buyer first. It's a lot easier to learn ebay from the buyers' side first. Since you've done that, you shouldn't have a problem.
Personally, I've never had a problem with Paypal - but I do know others have.
Plus, it's a good way to get rid of "stuff" that you no longer need or want. I really enjoy it.
The only heartburn I have with being a seller is the newbie buyers. They can't wait to slap a negative on your feedback. You have to be really careful and treat them with kid gloves, or you'll get a negative for "not being nice." That's my big beef.
Instead of working things out in email, they can't wait to give negatives. But........their day will come. :)
I've never had a problem with Paypal, but I know someone that hates it.
I just started a drop off store in my neighborhood to sell for other people. It is going to go gangbusters I think. I have a tiny sign out front and I am almost afraid to put up the big signs that I have.
Good luck.
Opening price for the whole shebang: $125.
Bids: zero.
Eventually went into the trash bin. Understand: each 2-gb medium (disk) originally cost ~$100...
--Boris
As for Pay Pal, I've never had any problems. The only people I know who had trouble, it wasn't really Pay Pal but some scam artist presenting himself as working from Pay Pal. Follow their safety advice and you should have no trouble. If you are planning on selling a big item, you need to keep in mind that Pay Pal will take a fee from the seller. Some people will charge an extra 5% if the buyer wants to use Pay Pal.
I have used eBay to purchase over $50,000 worth of merchandise and was stung only once. I have also sold using eBay.
A low eBay rating WILL affect your auctions... many people are leary of buying from a low rating eBayer. It is a classic catch... you have to make transactions to build a good rating. Buyer ratings and seller ratings are basically the same and each increment your number. Unless you really go looking you cannot tell the difference easily. As for low rating buyers don't be too afraid of selling to a low rating... just don't ship the item until you have the cash (not just a check) in hand. In other words, make sure the funds have cleared.
Be wary of buyers that are suddenly purchasing large ticket items that don't fit their previous purchasing pattern... their accounts may have been hijacked by crooks who will buy large ticket items and send a forged cashiers check or other fraudulent instrument.
PayPal is a bank. Using it is as safe as using a bank. There will be fees and if your items are large, you may run up against a transaction limit. By using PayPal, you can specify that you will only accept electronic check transactions from the buyers bank account into your PayPal account. Using credit cards is more expensive because PayPal has to pay the merchant's discount to Visa or MasterCard, etc., so they pass that fee on to you plus their own fees.
For large ticket items consider using a escros service... but not one offered by the buyer,.. as it is common that fraudulent buyers create their OWN fraudulent escrow service. Use one that is recommended on eBay by other eBayers.
I furnished almost my whole house through ebay and have intermittently sold, I'd just suggest that you can easily build up your feedback by buying some inexpensive things, and by selling items like books, cds, and other inexpensive goods.
Try not to be too wordy in your auction, I especially hate the ones that are a hundred lines of 'rules', I never bid on anything that is sold that way. Just ask yourself if you were buying the item what you would want to know about it, you can put a small disclaimer at the end saying how many days till payment is expected if insurance is available etc.
I love PayPal, it has saved me money by giving me refunds when a seller has been a loser. In fact I try not to buy anything on ebay without using PayPal.
It is certainly a good thing to have a lot of positive feedback, but it is not absolutely necessary. If you are selling big-ticket items or expensive, fragile antiques then having no feedback is more of a liability than if you are selling $5 items that are not so great a risk.
IMHO, it is less worrisome to have no feedback than to have negative feedback. I have bought items from far away countries from sellers with little or no feedback and have been pleasantly surprised. If a seller has numerous negative feedback, I'm not buying from them even if they have a thousand positive ones.
Be thorough and very specific in your selling terms. Read the terms of other sellers.
Think twice about selling large items that can't be shipped cheaply. Buyers often bid on them, then experience deep remorse when they realize they must find a shipper and pay through the nose. Don't complicate your life by offering to find a shipper and arrange for shipping.
I'd go on but I'm getting depressed, remembering the mistakes I made. I haven't sold in over a year. Not worth the agony.
If you can, don't use a reserve. Put a starting price of what you need to get for the item. People will either buy or not regardless of price.
Don't start your auctions at a price that you can't afford. You will lose money that way.
Keep your shipping to a minimum. People get crazy about shipping amounts. If you charge a handling or packing fee, make sure that is in your auction.
ping
BTTT
When choosing your opening bid price, pay attention to where the listing fee breaks are.
Listing an item for 9.99 costs half as much as listing an item at 10.00.
Same thing for 24.99 and 25.00.
Use the completed items search to find what comparable items sold for in the last two weeks.
Choose your shipping method before hand. Weigh your items so you know your shipping charges. State flat rate shipping or using the shipping calculator so buyers can determine their ship costs by zipcode, this gets more bidders. It's okay to add a reasonable handling fee for packing materials, etc.
Mystery ship costs lowers bid numbers.
If a seller is to lazy/disorganized to predetermine ship costs and methods, they are also likely to be poor packers and slow shippers.
Good photos are really important in the antique/collectibles category and you may need several from various angles or to disclose flaws. If your item(s) require multiple photographs, a listing service with photo hosting will be cheaper than using ebay's photo service in the long run, especially if you have 100's or 1000's of items to sell. Try sparedollar dot com for low volume selling. If you plan to expand to serious full time selling you will want auctionwizard or auctionworks that can handle real volume selling
I don't use them, but I sell in a category where only the one free picture provided by ebay is necessary. I have seen them recommended by other sellers who need more.
Paypal is okay in my book for average dollar sales. I would not use them for selling high dollar jewelry or electronics as they don't have comparable fraud protection/dispute resolution to real merchant accounts.
If you can't spell, then be sure to spell check your descriptions and titles as mispellings will effect the search engine and reduce your total exposure, you will be totally dependant on luck if you spell keywords wrong. In fact, be sure you know what you are actually selling and research the best keywords to use in describing it to maximize search engine exposure.
Being honest, accurate, original, pleasant and even humorous in your descriptions is worth money, so polish your writing persona.
Best of luck to you.
I sold vintage lingerie on eBay last year and was quite satisfied with the results. I took a break from my eBay auctions because sales there have been a little slow overall for the past 6 months or so.
I have never had a problem with PayPal and since they became a part of eBay things run a lot smoother. eBay and PayPal were both very helpful last year when some awful person hijacked my eBay ID and attempted to sell non-existent computers.
You may want to try auctioning off one or two items and see how you like it. I thought it was great fun making money from something I enjoy in the first place and I loved creating the ads for my auctions.
If you want to do some research on how well antique items like yours sell, do an eBay search and look at "completed items" --- auctions that have ended. You will be able to determine what a good starting price is and how much you may be able to set for a reserve and ultimately get from the sale. I would recommend using plenty of good photos of your items in your auctions. Pictures make a huge difference for both the buyer and seller.