eBay Boycott Begins Tomorrow: Will It Work?

Sun Feb 17, 2008 4:58PM EST

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In response to eBay's recent announcement that it would no longer allow sellers to leave negative feedback for buyers, the uproar has been deafening. How deafening? So loud that a boycott has been planned, set to begin tomorrow on February 18, 2008 and run for (at least) a week.

Will it stick? As I noted in my original post, eBayers who want to auction things have little alternative to the auction giant unless they want to open their storefronts or sell at fixed-price merchants like Amazon.com.

However, a recent poll of eBay sellers showed that a full 90 percent were unhappy with the policy change (though AuctionBytes notes that no one was really happy with the feedback system before the change, either). Though, as the above story notes, "What I'm hearing from a sellers is not, can we afford to boycott eBay for a week, but rather, can we afford to continue selling on eBay once these changes roll out?"

eBay boycotts are nearly as old as eBay itself, and none of those have been effective at getting the company to change its policies. But things may be different now, as sellers appear to be weighing whether to even bother selling merchandise online at all, turning instead to flea markets and enthusiast fairs instead of wading through what many now see as a bureaucratic and expensive nightmare.

Still, eBay may be taking the threat seriously. To mitigate any ill will, eBay is offering a listing promo until the 20th (per AuctionBytes), and its new discounts for media sellers take effect on that day, too. Will people be drawn to a deal enough to overlook a few policy changes? We shall see.

Comments on eBay Boycott Begins Tomorrow: Will It Work?

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  • 1 Posted by materialgirlsews on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    there is NO current listing promotion running until the 20th. There was a ONE DAY listing sale held on February 13.

  • 2 Posted by redsphinx@verizon.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:34PM EDT Report Abuse

    Ebay is acting foolishly. Hope the boycott is successful and that the policy of giving negatives is restored. Negatives should not be given lightly, but should be serve as a protection from shabby business practices.

  • 3 Posted by moeb49 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:24PM EDT Report Abuse

    As a buyer, ebay's changes look good to me. The previous feedback system had turned into a nasty joke. Sellers should stick to the fees and let the feedback system change.

  • 4 Posted by lyn_rud on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    Listings are down already. Support the Boycott. No Buying, No Selling Feb. 18-25th. Google the following and sign up for the class action suit: Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro Ebay "The suit focuses on a violation of the Sherman Act alleging eBay has used illegal tie-in and steering practices to remain the number one online auction site. It is estimated that eBay controls in excess of 90 percent of the online auction market to date. According to the complaint, the named plaintiffs and other users of eBay are forced to pay higher fees as a result of eBay's practices. Both plaintiffs, who are active sellers on the site, claim eBay's tie-ins with PayPal and Verisign have led to higher credit card fees that must be paid to eBay or PayPal. These fees are artificially inflated and used to help eBay maintain its dominance over the online auction business." They even have a "tell a friend link". Note: Put n/a in the “date” and “# of shares field”. This is not a securities class action. If this is a securities class action, please list the date shares were purchased and the number of shares acquired:

  • 5 Posted by lyn_rud on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    For Buyers who think the feedback change is all good they need to learn more about it. The goal of the FB changes is to make more money for Ebay. If the Sellers do not maintain an incredibly high standard because the Post Office fees are too high, the buyer didn't read the description, or the seller made a mistake and shipped the wrong product, etc. EBAY will charge the seller higher fees and can hold the paypal payment for 21 days. This will end up creating more distrust, why would a seller trust a Newbie? Higher fees WILL be passed onto buyers because they are not going to sell and lose money in the transaction. There will be less sellers - this will drive up prices based on economics 101 of Supply and Demand. Support the Boycott, No Buying, No Selling Feb 18-25.

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