libinatorsmom
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2006
- Messages
- 1,988
Paypal and ebay have turned very buyer freindly and not seller friendly... its not good... for sellers - you basically have to pray you get good buyers!!!!!
The buyer probably realized he overpaid and had buyers remorse. Assume he was in a store that had an "all sales final" policy. He changed his mind before he got the check out line. No problem. Assume he changed his mind after he paid but before he left the store. I'll speculate a store would void the transaction.
This is probably true, but the reality is, this isn't a store. And not following through with the transaction after bidding is breach of contract.
Realistically, though, not much you can do, just relist, and move on.
Anyone have any advice ?
E-Bay and Paypal may seem to favor the buyer. Giving the buyer the benefit of the doubt makes the system work. The system wouldn't work if buyers thought they could easily be taken advantage of.
Paypal and ebay have turned very buyer freindly and not seller friendly... its not good... for sellers - you basically have to pray you get good buyers!!!!!
And that's how it used to be, to a great extent. Although I never worked for paypal or ebay, for some reason back in '99, early 2000s, people would contact amazon about how awful paypal and ebay were, and they wanted us to get involved. (people are weird and think that some companies are magic, I guess) They would tell us ALL about these things. We couldn't do a single thing, but I was the type of CS rep who would listen and at the very least give some empathy. I did a lot of reading on various websites, like one BIG "I hate paypal" website (this is before they were even affiliated like they are now), and they were really evil about buyers back then. Sellers held ALL the power then.
So now it has shifted. If only paypal/ebay could work out a balance.
But ultimately I'm not sure why the OP is so stressed. He hasn't sent the item yet. He can probably ask some friends to check out his page and make SURE that it's really easy for people to understand. I'm not going to check out his auction like the PP did (interesting about how the OP might be violating T&C with something he is doing), but honestly some of the seller pages are insane with multiple fonts and colors and sizes of letters...it's impossible to read. Sure, info might be there, but if you can't read it, it might as well be a blank page. So the OP can go back, make sure their pages are crystal clear, sell it to someone else, and move on.
Surely the OP doesn't want the buyer to *have to* buy the item and then have something they can't use.
Yup, you are lucky that the buyer contacted you now rather than after you shipped.
I once had a buyer file an item not received claim while I was away on vacation (mediterranean transatlantic disney cruiselol) even though she'd received the item.
In that case, ebay resolved it in her favor...
And if he files a claim after he receives it what happens then? Will ebay decide in your favor?UPDATE:
I just explained my situation to a supervisor at eBay and then received this "confirmation" of what they told me:
From ebay SR# 1-5999993802
Hello grilphace (bucs718@yahoo.com),
This is regarding your concern about a buyer that doesn't want the item but he already paid for it.
As per eBay policy, we suggest that you send the item to your buyer and complete the transaction.
Its on your buyer's option if his going to file a claim or not.
Thanks,
eBay
My eBay ID is grilphace, and I have a perfect record on eBay with over 995 positive feedbacks.
I sold a new factory sealed G585 Lenovo laptop on eBay last night. The buyer paid for it promptly. I then received an email today from the buyer who wanted to make sure this laptop had 4GB of ram. I wrote him back and said no, my auction clearly stated that this model had only 2GB of ram. He then wrote back and told me to cancel the transaction and that I was selling out of date equipment. He told me NOT to ship the laptop to him; that he would refuse it. He told me he paid PayPal with a Visa card and that he was going to contact Visa and dispute the charge.
I called PayPal Im a preferred member. They advised me not to ship the laptop and that the seller would if he disputed the charge win the dispute. Im shocked and amazed this is allowed !
Anyone have any advice ?
And if it's refused and it's returned to you and he files a claim will you then have to refund the money? I understand eBay policies and I understand where you're coming from about the buyer making a purchase, even confirming it when he placed his bid... but I just don't see how ebay will allow you to keep their money for a product that will in the end be returned to you.I don't allow returns; especially in an instance like this when I'm selling a item that has a factory seal on it. Once that seal is open - as we all know - the value drops. That's why you see so many items that say "the xxxxxx was opened just to inspect the contents" on eBay. That always make me laugh. I say that with electronics, if you open the box and turn the item on ? Its no longer new.
The way it was explained to me was this: I will ship the item. The buyer
can refuse it and it will be returned to me - keep in mind I have his money.
He can file a claim saying he never received it, but then I will have proof that I shipped it and it was refused. So I'd win that claim.
The buyer can accept the item and then file a "not as described" claim, BUT the item was described with 100% accuracy. So I'd win that claim.
My eBay ID is grilphace, and I have a perfect record on eBay with over 995 positive feedbacks.
I sold a new factory sealed G585 Lenovo laptop on eBay last night. The buyer paid for it promptly. I then received an email today from the buyer who wanted to make sure this laptop had 4GB of ram. I wrote him back and said no, my auction clearly stated that this model had only 2GB of ram. He then wrote back and told me to cancel the transaction and that I was selling out of date equipment. He told me NOT to ship the laptop to him; that he would refuse it. He told me he paid PayPal with a Visa card and that he was going to contact Visa and dispute the charge.
I called PayPal Im a preferred member. They advised me not to ship the laptop and that the seller would if he disputed the charge win the dispute. Im shocked and amazed this is allowed !
Anyone have any advice ?
UPDATE:
I just explained my situation to a supervisor at eBay and then received this "confirmation" of what they told me:
From ebay SR# 1-5999993802
Hello grilphace (bucs718@yahoo.com),
This is regarding your concern about a buyer that doesn't want the item but he already paid for it.
As per eBay policy, we suggest that you send the item to your buyer and complete the transaction.
Its on your buyer's option if his going to file a claim or not.
Thanks,
eBay
One nugget of advice -- in all retail (to include e-commerce sites such as eBay) -- "The Customer is Always Right"...