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![]() "lsmyer" wrote in message ... When I sell a radio on eBay, I start the bidding at 1 cent with no reserve. My auctions always do extremely well. I've sold many radios for more than I paid for them. The reason it works is that people are greedy. They smell a bargain and want a piece of what I have. By setting the bidding low, more people can afford to participate in my auctions. When you place a bid, you become an owner of that item. And once you become an owner, then you start becoming protective of your property. That's when bidding frenzies happen, and that's where I the seller make a lot of money. Caveat Lector wrote: I suspect this will work most of the time, but on occasion (for whatever reason), folks are not bidding (income tax time?) and an item sells for so low, that it is virtually given away. I suspect that is the reason some sellers have an outrageous shipping cost. Man is that a put off for me. Caveat Emptor sez I. Possibly, although I think it's -much- more likely that they would use a reserve; a reserve protects the seller from getting taken to the cleaners as in your example above AND does not scare off potential buyers with an outrageous shipping cost. I'm not sure why some people have such a hard-on against reserves. Let me explain... If you were selling something at a real, in-person swap fest, say you were asking a 100 bucks for your item. Furthermore, you would probably be willing to let them dicker you down to, oh, $95 or even $90. However, in the back of your mind, -known only to you-, the *absolute minimum* price you would take (to keep from having to haul your item back home) is $85. This $85 price in the back of your mind is *exactly* the same as an eBay reserve; nothing sinister about it, no plot, just a "safety net" to protect you, the seller, from having to sell at a give-away price. As to why people keep the reserve a "secret" is obvious--why tip your hand by telling the absolute, rock-bottom price you would accept? It is an auction, after all. |
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