Saturday, December 17, 2011

Do you see anything wrong with this picture?



On November 28th, I purchased a 350 count lot of San Jose Sharks cards for $4.99 (+ $8 shipping). The seller immediately shipped out my package:


And spent $11.49 on the shipping.



Which means that the seller made exactly $1.50 off of the sale before PayPal & eBay fees.

I'm sure this is a pretty rare incident... but it's a healthy reminder of why I haven't sold anything on eBay in years. Happy Saturday everyone... and sayonara!

7 comments:

Offy said...

He would have been better off using one of those Priority Mail boxes. If it fits, it ships. I think there's one that size box will fit into that costs $8 or $9 to ship.

Dawgbones said...

I got a Witchblade four figure set off of the bay once. Winning bid of $2.50 + $4 shipping, total $6.50 spent. The seller spent $8+ to ship it to me, costing him more in shipping and fees than he actually made off of it!!

BASEBALL DAD said...

I've done a lot of buying and selling on ebay. You really have to be aware of how much it costs to ship items.I used to keep a spread sheet so I knew exactly how much everything costed me and how much profit I made.

Anonymous said...

So how was the lot?

Fuji said...

offy - great call... my guess is that he could have even used the $5.20 flat rate box (the one that fits 3 or 4 dvds).

dawgbones - congratulations... yeah, that seller should have figured it was going to cost more than $4 to ship that set.

baseball dad - i guess that's why i don't really sell on ebay. i have no clue what it costs to ship things outside a simple 1 to 10 card trade package.

1967ers - it was exactly what i expected. about 40% newer product, 60% older product. there were a few older inserts that i'll add to my pc, and i'll keep a few of the non glossy cards for in-person autographs. but most of the cards will go to my students.

Wilson said...

I bit on lots of 1 to 10 cent listing on eBay, with free shipping usually. I assume these people just don't notice that they're losing money on the cheap ones compared to what must be a large number of listings for higher priced cards.

Ryan G said...

I listed a bunch of lots on eBay right before a shipping price change and got royally screwed, but this is a different situation. I've had several sellers ship for more than they get from me, even to the point of shipping fees being higher than my total price. I have to agree that flat-rate priority is the way to go for sending more than about 100 cards. The medium flat-rate box ($10.95) can hold a few 500+-count boxes.