Tips For Managing Multiple Ebay Auctions.
Use My eBay.
If you want a broad overview of where you are with your
auctions, make sure you pay a visit to My eBay occasionally
instead of just relying on emails. With my eBay, you can see all
your auctions in a big table, and sort by things like the number
of bids and the current price. If you want to see which of your
auctions currently has no bids, then you can do that.
One of the most useful things about My eBay, though, is the
'Summary' view. If you're not sure what you should be doing
next, then this acts effectively as an eBay to-do list: anything
you need to be doing will end up here.
Use Selling Manager.
If you're willing to pay the fee of $4.99 per month, you can
sign up for Selling Manager, which is a more effective version
of the My eBay 'Selling' view. It lets you customise your view
more effectively to see the information that's important to you,
see useful snapshots of how things are going, make automated
responses to your buyers using email templates, and more.
Selling Manager Pro gives you more features: it keeps track of
inventory for you, and lets you relist items in bulk. It will
even produce a monthly profit and loss report to help you keep
track of the big picture. Unfortunately, it costs $15.99 per
month.
Use a Listing Tool.
Even though they're called listing tools, much of the software
out there lets you manage what you're doing long after it's been
listed, with all the features of Selling Manager and sometimes a
few more besides. This programs also often have the advantage of
being programs instead of websites, meaning they're faster to
respond and can do more sophisticated analysis.
Remember the 'Relist' Button.
After your auctions end each time, there's an easy way to put
the exact same thing back again: the 'Relist' button. You can
Relist items quickly and easily this way, as long as you don't
want to change in the listing.
Pay Someone!
Here's something you might not have considered: if you're
listing so many expensive items that even automated selling
tools take too long to use, then have you considered paying
someone to help out, as an employee? After all, you wouldn't try
to staff a shop full-time on your own, would you? If you already
run a business, you could even give the responsibility to
someone who works for you there. Freeing up your own time to do
something else might pay off for you in the long run.
When you're managing so many auctions, sooner or later you might
need to cancel one of them early. The next email will let you
know when and how you can do it.
About the author:
Kirsten Hawkins is an Ebay and internet auction enthusiast from
Nashville, TN. Visit http://www.auctionseller411.com/ for more
great tips on how to make the most from Ebay and other online
auctions.