About Me- Member since: Oct-03-98 08:48:46 PDT
- Location: United States
- 162,041 views
| Archive - January 2008 Posted Jan-31-08 19:41:49 PST Between avitar pics and interesting fact about city kept me on the blog but I need to say Good Night!!!!
Now I have 6 hours to sleep!!!
Have a great night! Posted Jan-31-08 19:27:56 PST Posted Jan-31-08 19:19:35 PST Plenty of traffic lights!! Way too many and more added!!
Posted Jan-31-08 18:57:40 PST If you have many different ID and especially ID that describe your mood and so on. Does that make you schizophrenia. Sorry had to ask, it drive me crazy to see all those name that personality of the moment!
Good Night! Posted Jan-31-08 18:54:10 PST It is FRIDAY tomorrow!!! YIPEE!!!!!!
I need to go to bed!!! Good Night! Posted Jan-31-08 18:37:45 PST I decided to try to scan something but I never use the printer as it is new. It is printer, scanner, copier and print pictures too!! 4-1!!! But all those step and making sure everything work. Print the page to see if it will print then asking me to scan to see if it is alignment!
LOL!!! Posted Jan-31-08 18:21:30 PST My ex started this account back in 1998 to buy Barbie for me but really for him but it is my screen name. Correct me if I am wrong
1. You were able to retract your feedback. I am assuming as I saw a neutral that say retracting positive feedback. I am going to assume it was the Barbie that look like it been out of the box.
2. Then no longer be able to retract which I have no ideas when that happen or if that is true.
3. Ebay actually advise me to leave after the transaction.
4. The stupid 5 stars catorgory that the buyer get NONE!!
5. And now no negative feedback for buyer.
Is that correct??? Posted Jan-31-08 18:15:58 PST I was 2187 at about 5 pm and suddenly 2188 at about 5:30 and then I am 2189 between 7 and 8 pm and just noticed 2190!! Anymore coming?????? Posted Jan-31-08 17:50:32 PST This have been confirmed by one of the supervisor at work who have called Sprint!! My boss did it for me on my cellphone to put me on the block list!
Cell phone numbers going public tomorrow
REMINDER....all cell phone numbers are being released to telemarketing companies tomorrow and you will start to receive sale calls.
....YOU WILL BE CHARGED FOR THESE CALLS
To prevent this, call the following number from your cell phone:
888-382-1222.
It is the National DO NOT CALL list. It will only take a minute of your time It blocks your number for five (5) years. You must call from the cell phone number you want to have blocked. You cannot call from a different phone number.
HELP OTHERS BY PASSING THIS ON TO ALL YOUR FRIENDS. It take about 20 seconds. Posted Jan-31-08 17:32:12 PST Posted Jan-31-08 17:26:44 PST eBay fee changes upset sellers
by Matthew posted on January 31, 2008 9:16 am
Earlier this week at the eCommerce Forum in Washington D.C., Bill Cobb, president of eBay North America, announced changes to the pricing structure on the site. He said:
We’re making a fundamental change to the economics of selling on eBay, resulting in three significant price reductions, effective February 20.
Those changes include:
- Lowering insertion fees for all auctions, including fixed-price listings
- The Gallery feature is to become free
- The introduction of tiered pricing for Featured Plus
The changes, according to Cobb, are in response to sellers not liking the existing price structure and that they wanted higher prices for success rather than starting the auction in the first place. The comparison final value fee table is reproduced below, taken directly from eBay’s fees page:

Some sellers have looked into the new fee structure and found that this will actually increase the cost of listing some items rather than reducing them. The example given is a purse selling at auction for US$25. With the old fees, the seller would have paid a total price of $1.91 (60 cent listing charge and $1.32 final value fee), but with the new charges, the total comes to $2.74. The listing charge goes down to 55 cents, but the final value fee increases to $2.19, more than compensating for the listing reduction.
