it depends on what your selling, if there's a large market for it then .99c auctions can work well because many people are attracted to what other people like, so whilst the kids are having fun with 50c bids ect, once it starts to get closer to the value the kids drop off,
leaving your auction looking like it's the ants pants, 24 bids, 400+ views and it's still just $33 with 2 minutes to go.
then come the high rollers, ready to pounce, with 20 seconds to go there's 32 bids, it's $77 and adrenilin sets in, the must haves just can't contain themselves, the're so in the moment they must win, 2 seconds left and you almost fall off your chair 'cos it's now $199,61 you think omfg and refresh to see the winners name, only to find in the last 2 seconds there was another 4 bids, it ended at $367.01 your in shock, you feel guilty, go back to shock and not come out until you get that paypal email, "you've got payment" you quickly log on to check your account, yep it's in, wow looks great, you come out of shock, spend the money and realise you still haven't sent the item, that's boring.
on the other hand if your selling an item that is not so popular, or like bulk lots ect ect, yeah I like the 20% of the actual price you want to allow for some of the above.
and then there's the unknown item, you have no idea what it's worth so you set a higher price then you would think it's worth and are more then happy to get, someone may come along and buy it too.
I don't like reserve auctions, we can't actually do reserve auctions anymore here and it's better.
I used to use reserves for testing the water on items, not knowing how much interest it would have or what people are actually willing to pay, so you put a very high reserve and let people bid it up to the highest bid, so if your reserve is $100 and they bid up to $60
then you have an idea of what to list it at next time round.
problem is people know this and can't be bothered playing the reserve game.
Buy it now's are great for higher priced items for the impulse buyers that need to purchase this moment or nothing.
but steer clear of adding the "make an offer" option, it instantly devalues your item, you miss out on the person wanting it now
if they see that your actually negotiable on price.
end of the day, no matter what you think will happen to your item, how it will sell ect, it's usually the complete opposite.
and one more thing, I can sell $2 item on
ebay all day, many hundreds of $2 items before I sell 1 item for $200
the bigger the ticket, the slower it usually sells, but junk, cheap as chips, all friggin day man.
Bookmarks