eBay cuts seller fees—or does it? (1 Viewer)

mikemiller1955

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I found this intersting article...it's a good read...


March 16, 2011, 10:53 AM
EBay Inc. announced a new pricing structure yesterday that eliminates some upfront auction listing costs and incentivizes sellers to offer free and low-cost shipping.

Effective April 19, sellers will get their first 50 auction listings per month free and can add the fixed-price “Buy It Now” sales tool, also for free. EBay previously charged five to 25 cents per listing to use Buy It Now. Existing listing rates apply for auction items after the first 50.

The online marketplace also restructured its final value fees, which are the commissions it collects from shoppers and are based on the total value of a sale. EBay will now lump the cost of shipping into the total sale value, while at the same time reducing overall commissions by 1%-2%, depending on the item.

A rosy outlook from eBay
This means sellers who currently offer free or low-cost shipping will get a break on what they owe eBay. Sellers who charge high shipping costs will pay more. EBay says 30% of items sold by U.S. merchants already ship free.

The commission fee for apparel items, for example, drops from 12% to 10% under the new structure, but the commission will now be based on the final sale price of the item plus shipping.

So if a seller sells an apparel item for $40 and offers free shipping, he will now owe eBay $4 (10%), whereas before he owed $4.80 (12%). A seller who closes a $40 sale but charges $10 for shipping will pay eBay a $5 commission under the new rules, 20 cents more than previously, as eBay’s final value fee will now be based on a $50 total sale.

EBay says the changes allow both sellers and customers to benefit from an immediate purchase and that the new fee structures build upon a series of similar promotions implemented in 2010, which it says drove significant increases in both new sellers and new listings.

“As we look toward the future of commerce, eBay is positioning small sellers and larger merchants alike for growth,” says Christopher Payne, senior vice president and head of eBay North America. “We are listening to our customers and continue to tailor pricing to ensure the success of our sellers.”

Not all eBay sellers agree. Robert Bitto, owner of the SuenosImports eBay store, says the new fee structure will cause him to remove his products from the online marketplace, as it has become less and less profitable for him over the years. “I will lose at least $1,000 this year with the new fee rules. That’s a mortgage payment,” he says.

Bitto says he charges for shipping at the same rate that U.S. Postal Service or FedEx charges him. “This program is to encourage the lowest possible price for shipping, but I do that anyway,” he says. “I’m going to pump up my web site, pump up my sales on Etsy.com and by the end of the year I will have weaned myself off of eBay.”

Simone Klein, an occasional seller on eBay and owner of DesignKandy.com, says eBay is punishing all sellers for the actions of a small group of sellers that sell items at rock-bottom prices but then jack up the cost of shipping, thereby avoiding paying fees to eBay. For example, a seller might charge 1 cent for a pair of socks but then charge $20 to ship them and pocket the real shipping balance and avoid paying fees to eBay. “There are a few bad apples out there that make money off of shipping by adding huge amounts of handling charges, but most sellers are pretty fair," she says. The only winner here is eBay.”

Rich Rothbard, product manager at specialty camera retailer Cameta Camera which has a daily average of between 8,000 and 9,000 items on eBay and also sells on Amazon and through its own retail site, says web consumers today are savvy enough to look at the total price to find the best deal—and that includes shipping. “It doesn’t matter how you package it, what it comes down to is your overall gross price including shipping,” Rothbard says. “After price, the first thing a person looks at is if you offer free shipping.”

The fee changes will impact sellers differently, depending on the price point at which they sell and the cost at which they ship, says Scot Wingo, a long-time eBay observer and CEO of ChannelAdvisor, a firm that helps retailers sell through online marketplaces, search engines and comparison shopping sites.

Sellers of low-priced items with no free shipping options could see drastic fee increases. A CD merchant, for example, who sells a $5 CD and charges $5 for shipping pays eBay 75 cents (15% of $5) under the current structure, whereas a month from now they will pay $1.30 (13% of $10). Though an extra 55 cents may not seem like much, it could add up for some sellers, Wingo says. “These things are tricky because they always seem like nickels and dimes, but some of these guys are selling 100,000 CDs a month and this will have an enormous impact.”

The new rules will impact merchants that sell large, bulky items that are difficult to ship. When the high shipping costs of these types of items are lumped in with the item price, eBay will charge a much larger commission, Wingo says.

Sellers in these low-priced and high shipping cost categories will likely raise prices to offset the higher commissions eBay will charge, essentially passing on fee increases to the online marketplace shopper. “There are maybe 10% of the sellers that are in that bucket,” Wingo says. “For those kind of items, it will make it tough for eBay to be price competitive.”