Steve Grossberg, an eBay Top 100 seller and founder and president of the Internet Merchants Association, commented:
I think you are going to see a listing decrease, you are going to see some sellers leave the site or pull back quite a bit and think of other ways to make revenue, and it’s going to backfire.
Read more at the Associated Press article and the eBay press release.
Matthew’s Opinion
I think it is a mistake for eBay to present this as a reduction in costs to the seller, which Bill Cobb clearly does in his press release with the words “significant price reductions.” It is simple math to figure out that if you decrease the percentage charge on a smaller listing price, but increase the percentage charge on the larger final price, the cost is going up.
Looking at the fee table above, they are significant fee hikes as well. The listing fee has been reduced by between 5 and 80 cents, but the final value fee has gone up by 3.5% for the first $25 and then increased by .25% on the remaining item value. In a lot of cases, the maximum 80 cents you can save on your listing price will be eaten up by the increased charges on the final price.
Lower initial charges will encourage more auction listings, but in the long term, if sellers find the auctions are costing them a lot more, then they will leave eBay. Amazon seems to be the main alternative at the moment, and eBay just needs to keep a close watch on what is happening, especially with its top sellers.
Posted Jan-31-08 16:58:27 PST I am trying hard to list my inventory but it is sooo hard to focus!!! I want to list everything by Feb 10!!!! So I can join the strike! Posted Jan-31-08 16:47:31 PST Someone came in and I didn't agree and even said I will be weary and it was not hidden and I know someone comment on it as I see 2 but it is hidden!! It makes me feel like they have something to hid!!! Posted Jan-31-08 16:38:55 PST I can see it slow shipping but not consider that they may not go to the post office everyday! Not consider that there was a holiday and the feedback was left on Sunday. So if got on Saturday, it was 11 days but only 7 business days! I don't see it slow at all!! I guess I am patient!!!
Once I did email the seller if she shipped it as it took so slow and she said she already said and it was media which was fine. But seem like a long time and she very nicely said I live in Alaska!! DUH!!! AK to FL, no wonder it not there!! Common Sense!! After that, I check where they are!!! The book was in awesome shape and was like new (It was used) Posted Jan-31-08 16:31:54 PST
| 27. |
Which sellers will have their payments held? |
| In a small percentage of cases where it has been determined the risk of dissatisfied buyers is higher, PayPal may delay release of the payment funds to the seller until the buyer has left a positive feedback or 21 days have passed without a dispute, claim, chargeback or reversal filed on that transaction.
To determine if a transaction may have a higher risk of dissatisfied buyers, eBay reports to PayPal a number of factors, including but not limited to:
- Seller's % Positive Feedback in the last 30 days
- Seller's Detailed Seller Ratings in the last 30 days
- Final price for the item
- Shipping & handling fee
- Seller's eBay tenure as an eBay member
- Seller's total number of Feedback
|
| 28. |
How will I know that my payment is being held? |
| Payments that are held will be shown as "pending" in your PayPal balance. PayPal will send an email notifying you when the hold is released. PayPal Money Market Fund customers will continue to receive income for amounts that are being held in your account. |
| 29. |
When will PayPal release the eBay item hold? |
PayPal will release the hold when the earliest of the following occurs:
- the buyer leaves positive feedback,
- 3 days after confirmed item delivery* or
- 21 days without a dispute, claim, chargeback, or reversal filed on that transaction.
* This applies to US domestic transactions that are shipped by USPS or FedEx and either (i) use PayPal shipping labels to ship items or (ii) upload tracking information to PayPal via the transaction details page. |
| 30. |
What can I do to avoid having eBay item holds? |
Your payments WILL BE NOT HELD if you meet all the following requirements:
- eBay Tenure: Greater than 6-months
- Total Feedback score: More than 100
- Dissatisfied Buyers %: Less than 5%
Or if you meet all the following requirements:
- Detailed Seller Rating: Greater than 4.5
- Total Detailed Seller Ratings Recieved: More than 20 in the last 12-months
|
| 31. |
How can I minimize the chances of having my payments held? |
- Improve your DSR feedback ratings, and
- Implement best practices to reduce buyer disputes, claims and chargebacks and if they do occur-resolve them quickly and to your buyer's satisfaction.
