DMRick said:
The backbone of eBay? Most people think it's a farce, myself included. The way it is now, it's pretty meaningless. A non payer, can leave a neg..how fair is that? Sure, I could respond to it, but most people just look at the figures, not the actual feedback.
Until I hear from the buyer by the way, I don't know if the transaction went well. Who knows why a person feels compelled to leave a neg if all went well. Some have commented that they leave a neg, once they see the shipping cost on the package (not to me, but on ebay boards). Even though they knew the shipping before they bid, they decided it was too much, and left a neg, even though the transaction went well. Or in another case, even though the auction gave the size of an item, the person decided it was smaller than they thought. There are lots of reasons people leave negs..especially if the seller has already left a postitive. Like I said earlier, we can all decide when to leave it...and it doesn't make one of us worse than the other.
Feedback does have some value, however it is time consuming to find the negatives and neutrals, to see exactly what they say.
It is a major mistake to just look at feedback numbers, and not read the negatives. eBay should make it easier to find the negatives.
A negative, due to not noticing shipping that is clearly stated in an auction, is a negative worth ignoring.
A negative due to non-delivery is something to consider.
A negative due to a seller's lack of willingness to help track a lost package is something to consider.
If a seller has only one negative (or only from one buyer) and has a response (to their own feedback) that can be believed, I take that into consideration.
Often a high volume seller will have a percentage over 99, and still have a track record of multiple complaints per month.
Sometimes it is how a seller responds to the negatives others leave them, that causes me to not want to deal with that seller. I have seen some very unprofessional responses to feedback.
Sometimes I read the feedback of the person who leaves the negative, to get an idea of who is credible. I have seen cases where the person leaving the feedback was the obvious problem.
Last night I made the mistake of buying, without first reading the feedback. While the seller had over 99%, there are obvious problems in the feedback.
After I recieved an email from the seller, accusing me of multiple things that I did not do, that made no sense to me, I then checked their feedback.
I had pointed out that their listings had contradicting shipping information for multiple purchases, but agreed to still pay the shipping amount they had put in the invoice. I even submitted the pay pal payment for the full invoice amount, so there is no question about my willingness to pay the sellers desired shipping amount. But I thought the seller should know, that they had contradicting information in their listings.
I didn't expect a response accusing me of making multiple payments (which I did not), canceling payments (which I did not), and waiting two weeks to complain (which I did not).
I had never purchased from this seller before last night. My pay pal records showed one single payment, and no payment cancelations.
This is not the first time I have pointed something out to a seller, and had them jump to the defensive and start accusing me of things.
In all cases where this has happened there were clues in the feedback that there might be a problem.
Now my biggest concern is actually getting my items.
I strongly suggest that people take the time to actually read feedback comments, and then if there is a question, read the comments of the person leaving the negative feedback.