4 Responses

9994571 wrote: March 16, 2011, 12:04 PM Dinesh Lathi VICE PRESIDENT, SELLER AND BUYER EXPERIENCE who concocted this latest horror show of added fees is a Harvard graduate of business. Like most text book ideologues, he brings his theories to the real world with every intent to fatten the wallets of himself and eBay’s stock holders. Every new generation of CEO’s and management changeovers that come into the Ebay fold have one goal in mind. To squeeze more profit out of it’s flock of sheepish eBay members. These members are eBay’s personal corporate livestock, and right now even in a struggling economy, eBay figures it’s time to harvest some more prime steak off its members backs. I personally see this is a down grade of my relationship with eBay which began in 1998. I am also a Power Seller and Top Rated Seller, but that does me little good if eBay engineers itself to make me its slave. I think this crushing fee add-on is going to backfire on Mr. Dinesh Lathi and I hope stock holders ask for his resignation. This man is moving eBay so far away from what made it successful, that he should be joining the government CZAR’s so he can continue to rule without oversight or approval of the people. Tyrant is the word of the day.

mojokat wrote: March 16, 2011, 2:18 PM eBay truly thinks its sellers are stupid. Fees assessed on shipping more than negate any little "freebies" eBay offers. eBay is doing this because it's been losing money to unethical sellers who play the system by selling their items for next-to-nothing and inflating their shipping fees to make up for it, yet eBay refuses to properly deal with these bad apples, preferring to throw a blanket fee over ALL its sellers. It's amusing how eBay pretends to "care" by encouraging its users to report these kinds of listings. I have reported COUNTLESS sellers who offer high priced items for a 99 cent "buy it now" with shipping as high as $1,500.00. eBay refuses to deal with these scumbags and I can prove it. I save all the items that I report in "my favorites", yet these listings are NEVER, EVER removed. Hasta la vista, eBay.

PBSCorp wrote: March 19, 2011, 1:52 PM This hurts, Shipping is expensive for me. I'm stuck with eBay as they are a monopoly, but I will close my eBay store in July for 1 month in protest to this and the continuing practices of eBay and PayPal.

F_Ellen wrote: March 22, 2011, 4:50 PM I was just getting ready to go back to eBay because I was so infuriated at the last time they tried doing a "we're lowering the costs" double back flip so they could make more money by changing the store's fee structure that I took almost everything off and did the absolute minimum just so my name could still get out there. And now they turn around and tell me that they have to charge 10% or so of my shipping fees. Well, Mr. eBay, I am sorry to say that the only possible way to counter that is to charge 10% MORE for shipping which I am sure will not make my customers happy. I am glad that I have found auctioninc.com for my own website that I can now have decent shipping prices that don't rake anyone over the coals-- my customer or myself. My dealings with them have been very positive, the few items that I have tested with are accurate to within just a few cents, I plan to have the rest of my parts listed with their 'add to cart' button by the time eBay gets it's fees adjusted.
 
Good article Mike.

I'm raising my bid starting price on items and increasing my shipping fees by 15%. I have covered part of the shipping costs to be competitive with US sellers, but no more. I expect US sellers across the board will be raising their fees anyway. Things may sell slower, but it will be cheaper to list items, so the only ones getting screwed will be the buyers. This will also pretty much end my buying items on ebay too. The higher shipping costs will either get me to buy locally or do without.

Terry
 
I think the morons at ebay figured out that shipping costs in Canada are high. I answered a survey ebay sent to me in which I told them what I thought of them. Here are the new rules for Canadian Sellers.

Starting April 19, Standard Auction-style fees will be changing for non-store subscribers - you'll be able to list FREE at any start price--up to 50 items a month and Auction-style Final Value Fees will apply to the total amount of the sale (including shipping). You will also be able to add the Buy It Now option FREE No mention of reducing the Final Value Fee which is 9% to a maximum of $50.

And because international sales will disappear because of the high postage rates in Canada, "When you list on eBay.ca and sell to a US or international buyer, we'll charge your Final Value Fee rate against your first domestic Canadian shipping service, or the actual shipping cost paid by the buyer, whichever is lower.
This means that even if you frequently sell to US buyers, you can keep your overall fees down by offering free or low cost shipping to your Canadian buyers"
{sm2}^&confuse That really simplifies things :rolleyes2:

Terry
 
insane. I ship a lot of items overseas. I am going to get hit very hard on priority shipping and will be forced to offer more first class. first class is a crap shoot on delivery time, especially around the holidays.

i have also been buying a lot of hard wood lumber. those are the large and bulky orders that need higher shipping charges and I know I'm going to have to pay more.

but, it's ebay. they'll come out alright or they'll come up with a new pricing structure which will take more out of us than the one before. it's all spin with them.

combine this with them telling me that they want to place a hold on my payments until an item is confirmed delivered and I am going to have to hold out and not sell anything through them for a while. when I go a few months, I get calls and emails from them asking why my activity has gone down.
 
