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G I I T S o l u t i o n s Simple Solutions for
Complex Problems
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The eBay Buyer's FAQThe
eBay Buyer's FAQ. So you
have a question? Has something gone very wrong and you don't know what to do?
Well, fair enough. Here are the questions that I hear all the time from buyers. Does
eBay have a Customer Service Department I Can Phone? eBay
are notoriously hard to contact, should you ever need to - it sometimes seems
like they expect the site to run itself. You can email them, as long as you
don't have your heart set on a coherent response: go to
http://pages.ebay.com/help/contact_us/_base/index.html. You might have better
luck in a 'live help' webchat here:
http://pages.ebay.com/help/basics/n-livehelp.html. Only
eBay Power Sellers (sellers with a very high feedback rating) get to phone
customer service. If you really want to try your luck, type 'ebay [your
country] phone number' into a search engine and you'll probably find something.
Unfortunately, the chances are you'll have gone to all that trouble for the
privilege of leaving an answerphone message. It
might seem cruel, but imagine the number of people who would call eBay every
day with the silliest questions if they gave out their phone number everywhere.
Its Wild West nature is, in a way, part of its charm. eBay
Sent Me an Email Saying They're Going to Close My Account. What Should I Do? This
email asks for your password, right? It's a scam, an attempt to frighten you,
make you give up your details and then steal your account. eBay will never ask
for your password or any other account details by email. eBay say that you should
only ever enter your password on pages that whose addresses start with
http://signin.ebay.com/. They even offer a special 'Account Guard' as part of
their toolbar, which lets you check that you're not giving your password to a
dodgy fake site. You can read more here:
http://pages.ebay.com/toolbar/accountguard_1.html. It
Seems Too Good to be True. How Does eBay Make Money? For
you, the buyer, eBay is free. Sellers, though, pay all sorts of fees: a listing
fee for each item they list, a final value fee (a percentage of what the item
sold for). They can they pay optional fees for extra services, including Buy it
Now, extra pictures, reserve prices, highlighting the auction, putting it in
bold, listing it first in search results or even putting it on the front page.
You can see a full list of fees at http://pages.ebay.com/help/sell/fees.html. It's
obviously worth it to the sellers, though, or they wouldn't carry on using
eBay. The system is quite efficient, and basically forces both eBay and the
sellers to keep their profit margins as low as possible - otherwise prices will
simply go too high and the buyers will stop buying. How
Safe is eBay? Well,
as it happens, that's the subject of our next email! All of eBay's safety
services for buyers and sellers are in one place, called 'SafeHarbor'.
SafeHarbor handles fraud prevention and investigation, helps with dispute
resolution and keeps rule-breakers in check. Read all about it next time, and
be safe.
Legal Notice:
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