 |

How To Use Ebays Pre-Approved Buyer Function. |
|
|
Submitted by Writer's Cramp Syndications
| RSS Feed
| Add Comment
| Bookmark Me!
For sellers who constantly have to put up with bid snipers, non-paying bidders and other anti-social, timewasting buyers, eBays pre-approved buyer feature is a godsend.
Pre-approving buyers lets you choose in advance who youre going to allow to bid: not by banning people you dont want, but by explicitly allowing people you do want. Anyone who is not on the pre-approved list will have to email you and ask you to let them bid.
While that might sound great, its only really a good idea to do it on very, very high value items. After all, half the point of eBay is that its such an open marketplace if youre going to restrict bidding to a few people, why not just email them to offer the item?
Most buyers will be very upset if they come across an item that they need to be pre-approved to bid in. They almost certainly wont have heard of the rule before, and theyll think this new feature (it must be new if theyve never heard of it, right?) is absolutely terrible. The one time I required pre-approval for an item, someone actually wrote to eBay to complain about the auctions format as if eBay had nothing to do with letting me list that way! The chances are that almost no-one will ever email you asking to be included in the auction theyll go somewhere else instead.
Of course, itd be better if you could just require that bidders have a minimum feedback level, but then that might overly restrict the choices of new buyers, and make them less likely to buy anything to begin with. Theres a delicate balance at play between trust and openness, and pre-approval tends to violate it. If one of your regular buyers wants to bid on your item only to find out they werent pre-approved, the chances are theyll be more than a little offended at your lack of trust.
The only situations in which you might find an advantage in pre-approving bidders are if your auctions get consistently disrupted. Jokers sometimes bid millions because they think its funny, or people bid high and then dont pay as a protest against whatever youre selling this is a pain to deal with. Requiring approval makes sense on very high-ticket items simply because it shows the buyer is serious about wanting to buy.
Before you can restrict an item to pre-approved buyers, you have to list it and get an item number. You can then set up pre-approved bidding on this page: http://offer.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?PreApproveBidders. From there on, its a simple process just type the usernames of the people whose bids you want to accept, and then keep checking your email.
Remember, though, that you dont need to restrict your auction to pre-approved bidders to keep people you dont like from bidding on your auctions. You can simply cancel these buyers bids when they appear, and then use eBays block bidder function to ban them from bidding on any of your auctions again. Edit your block list here: http://offer.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?bidderblocklogin.
In the next email, well take a look at whether your eBay design is as effective as it could be.
Click for Details --> Customer Generating Machine <--
|
|
 |

|
LinkedIn Recommendation:
Felice Amon - SEO Account Manager at Gadgetron - I have been watching Teo's business grow over these last few years and am amazed at how he keeps coming up with new applications and marketing. I really don't know how he can do all this! But, I finally hire him to do some Google marketing for my company, and we were on the first page of Google in less than a week. I am amazed. I am now working with him regularly and don't see that changing! Great work! - March 15, 2012, Felice was Teo's client |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
Related Tags (related articles):
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |