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 chimpchamp
 
posted on November 10, 2005 08:07:49 PM new
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051111/wr_nm/ebay_prices_dc

What's it worth? eBay lets users search prices By Eric Auchard

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Online auctioneer eBay Inc. on Thursday introduced a new service that allows buyers and sellers to search the price history of any product on its electronic marketplace worldwide for up to 90 days.


EBay Marketplace Research, as the new subscription service is known, gives buyers and sellers a view into millions of eBay listing, bidding, and pricing trends, in effect creating a constantly updated barometer of consumer shopping habits.

The paid service gives subscribers access to data, charts and graphs, that show the prices eBay's 168 million users have paid in any auction over the past several months, which gives consumers a powerful way to find baseline product prices.

"It does help you to get some idea of the true value of what you are selling," said Martin Pyykkonen, an analyst with brokerage Hoefer & Arnett in Boulder, Colorado.

"With research, the informed buyer is going to be able to say, 'The item is worth about this,"' agreed Hal Varian, an economist at the University of California's Haas School of Business.

Marketplace Research comes in three subscription levels, starting with a two-day pass for $2.99, a basic monthly service

for $9.99 and a professional package priced at $24.99 a month. The first two services show pricing data going back 60 days while the professional subscription -- aimed at power sellers -- has a 90-day pricing history and international market data.

Sellers can follow trends as they play out online, allowing them to adapt their sales strategies immediately.

Pyykkonen said the service will help eBay's core base of existing auctioneers. "Ebay needs to do everything they can to help the seller community" (HAHAHA!) by bringing more sellers online and converting them into veteran "power sellers," Pyykkonen said.

Gartner Inc. analyst Allen Weiner said competition in the online auction market is heating up, both from start-ups and other major Internet players who are pushing their way into the classified advertising market, including Google Inc..

EBay is looking for ways to make it easier for new users to take part, Weiner said. "Part of the big mystery of online auctions is their inefficiency," he said. "By offering pricing history, eBay is making people's time online more efficient.

"A lot of people are very inexperienced and really have no idea about how to set prices," Weiner said.

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I think this is all a big bunch of hooey!! Why doesn't eBay just come out and say, we want another revenue stream?? Sellers know their pricing.


 
 irked
 
posted on November 10, 2005 08:23:12 PM new
Ok sounds good but sellers should get it free just for making an effort to fatten Ebay's pockets. They get paid for listings regardless of our sells.
Sing along now! My name is B-o-l-o-g-n-a and that about sums it up. Why pay for another service. Already the sellers are sinking with all the fees out there.

Just one time I would like to see a great break for the sellers not another pay service. Heck give it to sellers and make the buyers pay. LOL actually no one needs the cost so scratch that idea. Buyers already are buying less paying less -- at least from me lately. Anyway just wanted to get my say in.


/

My 2 cents worth paid in increments of 1% per annum uncompounded yearly!
 
 sparkz
 
posted on November 10, 2005 08:39:08 PM new
You've got to be kiding!! Is this for real, or is it a belated April Fool's joke? If this is for real, it could well be the straw that broke the camel's back, and the springboard that Google needs to morph their newly announced "Base" into an internet auction site. That is their eventual goal. Looks like the timeline may be moved up.


A $75.00 solid state device will always blow first to protect a 25 cent fuse ~ Murphy's Law
 
 vintagepostcardsdotorg
 
posted on November 10, 2005 08:55:01 PM new
my hubby just said: "it's a silly service for silly people." i mean really, who doesn't do their homework before buying/selling anyway?


http://stores.ebay.com/postcards-postcards?refid=store
http://www.vintagepostcards.org
 
 
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