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5 Ways to Drive
Traffic Away from Your eBay Auction |
by:
Jason
James |
Copyright
Auction Resource Network
eBay is a one-stop solution to
any one who wants to make money online. Whether you just selling
a few unwanted items from around your house or your want to
develop a work from home business, eBay removes many of the
obstacles for you. Not many other websites can help you drive
targeted traffic towards your sales, process the order on your
behalf and accept payment though paypal. All you need to do then
is dispatch the item to your winning bidder.
And let's
not forget the biggest advantage over selling on eBay. The
majority of users have money in their hand just waiting to find
the right item.
So if eBays so great why would you want
to drive traffic AWAY from your auctions?
Well there are
a few reasons why you'd be better off selling from your own
website, rather than though eBay. Firstly & most importantly,
think of all the listing fees & final value fees you could save
if everything you sold on eBay you could sell on your own
website. Personally it would save me thousands of dollars per
year alone in listing fees.
Secondly, you'll be
protecting yourself from eBay policy change. Imagine you were
selling thousands of ebooks weekly and then suddenly eBay policy
changed to prevent any ebook listings.
Overnight your
business would simply disappear & your income would vanish. It's
the same with listing fees - A sudden hike in fees could wipe
out your business & profit overnight.
With any business,
especially an online one you need to safeguard yourself against
measures that are out of your control. So by driving traffic
away from your auctions to your own website you'll slowly start
building up an alternative source of revenue. The following
methods can be used on eBay. Some are on the borderline of eBay
policy & you should check out any policy violation before using
them. Saying that, a huge proportion of sellers use these on a
daily basis.
1) Image Hosting
All the best sellers
have auction templates developed to maintain a professional
listing. And of course those sellers ALWAYS use images or
graphics to accurately show the condition of the items their
offering.
eBay itself allows you to upload the images to
their servers, other commercial & free services are available.
However really you want to store any images on your own server.
Not only will search engine robots follow the links from your
listings to your site (helping in improved visibility in any
search engines), but many browsers will show the address of
where the images are loading from in the status bar - For
instance "Loading Image From http://www.visitmyshop.com" or
"Waiting For http://www.visitmyshop.com". This is a great way
for your visitors to see to become familiar with your site.
2) Feedback
Many sellers include their own website in the
feedback comments they use. Strictly it is against eBay policy
but many Powersellers use comments like "Thanks for your custom
from http://www.Visitmyshop.com" as standard. This is perhaps
one of the widely violated policies on eBay. I've never known of
anyone receive a warning for this policy, but use it with
caution as you could be the first.
3) Email Address.
eBay allows your listings to contain one email link address, in
addition to the "Ask The Seller A Question Link" they already
provide. Use the opportunity to show the an email account
associated with your domain name for example sales@visitmyshop.com.
The only condition about showing your email address is the one
shown must also be your registered email account with eBay.
Before you list it, make sure they match up.
4) About Me
Page
eBay actually allows
you to link to your own website from your About Me page, as long
as the actual page does not directly offer to sell items.
Therefore make it an information or about us page that you link
to, BUT one where visitors can easily navigate to your catalog
of items for sale. Additionally drive traffic to your About Me
Page by including a link on every listings, for example "Click
here to learn about me". An average basic shop on eBay will get
over 1500 item views within a month. If you can drive just a
small proportion of these to your about me page & then to your
site you'll certainly see a difference in your non-eBay sales.
5) User Id
While eBay does not allow your user id to be
that of an website, you should have it as closely to resembling
your site name as possible. You CAN NOT attach .com, -com or
*com to the end of your user id - this is strictly against eBay
policy. However nothing would stop your id being VisitMyShop.
The idea is to get your eBay visitors comfortable with dealing
with you away from eBay.
I hope these tips help you drive
traffic away from your auctions towards your site & lessens
eBays grip on your business. Remember, Ignorance is not an
excuse eBay accept if you do violate their policy. While you
initially get a warning for policy violation continuous offences
may result in your account being suspended. Having said that,
eBay mostly rely on policing from other users to enforce their
policy so as long as no reports you should be in the clear.
Good luck with your eBay activity.
About the author:
Jason James is a 10 year Internet marketing veteran and an eBay
Power Seller of 4 years. His website "The Auction Resource
Network" reveals his inside secrets and sources that help him
pocket over $10,000 a month on eBay. Get your FREE 14 Day "eBay
Secrets" eCourse here: http://www.auctionresourcenetwork.com
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