|
| 32. |
Why is the payment being held for up to 21 days? |
| eBay and PayPal are working together to help increase buyer satisfaction which, in turn, can mean more sales for you. We have found that after 21 days the chance of a buyer dispute or claim significantly decreases. |
| 33. |
Will my payments be held if I have excellent buyer satisfaction, but sell in risky categories? |
If you sell in the categories of gift certificates, video games, cell phones, computers or consumer electronics, your listings for those items must offer either PayPal or merchant credit card as an accepted form of payment. However, your payments WILL BE NOT HELD if you meet all the following measures:
- eBay Tenure: Greater than 6-months
- Total Feedback score: More than 100
- Dissatisfied Buyers %: Less than 5%
- Detailed Seller Rating: Greater than 4.5
- Total Detailed Seller Ratings Recieved: More than 20 in the last 12-months
|
| 34. |
What should I do if a payment is subject to an eBay item hold? |
PayPal will release the hold when the earliest of the following occurs:
- the buyer leaves positive feedback
- 3 days after confirmed item delivery*
- 21 days without a dispute, claim, chargeback or reversal filed on that transaction.
Once the buyer has paid for the item, ship it. Funds are released as soon as a buyer leaves positive feedback. The faster you get their purchase to the buyer, the faster they can leave you feedback.
*Funds are also released within 3 days of confirmed item delivery. This applies to US domestic transactions that are shipped by USPS or FedEx and either (i) use PayPal shipping labels to ship items or (ii) upload tracking information to PayPal via the transaction details page. So fast shipping helps you here too. | Posted Jan-31-08 16:14:16 PST If so, is that monopoly??? Posted Jan-31-08 15:47:43 PST EBay fee hike sparks seller rebellion
EBay's new fee structure has small stores fearful about their survival.
 |
| Classical music dealer Jim Moskowitz was frustrated with eBay's subterfuge in announcing its new fee structure: all the good news, with the bad news buried. |
 |
| The eBay Price Guide author Julia Wilkinson can't remember ever seeing eBay sellers so upset: her email is running six-to-one against the changes. |
(FORTUNE Small Business) -- If eBay's fee changes were meant to shore up market share at a time when sellers are increasingly migrating to competitors such as Amazon (AMZN, Fortune 500), initial response suggests it may do the opposite: eBay's veteran sellers are furious, with some forecasting ruin for their businesses.
"Ouch!" said Laura Ricciotti, a seller from Windsor, Ontario, about Tuesday's announcement of a new fee structure for the online auction giant.
Ricciotti said the new fees, set to go into effect Feb. 20, will pinch her already tiny margins selling children's books through her eBay (EBAY, Fortune 500) store, Read With Me Books, which began in 2000 with posts for a few auctions for baby clothes and other finds.
"Sellers need to remain competitive in their pricing to do well in eBay's global marketplace, and it will be very difficult to continue to do so and still see a profit," she said, under the new scenario.
And that was one of the gentler reactions
Sellers on eBay's normally rancorous message boards were apoplectic, using phrases like "extortion" to describe the news. On Wednesday several began calling for a general strike, under which sellers would withhold listings for a week.
Ebay's complex new rules affect sellers in almost every part of a transaction.
It reduces upfront costs such as listing fees, which will drop from a starting price of $0.20 to $0.15 for traditional auction listings, and makes gallery photos free. However, eBay is adding more costs to the back end for many sellers with higher final-value fees, the commission eBay takes after a sale. Top sellers will be rewarded with greater visibility and protections, but - in perhaps the most controversial aspect of the shake-up - sellers will no longer be able to leave negative feedback for buyers.
