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Five Ways To Detect
Shill Bidders On eBay So That You Don't Pay Absurd Prices |
by:
Sydney
Johnston |
There is as a
lot of buzz about shill bidders on the eBay forums. But in
actuality, shrill bidding isn't that common and is rather easily
detected.
A buyer will sometimes attempt to use shill building to raise the price of
merchandise he is selling. The idea is that the shiller will bid
increasingly high prices, in the hope that legitimate buyers
like you will top the artificially high prices in an effort to
win the goodies for sale.
Here are five ways you can recognize a shill bidder:
1. Few shill bidders will have any feedback. This is because they never
follow through with transactions and therefore don't have anyone
to leave feedback. If the shiller does have legitimate
transactions on ebay, he is usually smart enough to use a
separate ID, because he does not want to get caught shilling and
lose all buying and selling privileges.
{It is important to note, however, that just because a bidder has no
feedback that does not mean that he is necessarily a shrill
bidder. This may simply be a new account that has not had time
to build a feedback reputation.}
2. Generally, a shiller only bids on the auctions of a particular seller.
When in doubt, you can check the current and completed options
of a seller and see if this shiller has bid on other auctions by
the same seller.
3. Shill bidders are most often newbies. You can check the feedback, and the
date that the eBay account was created, for any ebay member. If
the bidder's account was created two days ago and he is bidding
on several auctions of the same seller, you can be pretty
certain about what is going on.
4. eBay has ways of the tracking shillers. Of course we don't know
everything they do (and if I did know I wouldn't tell!) but some
clues all are dead giveaways. For example, if the seller and the
bidder have the same IP address, eBay knows to take a closer
look.
5. Shill bidders retract many more bids than normal buyers. eBay does allow
any buyer to retract a bid, although this is only supposed to
occur for specific reasons. But in actuality, a retraction is
rarely challenged and ultimately what can eBay do? It cannot
force a person to pay for a particular item.
It is wise not to use this option on a frequent basis. Remember that your
eBay behavior deal is constantly tracked. A retraction is
considered to be a "black mark" on your reputation so don't do
it very often. Shillers, on the other hand, don't care because
they're unconcerned about their reputation. If caught, they
simply open a new account.
Sometimes a shiller is the high bidder at the end of an auction. In that
that case, the seller and buyer can agree to cancel the bid,
rather than retract it. However, all this takes a lot of work,
planning and effort. In the end, shill bidding is rarely worth
the trouble and time. Instead, smart sellers spend their time
finding products and writing listings - the two basic
moneymaking activities of an ebay business - instead of plotting
how to raise profits on individual listings. Success in business
is about efficiency.
About the author:
Learn how to sell on eBay with 16 hours of online instruction taught
by a 10 year eBay veteran. Own an eBay business instead of an
eBay hobby.
http://www.auction-genius-course.com
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