
 If the Internet has a quaint pastime, selling stuff on eBay is probably it. Before a 
thriving e-commerce sprouted a handful of platforms on which anyone can sell anything to  anyone else, there was a slightly thrilling novelty to participating in  the online auction. “Yes,” we told our friends, “I sold it on 
the internet.”
 Some of the mystery and magic may have been lost over the last 15  years, but the easy selling platform remains. Up to 100 individual  listings per month are free on eBay, but many people go beyond that —  the site’s 90-million-person community now buys enough (about $1,900  worth of goods every second) to support many full-time businesses. If  you’re thinking about setting up a storefront on eBay, here are eight  pieces of advice to keep in mind. 
1. Ask Yourself if eBay is Right For Your Business

  Though Marc Cohen’s business sells merchandise on Amazon, Buy.com,  and through each of his two store’s websites, his two eBay storefronts  bring in about 80%-90% of his business. eBay works well for him for  several reasons. For one, sites like Amazon and Buy.com have catalogs of  merchandise that make it easy to create listings. If you’re selling  something other than what is in the catalog, however, it can be more  difficult to create a listing. Because Cohen sells a wide variety of  used video games and other discount merchandise, at times it’s easier  for him to list them on eBay. If you sell unique items like  collectibles, eBay might also be the best way to go.
 Another aspect that makes eBay an ideal choice for Cohen is that he  deals exclusively in merchandise that is somehow distressed — used,  returned, part of a closeout sale, or excess inventory. “eBay is an  online flea market,” he says. “It is extremely price competitive. Most  products (except rare or out-of-stock products from primary retailers)  will not fetch prices even close to the retail prices.”
 Like all third party online retailers, unless you can offer something  that is harder to find or lower priced than the majority of other  sellers, it’s unlikely that you’ll have much success. 
2. Start Slowly

  “[Most eBay sellers] don’t think of their businesses as business, and  they don’t come from business backgrounds, and they tend to make  mistakes in their business practices based on this lack of experience,”  says Jim Griffith, eBay’s senior manager of seller advocacy and the  author of 
The Official eBay Bible.
 Before you jump into eBay full throttle, Griffith suggests starting  out with just a few listings while you perfect your processes. Taking on  more listings than you are prepared to smoothly package, ship, and  provide adequate customer service for could lead to detrimental buyer  reviews. 
3. Customer Service is King

  Aside from offering quality products at competitive prices, customer  service is probably the most important factor for successful selling on  eBay. Sellers who win glowing reviews from their buyers will turn up  higher in product search results than a competitor with low ratings, and  achieve a better 
public feedback profile. 
 Frequent sellers who maintain good customer service ratings also become part of the 
top-rated seller program.  Benefits of belonging to this program include an endorsement badge that  is displayed alongside listings, UPS discounts, and they a 20% discount  on eBay’s final value fees. 
4. Create Effective Product Listings

  Griffith works with new sellers every day. He says one of the most  common innocent mistakes he sees them making is in their descriptions,  terms, and photos.
 One thing that sellers should avoid is adding text that could be  viewed as negative by buyers. “Harsh or restricting terms of service —  requests to do not do this, do not do that, you must do that — that kind  of language doesn’t work in any marketplace, and on eBay it’s actually  an effective way of getting rid of customers,” Griffith says.
 Terms should be simple. Consider using a bullet-point list to convey  your shipping and handling, payment, and return policies. Product  descriptions can be more robust. Griffith suggests watching how others  selling in the same category handle their product descriptions. Clothing  sellers, for instance, used to use simple sizes like XL in their  descriptions. Now they are migrating toward exact measurements.
 It might seem obvious, but another great way to increase your sales  is to provide quality photos. eBay sellers can upload up to 12 photos  with each product and should use as much of this space as possible. 
5. Brand Your Storefront

  One of the great things about selling on eBay is the opportunity to  create a branded store page that highlights specific products and can  set you apart as a seller. Unlike most other selling platforms, eBay  allows all sellers to create up to 15 customizable pages.
 Cohen, whose 
Thumbmonkey Video eBay store beat out about 12,000 other stores to win an marketing award  from eBay in 2008, says that some things that are being upfront about  the return policy and providing contact information.
 eBay provides a 
free tool for customizing your pages. 
Marketing and merchandising apps can also help you make you customize the look and functions of your  storefront. In addition to themes, the section contains apps for doing  market research, sharing your listings over social media, or even 
track your buyers’ locations are also available. 
6. Remember That The Customer is Always Right — Even When They Are Not

  Griffith gets a fair share of heroic customer service stories during  his daily conversations with eBay sellers. Recently, a seller of  packaging materials told him about a customer who complained about an  order of pink packing peanuts.The customer said he had received white,  not pink, packing material. After assuring the customer had another  order of pink packing peanuts on the way, the seller asked if the buyer  could send a photograph of the mistake in order to show the supplier its  mistake. The customer sent a photo — of indisputably pink packing  peanuts.
 “That to me as an example of what a great seller on eBay will do, not  to protect themselves, but just to make sure that somebody is happy,  even if they’re completely wrong,” Griffith says. 
7. Consider Free Shipping

  “When it comes to shipping, the standard is moving across the  industry toward free shipping,” Griffith says. “Buyers don’t want  shipping to be part of their decision making. The best way to take it  out of the decision making process is to offer free shipping. Even if  that means moving some or all of the cost of shipping into the price of  the item, it’s still an easier experience for the buyer.”
 Unlike many other selling platforms, the seller is in control of  setting shipping prices. Whether you decide to go with free shipping or  not, you should ship your merchandise as quickly as possible. Cohen says  that even if there’s a problem with the order, buyers are usually much  more amicable when they’ve received their products quickly. 
8. Do a Bit of Method Acting

  In order to understand what eBay buyers want, become one.
 “You’ll garner a lot of valuable information about your business once you understand what the eBay buying experience is like,
Sagar Ganatra Says