I'm not trying to bash you or anything but here's some tips for Ebay. Once you use it more often, you really get used to it.
1.Pictures are the main sellers. I saw one guy selling an E-mag and he took a picture of it on his unmade dirty bed. It just didn't look good. I often set my items up in the foyer of my house. The hardwoods floors and white molding generally make things look nice and professional. Also try to make everything look neat when taking pictures. Take off all the stickers and make the gun look real good. Put all extra accesories on the side. It's best to keep them off the gun for all the pics except one, so the seller can see what just the gun looks like.
2.Spelling Spelling Sp3lin speln...yeah. I ignore auctions that have a lot of abbreviated words and LOTS of simple spelling and grammar mistakes. A few mistakes are accpetable but a messed up description usually means dumb PBN kiddie that won't be reliable. I've had too many problems with little kiddies trying to sell me sh1t. I'm sick of it. I will only buy from people that can spell and have 20+ positive feedback with no negatives. You did good on the spelling.
3.Using the right words in your listing. Avoid negative sounding words like "explode" or "broken". Also don't use words like "gat", "sweet", or "man this thing RIPS!!". No one cares. We know what the gun is capable of if we are looking at it. Sound posistive and professional in the description.
4.Title. This is a big one. If I am selling an E-mag I would put "ULE E-mag Emag not Xmag Ion DM4 Timmy Angel". Maybe someone is just surfing around looking for a high end gun and didn't anticipate seeing the E-mag. It may grab this persons attention. I generally add guns related to the one you are selling or the most popular. Also bolding it can help if there are pages of the same item.
Overall, you did a good job on your listing. Pictures could have been a little better, but at least you have pics.
1.Pictures are the main sellers. I saw one guy selling an E-mag and he took a picture of it on his unmade dirty bed. It just didn't look good. I often set my items up in the foyer of my house. The hardwoods floors and white molding generally make things look nice and professional. Also try to make everything look neat when taking pictures. Take off all the stickers and make the gun look real good. Put all extra accesories on the side. It's best to keep them off the gun for all the pics except one, so the seller can see what just the gun looks like.
2.Spelling Spelling Sp3lin speln...yeah. I ignore auctions that have a lot of abbreviated words and LOTS of simple spelling and grammar mistakes. A few mistakes are accpetable but a messed up description usually means dumb PBN kiddie that won't be reliable. I've had too many problems with little kiddies trying to sell me sh1t. I'm sick of it. I will only buy from people that can spell and have 20+ positive feedback with no negatives. You did good on the spelling.
3.Using the right words in your listing. Avoid negative sounding words like "explode" or "broken". Also don't use words like "gat", "sweet", or "man this thing RIPS!!". No one cares. We know what the gun is capable of if we are looking at it. Sound posistive and professional in the description.
4.Title. This is a big one. If I am selling an E-mag I would put "ULE E-mag Emag not Xmag Ion DM4 Timmy Angel". Maybe someone is just surfing around looking for a high end gun and didn't anticipate seeing the E-mag. It may grab this persons attention. I generally add guns related to the one you are selling or the most popular. Also bolding it can help if there are pages of the same item.
Overall, you did a good job on your listing. Pictures could have been a little better, but at least you have pics.



...



Comment