by Mike**Mize » March 18th, 2011, 9:55 am
Thanks for this discussion. It really spells out the pros and cons of eBay selling. Being in the middle of an auction week I guess I'm pretty happy with some of the numbers I'm seeing so far this week. I've had, for instance, almost 400 combined views for my gloves this week. There's no way I could approach that kind of exposure without eBay. I do think it's very important to go into it without any major expectations. Like they say in baseball, "don't get too high, don't get too low. Keep an even keel.".
At the same time this thread brings to mind the last time I ran a small series of gloves. Really, the killer is the bill at the end of the month. I now remember last time thinking, "Gee, That seems awful high.". It's a trade off. Very often eBay leads to sales of other gloves outside of eBay. I've established some truly loyal friends/customers as a result of eBay auctions. That's the silver lining. Now that I think of it, I met JD as a result of the "ask the seller a question" aspect of an eBay glove offering several yeas ago. Where I'd be in the hobby without having made those friendships, I have no idea. I remember reading a series of JD written descriptions composed for a group of gloves he was selling. The prose was just so refreshingly honest, and in some instances deadpan funny, it just made the gloves irresistible. Anybody remember his Frankenstein glove from a few years back. I still have that one and every time I look at it, it makes me smile.
So I guess if I were to try to describe my approach to eBay selling it would go something like this; Sell this way every now and then. Get the bill. Grin and pay it until the time when starts to feel unacceptable. Then cool it for a few months and regroup; maybe even forget those annoying details and then when and if you think you're ready, jump back in.
As an aside, I actually think things are picking up a bit with the hobby. I have a feeling that there are some new guys just beginning to collect. I think that's fantastic.