My Auction Empires – eBay and Amazon Consultants

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Browsing Posts tagged eBay Description

 

In our final part of this mini series a common question eBay Consultants tend to get is “How long should the description be ?” As with most things in life and business, it all depends.

Your eBay description needs to be long enough to sell the item in a non threatening way, just write the description in a manner that you were telling your best friend about the item you were selling.

It often amazes me as an eBay consultant the problems people have when they need to write about the item they are about to sell online. When a client says they are having challenges with writing a description I often give them these tips.

  • Place the item on a table in front of them
  • Take a pad and pen and then write a letter to their best friend telling them about this item they have just bought. But they cannot send any pictures to the friend so the description needs to explain what the item is.
  • Also if there is any damage they need to put this in the description too.
  • Be honest and open and never over sell the item in the listing.
  • And as for length write enough sales copy to get your point across. Where possible try and use some bullet points to make your points stand out.

Andrew Milburn is an eBay Consultant based in the UK

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We all sign up to eBay and list our items and then because we have paid our listing fees, shop fees if we have a shop and then when the item sell our final valuation fees we just sit back and wait, for good old eBay to sell the items for us. Well it is true eBay will work hard for us and will market our listings for us while they are on the site, but they are also doing this for millions of other people at the same time. Yes they do a good job, but this is a business we are in either a part-time or full-time, we also need to do some work.

Right now I can hear some of you moaning and saying “Hey Andrew, I have taken those pictures and written a quick listing, what else, it is now up to eBay” when I hear this I tell them that I understand where they are coming from, but point out to them, that if they just spent a little time each day or week in tweaking their listings they would help them in eBay search and also in Google and the other search engines. And it is nothing hard or complex, you just need to get serious about your business and say yes, I am willing to go the extra mile with it and that you are prepared to put in just 30 minutes a day to help those items sell for a higher price and sell on a regular basis.

The first area you need to look at, and again being open and honest with you here, you should have done this action way before writing or re-writing a title or description and that is research. Yes I want you to have this engraved on your mind 24/7………………………………. Research, Research, Research. If you can get this part right then you are a good way in to making a success on sites such as eBay. Research in your marketplace, Research your product, Research the competition, and Research those keywords. In fact each one of those is a serious of articles on their own, but for now I want to talk about Research the competition.


Research your competition

You can do this the hard way by looking at the different websites and eBay shops where they sell the types of items you are interested in selling. Make a note of :

  • The colours they use in sales letters
  • The words they use
  • The types of pictures they use
  • A long or short sales piece
  • And the type of keywords they use

Now before I get any complaints I do not want you to copy, I just want you to look and see what these top sellers are doing and only look at the sellers who are selling multiple items a day in your niche or are regular sellers in your niche. You may remember that that I said hard way just above and yes there is an easier way to do some research and that is with some eBay research software from a company called Terapeak. eBay Research by Terapeak will give you some of the answers above and will present it to you in away you can understand and then put into action. But remember you need to do the work and then put it in place and take the necessary work to carry it out.

Andrew Milburn Is An eBay Consultant Based In Lichfield Staffordshire

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One of the questions that I am often asked by classes and students is : “How To Write Good eBay Descriptions“.

Now the way I like to look at eBay Descriptions is the fact they are you sales letter or sales pitch. An eBay Description is your shop front it is the way you are going to sell your item – or if it is poor not sell.

So lets get going and I will tell you my way of writing eBay Descriptions.

Stage 1. – Write a good title, this is the first thing people will see, and this is what buyers will click on to get to the full Descriptions. Use all the Characters. Do not fill it out with silly things like @@ !! etc. Use the words that your buyers will use to search for the item.

Stage 2. – Now you have written, the title you come to the eBay Description, a good idea is to repeat the item title at the top of the eBay Descriptions. This helps both the buyer and the search engine spiders.

Stage 3. – Once the title has been written, you come to the main body of the sales letter and the eBay description. Write it as if you are chatting to a mate in the local bar or over a cup of coffee. Make it sexy, if it has a story about the item tell it. This is where you do the selling.

Stage 4. – If you are selling clothing give people the sizes, what it is made out of, if it still has the tags, if it is still in the bag. Tell them and show them with pictures as well.

Stage 5. – If the item you are selling has a fault in it tell and show the people it in the eBay Description. Be very honest with the people, tell them where the problem is with the item.

Stage 6. – A good thing I find to put in is your shipping and postage costs this lets people read what the prices are. I always put this at the bottom of the eBay Description and put it in 10pt Times New Roman Font and put it in blue. This lets it stand out. Normally I put some thing like this:

Postage to the UK is £1.75 this includes 1st Class recorded Delivery. The Rest of the World is £4.99.

Stage 7. – If you have any terms and conditions put this at the bottom of the item description.

Above all write to sell, but do not go over the top and always tell the truth.

Another selling idea brought to you by Andrew Milburn and My Auction Empires.

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