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Subject:
EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
Category: Business and Money > eCommerce Asked by: mdpa173-ga List Price: $12.00 |
Posted:
22 Feb 2005 04:15 PST
Expires: 24 Mar 2005 04:15 PST Question ID: 478637 |
i would like some opinions on whether ebay selling market is saturated, or whether smart people can find a niche by selling something - timeshares come to mind. |
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Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
Answered By: siliconsamurai-ga on 22 Feb 2005 08:29 PST Rated: |
Hi, thank you for submitting your question to Answers.Google, I hope I can provide the information you are seeking. I need to preface this by pointing out that I own an eBay store so part of what I am saying is based on personal experience. A quick answer to your question is a simple Yes you can make a living and, no, the market is FAR from saturated. You don't even need to be all that smart although that doesn't hurt. Below I leave the timeshares topic to near the end but the rest of this is important too, even if you do stick to timeshares as your eventual business because you will need to understand the options and the eBay community to be successful. Recently a woman sold advertising space on her pregnant stomach for nearly $10,000. Another woman sold a ?ghost? in the form of a haunted walking stick for many thousands of dollars. Obviously you can make a living if you can come up with a gimmick. But simply reselling things you buy when they are on sale or something you happen to know how to make, or how to get for free, is very profitable. Seling something great which very few people know about is not as difficult as you think - look around at things you may buy from obscure stores or catalogs. The biggest profit item for me is feathers dropped by a bird here on my ranch ? I can?t go into details or I would be identifying myself which we aren?t supposed to do. I sell things we pick up at flea markets or garage sales, as well as things I but in large quantities when they go on sale. These are usually unique or not well known items so I am often the only one offering them. Since I can buy very cheaply a couple times each year, the rest of the year I can often undercut even the importer and still make a nice profit. You might want to sell DVDs. You can buy new, legal DVDs of classic movies, cartoons, and other new productions for $1 each. Others are already doing this but you can bundle them in sets or offer birthday kits or such including a plush doll or something. You may even decide to produce your own DVD or VHS productions ? the great advantage there is that you have no inventory, you just publish as the orders come in. Car parts are other high-profit items. I know someone who buys performance parts new from dealers at a small discount and resells them at a profit. If you have mechanical skills you can dismantle junk cars ? even a new car costs less than all the parts which make it up when they are sold one at a time. You can also make deals with local businesses which don?t have the time or knowledge to sell their surplus items on eBay. Ebay itself makes things easier by posting notices about what the most popular items are currently, and by offering various promotions and suggestions for holidays. Although you may wish to test the market with auctions or, as many of us do, use an occasional auction item to drive visitors to your store, you will definitely want a store, but an eBay store is inexpensive to own, a lot cheaper than posting auctions. For example, it only costs a few pennies to post an item or multiple identical items in a store at a fixed price, so you can easily list hundreds in a store month after month, even if few sell. Most of my inventory listings cost $0.02 or so. A monthly store rental will run $15.52. Because my family only does this part time, I sometimes spend as little as fifteen minutes each month operating the store. Compared to a brick and mortar business, or even placing want ads in the local newspaper and having to deal with visitors and phone calls, eBay is an incredible bargain. In fact, I?d say if you can?t make a living on eBay then you have no business going into retail in any way other than as an employee. Critical points to consider ? shipping will kill you if you don?t watch it carefully. I try to select items which can go in a #10 envelope or a fixed-price Priority Mail envelope, then offer free shipping ? people love it. You can also specify both a handling fee and a calculated shipping fee which is OK for big items, but nothing beats free shipping ? just build the cost into the buy-it-now or store price. Buyers also love a full guarantee; I nearly always offer them and never had a claim. On big items such as cameras I give the buyer time to run a roll of film through it to test it. My guarantee on new items is unconditional except for return shipping unless the item is defective. Learn to take good pictures and get a decent digital camera as well as a place to take well-lit pictures. Invest some time in learning to use basic photo-editing software. Get a PayPal account. It is difficult to establish any credibility on eBay without a PayPal account. Consider only accepting PayPal payments ? that gives you a LOT of protection. Make your ad copy fun to read, informative, and above all, accurate. Be friendly and fast in your responses to e-mails. Ship ASAP or a little sooner. Return the favor of a positive feedback as soon as possible. Ebay also offers tutorials and mentoring groups on almost everything ? take advantage of them. There are also discussion boards you should participate in. Most information on eBay is free if you have an eBay