"I gotta confess I didn't see this particular way of handling it coming," said longtime eBayer and author Julia Wilkinson of the changes in treating feedback against buyers. "I had to read it twice."
Wilkinson, author of The eBay Price Guide (No Starch Press, 2006) and publisher of http://www.yardsalers.net/, said she can't recall seeing sellers so upset. Her email is running six or seven to one against the new fee structure, she said.
Sellers, analysts and industry watchers all seem to be asking the same question, said Ina Steiner, editor of the influential trade publication AuctionBytes.com: Will it work?
If the reaction is any gauge, the answers may not be what eBay is looking for.
"Net-net, sellers are not impressed with this at all," she said. "No one is saying 'this is going to help me sell more.'"
Usher Lieberman, an eBay spokesman, said the new plan is good for sellers. The company's calculations show that up to 60 percent of them will see savings. EBay isn't worried about the explosive reaction among sellers, he said - they have a lot to absorb right now.
"We have a passionate community," Lieberman said. "If we weren't hearing from them on this, we would be worried."
For Mitzi Swisher, who created her online store VintageGoodness with a modest severance from her outsourced newspaper job in Columbus and a passion for all things vintage, the changes are frightening.
"How do I digest all this?" the 32-year-old said. She plans to gather up all of last month's numbers from VintageGoodness and run them through the new plan, to see how it will affect her profits. One thing jumped out at her right away - final value fees for inventory in eBay stores will jump to 12 percent from 10 percent.
That's a percentage many consider excessive. Swisher, who has discussed the plan with friends and colleagues, noted that one fired off a barbed quip about tithing: "Someone said, 'God only wants 10 percent.'"
Jim Moskowitz, a Swarthmore, Pa.-based seller who specializes in lesser-known classical music artists, took particular exception to the way the announcement was made. In making its formal announcement before a conference of 200 of North America's top eBay sellers in Washington, D.C., eBay spotlighted all the changes that sounded good, but downplayed issues they knew wouldn't sit well with sellers, he said.
Despite the calls in message boards for a Boston Tea Party-like rebellion to fight the fees, some sellers see little room for protest.
Swisher, for example, gets some exposure for her merchandise via her blog at http://vintagegoodness.blogspot.com/, but said eBay is where the buyers are. She can't just walk away.
Mark Gordon, a seller who deals in vintage collectibles from San Antonio, Texas, through his eBay store, Alamo City Comics & Collectibles, sees a darker fallout. He said the core auctioneers that helped eBay become the phenomenon it is today may start jumping ship.
"It's a great time for Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) to jump in," Gordon said.  Posted Jan-31-08 14:40:00 PST
EBay fee hike sparks seller rebellion
EBay's new fee structure has small stores fearful about their survival.
 |
| Classical music dealer Jim Moskowitz was frustrated with eBay's subterfuge in announcing its new fee structure: all the good news, with the bad news buried. |
 |
| The eBay Price Guide author Julia Wilkinson can't remember ever seeing eBay sellers so upset: her email is running six-to-one against the changes. |
(FORTUNE Small Business) -- If eBay's fee changes were meant to shore up market share at a time when sellers are increasingly migrating to competitors such as Amazon (AMZN, Fortune 500), initial response suggests it may do the opposite: eBay's veteran sellers are furious, with some forecasting ruin for their businesses.
"Ouch!" said Laura Ricciotti, a seller from Windsor, Ontario, about Tuesday's announcement of a new fee structure for the online auction giant.
Ricciotti said the new fees, set to go into effect Feb. 20, will pinch her already tiny margins selling children's books through her eBay (EBAY, Fortune 500) store, Read With Me Books, which began in 2000 with posts for a few auctions for baby clothes and other finds.
"Sellers need to remain competitive in their pricing to do well in eBay's global marketplace, and it will be very difficult to continue to do so and still see a profit," she said, under the new scenario.
And that was one of the gentler reactions
Sellers on eBay's normally rancorous message boards were apoplectic, using phrases like "extortion" to describe the news. On Wednesday several began calling for a general strike, under which sellers would withhold listings for a week.
