True, but if few people bid, then the price tends to be less than if a lot of people bid, even if many people only increase the price by the minimum margin each time. The more bids an item receives, the more visible it is in searches, and the more likely it is to receive even more bids. As the price rises, the psychology of the bid sniper is to increase their snipe amount to ensure that they win, meaning a higher final value overall. If buyers only bid one time, over the course of the listing, setting their proxy at their max, and didn't raise again if outbid, the final price would not be much different, but lots of people tend to chase when outbid. Even so, if many people place a bid, rather than just watch and bid only if the price stays low, it's to the seller's advantage. Not extending auctions enables buyers to get away with last minute sniping.but ultimately it boils down to your maximum bid - that applies to sniping as well....your maximum bid is what it is, whether its a day or a second before the auction ends. You either win or you don't.
but ultimately it boils down to your maximum bid - that applies to sniping as well....your maximum bid is what it is, whether its a day or a second before the auction ends. You either win or you don't.
... But when it comes to selling a custom Aero, honestly, I’m just happy to place it in a new home, recover a reasonable fraction of my losses, lick my wounds… and move on to that next elusive grail, aka “final perfect jacket.”
Agreed...I haven't bid on an auction item and won in years...even when I've overvalued my bid. Then, strangely enough, a few days or weeks later here comes the same item with a sob story about a non paying bidder...yet they decline the option of second chance offers for my overvalued bid...Shill bidders are mostly shill sellers me thinks...
funnily enough, i had an experience the other day with an aero jacket for sale, where i am 100% sure the seller had a friend put fake bids on it to raise the price. there were only 2 bidders, me and one other guy and everytime i bid, he started putting bids in like 5€ steps, as if to make sure he didn't overbid me by too much and scared me away. at first i thought it was a real bidder, so i raised by 100 and then he legit bid 20x, every time 5€ more just to slightly overbid me yet again, and it was a 0 feedback guy who was bidding on nothing else.. i'm maybe naive that this never came to my mind before, but is this a thing on ebay? do people try to influence the auctions of their items like that?
Sellers also are vulnerable to being ripped off by buyers abusing the dispute resolution process. EBay has proven incapable of preventing fraud economically. It's virtually impossible to find the facts, and arbitration is very expensive relative to most transactions. Most transactions go well, but all the ones that do, are because both buyer and seller entered into contract in good faith and were honest. Fraud pushes prices upward as a cost of doing business.
Ebay should automatically extend auctions when there is bid activity in the final moments, and close auctions when bidding activity subsides after the set closing time. This would solve many problems, but still wouldn't address shill bidding. Other sites extend automatically, it's a mystery why eBay doesn't do it.
Agreed...I haven't bid on an auction item and won in years...even when I've overvalued my bid. Then, strangely enough, a few days or weeks later here comes the same item with a sob story about a non paying bidder...yet they decline the option of second chance offers for my overvalued bid...Shill bidders are mostly shill sellers me thinks...
One guy offered me 40% of my reasonable asking price so I replied along the lines of, if that’s what you think it’s worth, you don’t understand what quality is and don’t deserve to wear this jacket. Others I’ve counter offered with 2cents off the original asking price. The low ballers get the idea pretty quickly lol.
In my experience watching auctions on eBay since 1999, more bidders, bidding actively throughout the life of the listing results in a higher closing price. It's not just your maximum bid. It's the maximum bid of all the bidders. Knowing a lot of people are interested in the item informs interested parties that they will need to bid higher if they want to prevail. When there's little interest, buyers sense that they may be able to get the item with a lower maximum bid. It does come down to the maximum bid, but maximum is higher with more activity.but ultimately it boils down to your maximum bid - that applies to sniping as well....your maximum bid is what it is, whether its a day or a second before the auction ends. You either win or you don't.