account and that too is free. Beyond possibly buying a basic book such as ?eBay for Dummies,? don?t spend any money on eBay ?kits? or seminars at least until you have tested the waters. As with most such home businesses, the problem isn?t getting ideas, it is selling yourself and your products. Start small and see if there is any interest in your items. Just because someone else is selling the same thing doesn?t mean you can?t outsell them even at a higher price, just market yourself better. If you stick with timeshares, I still recommend you test out eBay with some small auction items first just to get the hang of things, and perhaps build up a good rating before you move on to expensive items. Also, just because you sell timeshares as your main business, that doesn?t prevent you from taking advantage of your good rating to sell anything else too, perhaps to supplement your income until the timeshare business takes off. Create a free ?about me? page and make it interesting. Google search term: success on eBay www.homebasedbusinessowner.com/ebaysuccesstrategies.htm tapestrydesigns.typepad.com/ career_niche/2005/01/tips_for_succes.html You might want to check out www.ubid.com as a source for items to sell. The ideas I provided above for specific items to sell are just the tip of the iceberg and only meant as an example of how diverse you can be. I listed them as examples because I know people who make money at them. Pick something you are interested in or need anyway. For example, we often put items in our store which we already buy and use. By reselling some we cut our cost because we can buy wholesale due to the extra quantity. Regarding timeshares: there are 800 search items on eBay for that term and a specific category: Real Estate> Timeshares for Sale. There are 650 timeshares listed for sale this morning. That might discourage you, but look at it this way, if they weren?t making money at it, would these sellers bother staying with eBay. Since a timeshare might be a unique item, the fact that others are for sale doesn?t really reduce the market. One seller has 400+ transactions and a 98.8% positive rating. Something to remember is that there are different pricing rules and cost structures for real estate and vehicles but obviously someone is making money at it. Why not you? Thank you again for turning to Answers.Google for help. Since you were asking for opinions and ideas rather than research, that is what I tried to provide. I do it part time with an eye to making it full time when I retire (for the 5th time, it never seems to stick). I make an excellent hourly profit and see no reason that I can?t increase sales by simply adding more items. Every time I have done that in the past I increased business and profits. As with most retail businesses, customer service is the key. | |
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mdpa173-ga rated this answer: and gave an additional tip of: $2.50 |
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Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: am777-ga on 22 Feb 2005 04:34 PST |
the writer of this stuff sure knows how "to sell himself"....... for what it is worth.... http://www.silentsalesmachine.com/ |
Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: pecospearl-ga on 22 Feb 2005 04:57 PST |
I think you could still make a living on eBay. And like any startup business it takes drive and dedication to succeed. I sold out my lifetime collection of books on Ebay's half.com last year and they went like hotcakes. Here is a book that may help: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0072258691/qid=1109076583/sr=1-3/ref=sr_1_3/102-1852636-7054553?v=glance&s=books |
Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: mdpa173-ga on 22 Feb 2005 06:13 PST |
thank you for the response |
Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: gdminpid-ga on 22 Feb 2005 06:52 PST |
There's plenty of scope for making a living. As long as you have enough money to buy things cheap. If you're in the USA, then the weak dollar makes its very attractive for you to sell in Europe, you could undercut most domestic sellers. One thing to do would be to specialise and import a specific good from say China, giving you more margin. |
Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: whistlefisher-ga on 24 Feb 2005 17:38 PST |
I only had 70 products in my store & it was costing me £25 (about $45 USD) a month & nothing was selling dispite good quality products at reasonable prices - unless you have a decent advertising budget (to advertise in newspapers & magazines) I wouldn't bother - you'll be virtually flushing your cash down the pan or delivering leaflets in the rain. Find that "niche product" the gurus talk of (the pot of gold - at the end of THEIR rainbow) or a product that only YOU can get your hands on/or get it cheaper than anyone else - then you'll make a fortune. E-books are crap, people buy them but seldom read the things do they ? no different to the pyramid schemes of the 80's - one person makes loads from it -customer gets the "Book" which is normally a "clunky" pdf -that still crashes most people's computers & the wisdom contained ? it just tells them to sell a copy of the pdf they have just opened to "make a Fortune" - normally on eBay. |
Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: siliconsamurai-ga on 25 Feb 2005 07:23 PST |