Ebay's complex new rules affect sellers in almost every part of a transaction.
It reduces upfront costs such as listing fees, which will drop from a starting price of $0.20 to $0.15 for traditional auction listings, and makes gallery photos free. However, eBay is adding more costs to the back end for many sellers with higher final-value fees, the commission eBay takes after a sale. Top sellers will be rewarded with greater visibility and protections, but - in perhaps the most controversial aspect of the shake-up - sellers will no longer be able to leave negative feedback for buyers.
"I gotta confess I didn't see this particular way of handling it coming," said longtime eBayer and author Julia Wilkinson of the changes in treating feedback against buyers. "I had to read it twice."
Wilkinson, author of The eBay Price Guide (No Starch Press, 2006) and publisher of http://www.yardsalers.net/, said she can't recall seeing sellers so upset. Her email is running six or seven to one against the new fee structure, she said.
Sellers, analysts and industry watchers all seem to be asking the same question, said Ina Steiner, editor of the influential trade publication AuctionBytes.com: Will it work?
If the reaction is any gauge, the answers may not be what eBay is looking for.
"Net-net, sellers are not impressed with this at all," she said. "No one is saying 'this is going to help me sell more.'"
Usher Lieberman, an eBay spokesman, said the new plan is good for sellers. The company's calculations show that up to 60 percent of them will see savings. EBay isn't worried about the explosive reaction among sellers, he said - they have a lot to absorb right now.
"We have a passionate community," Lieberman said. "If we weren't hearing from them on this, we would be worried."
For Mitzi Swisher, who created her online store VintageGoodness with a modest severance from her outsourced newspaper job in Columbus and a passion for all things vintage, the changes are frightening.
"How do I digest all this?" the 32-year-old said. She plans to gather up all of last month's numbers from VintageGoodness and run them through the new plan, to see how it will affect her profits. One thing jumped out at her right away - final value fees for inventory in eBay stores will jump to 12 percent from 10 percent.
That's a percentage many consider excessive. Swisher, who has discussed the plan with friends and colleagues, noted that one fired off a barbed quip about tithing: "Someone said, 'God only wants 10 percent.'"
Jim Moskowitz, a Swarthmore, Pa.-based seller who specializes in lesser-known classical music artists, took particular exception to the way the announcement was made. In making its formal announcement before a conference of 200 of North America's top eBay sellers in Washington, D.C., eBay spotlighted all the changes that sounded good, but downplayed issues they knew wouldn't sit well with sellers, he said.
Despite the calls in message boards for a Boston Tea Party-like rebellion to fight the fees, some sellers see little room for protest.
Swisher, for example, gets some exposure for her merchandise via her blog at http://vintagegoodness.blogspot.com/, but said eBay is where the buyers are. She can't just walk away.
Mark Gordon, a seller who deals in vintage collectibles from San Antonio, Texas, through his eBay store, Alamo City Comics & Collectibles, sees a darker fallout. He said the core auctioneers that helped eBay become the phenomenon it is today may start jumping ship.
"It's a great time for Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) to jump in," Gordon said.  Posted Jan-31-08 14:30:19 PST Updated Jan-31-08 14:31:02 PST When Feb 20 come, paypal will hold my money because I am under 95% for 30 days!!! OUCH!!!! I need more feedback!!! Posted Jan-31-08 14:21:39 PST I am certified to teach in FL and I hold ESE certification BUT I also need to be certifiy in:
1. Hearing Impaired K-12
2. Elementary Education
3. General Science 5-9
So by the time I am highly qualified, I will hold 3 certication!!! GRRR!!!!! That is the order I need to take. I will be the teacher who have the most of all!!! They just won't accept my ESE and I am out of field. So #1 will get me in field BUT # 2 and 3 will make me highly qualified. | Page 1 of 13 | Previous 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 Next | |
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