Pricing Your Products On Ebay

September 14, 2009 by admin  
Filed under EBay

poundsignvice_blog
Competing on price on EBay is a sure way to disaster. Sellers who employ this strategy will find themselves at best working for nothing and at worse losing money. The eBay market place is full of different types of sellers who are all employing different strategies to achieve their specific goals. There is, for example the big players. These are guys who own large businesses and will use eBay to dump stock on. They may not be bothered about making a profit they just want rid of their stock so they’ll sell it at a low price.

You also have the big players who use eBay to attract customers to their websites. They will sell products below the market value knowing that once they hook a buyer they will then up sell other products to make a profit.
You also have people selling personal items that they no longer want, or unwanted gifts so they will sell these for a low price and of course you will have people selling products illegally, copies etc. For a new seller to enter this market place and try to compete on price is business suicide.
I write from experience as well as thorough reviews and experiments. In my early days of trading, I did try to compete on price and I paid the price for that folly. I run an online arts store www.artscraftsandhobbies.co.uk and I have my own eBay store Arts, crafts & Hobbies. A part of my inventory consists of painting instruction DVDs. When I first started trading, I started on eBay and I priced the DVDs low at £10.00 each. Now art instruction DVDs are quiet expensive, they retail for between £18.00 up to £60.00. I had a supplier who provided me them at a good price.
As I said, I originally priced them at £10.00, which didn’t leave me much of a margin but I was naïve,and as you know we all have to pay to learn. After engaging in quiet a lot of studying and experimenting, I saw that price increases didn’t affect my sales at all. So, I took the decision to raise my prices substantially. For example, I increased the price of my DVDs from £10.00 to £14.99.
Now this is a substantial increase but in reality, it’s around what I should have charged originally. My reasoning was simple I would have to take a huge hit on sales to actually lose revenue, I worked out it would have to be something around a 35% drop. If sales did drop by that amount then I would be still earning the same income level from less work. Sounded like a good deal to me.
Now here’s the strange thing. My sales in the first month of the price increase went up. I sold more DVDs that month than any previous month since I had started trading. And they have remained steady. I also sell plenty of products in my store that other sellers sell cheaper.
I do not try to compete on price. When I add a new product to my store I don’t even look at what others may be selling it for, I’m not interested. I price the product using my own system, which takes into account eBay and PayPal fees and gives me my profit margin. I’m not doing this to make eBay rich or to give things away. I’m doing this to build up an income for me and my family. I want rewarding for the work I put into my business otherwise it’s pointless.
So if you’re thinking about entering the eBay marketplace don’t get fixated on the prices others are charging for their products. Take your cost price and add eBay and PayPal fees then add your profit margin and that’s your selling price. Be professional and focused. People don’t just buy on price and you probably don’t want to do business with those who do. Other factors come into play like how well you have listed your item, feedback and trust. Experiment a little and see what happens.
Keep Trading

Paul

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How To Combat The Asian Sellers On Ebay

July 6, 2009 by admin  
Filed under EBay, Featured

chinese-dragon_blog

Sellers from Asia are everywhere on EBay. Selling in every category for prices that are much lower than UK sellers can source products for. For example, I’ve seen sellers from Hong Kong selling products for £15.00 that I can’t source for £20.00. If you’re new to EBay, you can look at these prices and become disheartened, believing you can’t compete. Don’t despair.

You have many advantages in your favour. First, forget about trying to competing on price. You cannot. Nor should you even try. I’ve seen guys in business forums bragging that they make £5.00 on a hundred pound sale. I wouldn’t even bother. It’s not worth the effort, such a low profit margin is not a viable business model, it’s more like a hobby that pays some pocket money.

The objective of a business is to make a decent profit for the effort you expend. 5% in my book is not a decent profit. I like to look for at least 30% upwards. So how can you compete against the Asian sellers?

It’s easy really. The sellers from Hong Kong will be charging very high shipping costs. They might be charging £12.00 for example for a product you can ship for £2.00 that adds £10.00 to the cost of their product.

You can also wipe the floor with them for speed of delivery. Shipping from Hong Kong can be slow and unreliable. You, on the other hand, can get your item delivered the next day by Royal Mail first class.

There’s also the possibility of buyers buying from Hong Kong of being hit with a VAT bill. And there’s the added problems of returning the product if it is faulty.

You can offer your customers something they will be willing to pay for: security. If you are selling in a market where there are many sellers from Hong Kong make it clear in your listing that you are a British seller.

Emphasise the quick and safe delivery and the ease of access to you should anything go wrong. Make a point of stating that there is no additional cost associated with buying from you. The price you see is the price you pay.

All these things will negate the cheaper priced product from Hong Kong and ensure you maintain your profit margin.

Never try to compete on price on EBay or you won’t be able to create a viable business model. It’s not only the Asian sellers who sell cheap. You also have companies who are dumping stock, companies who use products as loss leaders, to get people to their websites, where they will up sell to them. And of course, you have some people who just don’t know what they are doing and sell too cheap to make a realistic profit.

You’re on EBay to make money so avoid getting into a price war. Set your margin and stick to it. Most buyers don’t just buy on price; they also want reliability and security.

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