This comment is made from the seller’s point of view… And is put forward as a discussion item.
It can be argued that the sellers on eBay are not getting the best deal for their items, because of the system of auction used by eBay.
eBay’s system is not really an auction, but is more akin to a
tender process. In as much as a “bidder†puts in a tender, and at a predetermined time, the highest tender is the winner.
This does not always favour the seller, as a bidder may pay less than they are prepared to pay, due to the eBay “proxy†bidding system only increasing the price as little as necessary (one bidding increment) to win..
Now, let’s consider another way to auction an item…
Set a start price 150%
more than the amount you are prepared to accept. And have the system automatically
reduce the price 7.5% per day until a buyer grabs it… The buyer pays only what he is prepared to pay as his maximum. But if the buyer is a cheapskate, he will miss out, as another more realistic person takes the item.
The buyer treats this system in the same way as a BIN.
The seller will
always get the
maximum for his item, And such a system would
stop shilling stone cold dead.
ebay could make the method an option for sellers.
Now is the time to kick the brick for suggesting such a thing. But bear in mind, this method is already in use in Australia. The biggest example is that all fish sold at the Sydney fish market use this method. It is likely that the large wholesale cattle marketing will go the same way soon.