I just lost a $300+ package to Germany using First Class International...the matter is resolved on my end as far as trying to locate it and I have exhausted all support from my local USPS in any form of tracking...

they're only reply is ..."sorry...but it can't be tracked"...

my only hope now is that the seller can still assist on his end...but I'm not holding onto much hope...

I know I'm stuck and will have to refund the $300 to him...

so now...

I revised my template to read that the buyer should contact me on shipping rates before bidding...and I will still ship USPS First Class International if the seller insists on a cheap shipping and won't upgrade to Priority...

a section of my new script read something like...

"for International shipping...contact me before bidding on shipping prices...on any International order over $200...seller suggests upgraded trackable Priority shipping and insurance purchased...buyer assumes all responsibility if package is lost through USPS First Class International...I can scan and email you the First Class receipt and customs form number with your address on it for your records and proof of mailing...but I will not take responsibility if lost...ship First Class at your own risk...I recommend Priority for your protection"...

when I tried to post the ad...it got rejected saying Ebay will not allow my ad with the text...

"buyer assumes all responsibility if package is lost through USPS First Class International"...or words like..."ship at your own risk"...

I reworded the ad to read...

"Any International order over $200.00...will be shipped USPS Priority...if you request Economy First Class USPS International...I will honor your request for the cheaper shipping...contact me before purchase...but I will not be responsible for lost packages as Economy First Class International provides no tracking info for me...you can request Economy first class at your own risk...you can request insurance...it is advised..."...still getting my point across...it's just a game of semantics now...

but...


for some reason this ad passed their "red flag" test the second time...

but I get the feeling if it goes to arbitration on a lost parcel...Ebay and Paypal will side with the buyer...even if I say I recommend Priority and you assume all risk as a buyer if you insist on cheap shipping...

any legal opinions...????????
 
This is not a legal opinion but paypal will probably side with the buyer and hold up your money with respect to that auction until the matter is resolved. In other words, I don't think it really matters what you say in your ad about risk, even if you cited Incoterms, which are the ICC official rules for the interpretation of trade terms and to which most buyers and sellers of goods subscribe.
 
This is not a legal opinion but paypal will probably side with the buyer and hold up your money with respect to that auction until the matter is resolved. In other words, I don't think it really matters what you say in your ad about risk, even if you cited Incoterms, which are the ICC official rules for the interpretation of trade terms and to which most buyers and sellers of goods subscribe.

I agree...

I believe the buyer is still protected regardless of the verbiage in my ad...at least in the eyes of Paypal...

with that said...he has no incentive to upgrade shipping...

if it's lost...I believe Paypal will refund him...

even if I scan and email him a receipt and customs form proving I left it in the hands of the good people at USPS...

here's an example...

Germany...1 pound...2 pounds...3 pounds...3 pounds 15 ounces...

First Class Int...$10.76...$17.64...$24.52...$31.40
Priority............$29.92...$32.20...$35.15...$38.10

why should he upgrade...the only reason would be for expedited shipping...

I don't think I have protected myself at all with my new ad...but I'm leaving it in there...
 
Don't do it. Just accept that for expensive items, the International market is dead to you unless the buyer wants to pay for air with a tracking number and signature on delivery. With few exceptions, that has been the case in Canada for a long time.

The exceptions are sales to Treefroggers I trust (not through ebay) and for items less than $100 (insured for $100 by Canada Post) that don't sell well here but are in demand in Europe.

Terry
 
I agree...


Using your example, here is what we face in Canada - and ebay wants to fee us on postage. :rolleyes2:

Germany...........1 pound...2 pounds...3 pounds...3 pounds 15 ounces...

First Class Int........$10.76...$17.64...$24.52...$31.40
Priority..................$29.92...$32.20...$35.15...$38.10

Small Packet Air......$17.06...$33.45...$50.26...$50.26
Canada Priority.......$89.34....$89.34...$89.34...$114.75

Small packet has no tracking number and no delivery confirmation but comes with a $100 insurance limit

Try shipping to anywhere with that fee structure other than US which is much cheaper.

Terry
 
This is no consolation Mike but I think you need to just accept that when you ship overseas, the package may not get there (but I think more than most it will) and that even if you're as pure as the driven snow, paypal will not take your side.

I remember several years ago I shipped a bunch of Town and Country Trophy to an English (well known) buyer and the package didn't get there. He was concerned and despite my counseling patience, he filed a claim with paypal. I mentioned it to Shannon because I know she ships a lot overseas and she said something to the effect that eventually everything shows up. Sure enough, two days later he gets a notice from Customs; he was quite apologetic and a day later my funds were released from paypal.

Thus, I agree with Terry on not leaving that in there. The only thing it will do is lose you potential customers.
 
The other thought I had is for expensive items, you could pay the small difference yourself to get the better service - like an insurance fee.

Terry
 
Just from reading the latest goings on with eBay, makes me wonder why anyone would even use the site to sell.
 

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