whistlefisher - I'm sorry you had a bad experience, I presume you noticed that nothing was selling and closed your shop at the end of the first month or lowered your prices or changed your product offerings? Opening an eBay store costs tens of thousands of dollars less than opening a brick and mortar business or even a direct mail business. Of course I never indicated that EVERYONE will make a good living on eBay. I do no advertising other than posting an occasional auction and my store does just fine because I offer a mix of low-priced and unique or nearly items and write interesting "copy" to go with the products, just as the most successful mail order catalogs do. Perhaps your product or prices weren't a good fit for eBay customers? As I tell people when I lecture, the monetary value of anything is only what someone else is prepared to pay at the moment. As for criticising books others are selling, just check out the vendor's rating, eBayers aren't at all shy about telling others when they feel ripped off. BTW, my rating is 100% |
Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: netman2000-ga on 01 Mar 2005 19:54 PST |
Yes you can make a living selling on Ebay. There are tons of people doing it today but it is becoming more difficult due to the oversaturation of sellers. About 5 years ago you would be on easy street but things have changed. It's not just Ebay that is saturated it is the entire e-commerce field on the web. All this means is you have to work a little harder than the competition now. I have actually helped many many business owners due just that, become successful in their first online venture. One piece of advice I can give you is seek out many different ways to promote both your products themeselves as well as your online storefront. And yes you do need an online storefront in my opinion to be successful. Yeah put all your products on Ebay, then submit them to froogle, then create feeds and put them on shopping comparison sites like the ones I have listed below: <a href="http://www.dealsnatch.com">DealSnatch.com</a> <a href="http://www.shopping.com">Shopping.com</a> <a href="http://www.cnet.com">Cnet.com</a> Also advertise on search engines themselves. Google Overture (Yahoo) are the most well known but you can get great bang for your buck utilizing the smaller ones also such as FindWhat.com and Kanoodle.com. Bottom line is you can make money online but you must do your homework and be willing to put in the time to compete. In this day and age there is a lot of competition, but then again the internet gains hundreds of new shoppers everyday. Will you be there to scoup them up or will someone else... |
Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: till2day-ga on 09 Mar 2005 08:57 PST |
I had a friend who was selling wood grain dash kits through ebay..he bought them wholesale from edashkit.com and was making an extra 2k a month..they drop shipped everything for him. |
Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: carperform-ga on 26 Oct 2005 12:25 PDT |
Hi, It is certainly possible to do this with performance parts, in fact, we do. Specifically you still need to read alot, I can suggest, EBAYm the complete guide, and the entrepreneur magazine book about ebay management too. For car parts, its important to check out high quality sites and mimic what they do well, while minimizing costs. http://www.carperform.com/cgi-bin/index.pl?=&=G6H1Are this site is a good example of low overhead and price savings that go to its customers, in addition, rpmoutlet is good too for making ebay effective, you can find both companies on ebay and online, search carperform or rpmoutlet, and compare them to jegs. Thinking critically about your business is crucial to success, and comparison is just one of many techniques. thanks |
Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: richtam123-ga on 31 Dec 2005 14:00 PST |
It's just like anything else you do in life; it's all about learning the ropes. I've been selling on half.com for the last 5 or so years taking advantage of a niche market. I know where to buy the items and what to look for when I find it. Sometimes my mark up has been several hundred percent. I also know that certain items only sell 3 or 4 times a year and I take advantage of it. The drawback at first was shipping but then I "discovered" media mail. :) Little by little I add to my income almost every month. I'll be moving onto eBay in 06 and I know I have to learn the ropes so I've been reading everything in sight regarding eBay. I also know that I'll need top drive customers to my sight so I'm in the process of practicing that by starting a Blog of all of things, my goldfish! I've been testing different free way of advertising. One little thing I did was to include my blog address in my sig line of every forum I belong to and more hits came my way. I tossed in a Goggle ads plus one for Amazon to check for conversion rates. It's a learning process that I intend to continue in order to learn about selling on the web. Start a blog and practices how to drive people to it, it?s a free way learn! Good luck with you full time eBay quest! Goldfish site: http://goldfishcondos.blogspot.com/ |
Subject:
Re: EBay - Can I make a living selling on EBAY
From: nick1thegreat-ga on 13 Jan 2006 08:01 PST |
Yes, you can! I am not making a living selling on Ebay, since I do not have so much time, but I made some good money a few times. The main ideea is to buy items that are in demand for less (whenever they are in clearance, using coupons, etc) and sell them for a profit at the right time (end your auctions on Sunday evening, etc). I am using the DealAlert program from http://www.pocketdeal.com , it alerts me whenever there is a good deal in a few seconds (before it's out of stock), plus it has all the latest coupons up=to-date and organized by store. There are some other good sites too that can help you buy cheap stuff, but I preffer PocketDeal because of the DealAlert feature (and I do not have time to browse on the net for deals) <a href='http://www.pocketdeal.com">http://www.pocketdeal.com</a> |
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