I commiserate with John and am glad it was a small amount lost. I have done business with him successfully, despite the vagaries of delivery. I am delighted to deal with John and other topline poster sellers who care about the transaction in all its phases and their customers. When things sometimes go wrong, there's always a reasonable prospect for resolution.
 
There really is no other way to look at this issue than as part of the cost of doing business when the item is consigned to any third party for delivery.
 
Secure, virtually instant on-line payments have been a boon to sellers surely, by mostly eliminating lost letters containing money orders and the time-cost of getting them cashed and so-called lost letters from fraudulent buyers.
 
These services have benefited buyers too: protecting them from those sellers who falsely deny receipt of the MO - some still do as I have recently noted regarding a Turkish poster seller.
 
Now buyers still deal with sellers who state the item was sent, but it wasn't and, still, negligent and indifferent packaging and ruined items on delivery. I just got an 05 calendar from a seller who failed to put any stiffeners into the packaging and the postal services of two counties bent and creased it to a useless state. The seller required a substantial "shipping AND HANDLING" sum and had 100s of positive feedback. While I generally expect a bad result and am pleasantly surprised on the receipt of an item intact in a reasonable time, I didn't figure specifically for a bad result for that item.
 
And sellers who list hundreds and hundreds of items then have NO system for even internally tracking when items are sent are another huge problem, because all buyers can do is wait and hope against hope usually past 30 days and no recourse. These sellers often do not reply to inquires either, because they're so busy listing MORE stuff and don't know when the stuff goes out and DON'T CARE because they have been paid - by paypal - and don't expect repeat business.
 
So the feeble recourse for buyers is to give the o-so "dreaded" negative or "scaredy-cat" buyer's neutral feedback. But these same sellers have time for retaliatory negatives which are specious.
 
Buyers should build those kinds of problems and sellers into their economic model and use them very sparingly (only for items they MUST have, but, ironically, can live without), because they'll never go away.
 
Buyers would assume that the sellers' business models take nondelivery and the occasional refund for good customer relations into account when the opening price is set against the reasonably expected end price even if it is the opening price. Buyers should be able to expect that the sellers' overhead costs are included in the price.
 
However, the effort by many sellers to avoid ebay and paypal sellers' FEES (most of which are calculable and should form part of overhead and the price) has reached such a feverish pace as to approach fees evasion. These sellers have low opening prices and charge unduly high shipping and handling charges to get more money for their items without paying fees. Of course their packaging has to be minimal to keep as much of the backend as possible.
 
I don't include in this bad group sellers whose business model is proven to be based on market-forces driving the bidding, so they can start low, because the fees are higher at the end and likely are at least commensurate with start and end fees together (some sellers use a straight buying model with the same result) AND who charge reasonable shipping costs AND do a good job of packaging.  
 
Ebay and Paypal could do much better of course if they were to consult and ACCEPT recommendations from longtime respected sellers and buyers of many kinds of items and business models on these issues.
 
But the issue really is not Paypal per se, it's the people with whom we (all) deal.
 
Can anyone can find a prophylatic for toxic people such as those noted? Not likely, so we're all engaging in various degrees of "risky business" and have to find some level of comfort for doing so.
 
As I move closer to completing (if that will ever really happen) a poster collection with which I am pleased, I am limiting the sellers with whom I deal to those who my risk assessment gives me good comfort.
 
John and others with substantial inventories, have to deal with a much larger selection of buyers and thus their risk assessments must result in and account for higher probabilities that problems will occur. Good buyers pay for that as well.
 
Craig, Vancouver
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, November 11, 2004 12:42 AM
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Paypal

Hi JR
 
The amount was only 16.99 but I was more concerned that someone else could be caught this way over a large transaction. Lets say a US seller sends a package to Europe with a value of $1000.00 but cannot provide the "online tracking" that paypal require. If the buyer decides to dispute the transaction they get their money back - no questions asked, no chance for the seller to provide any response, end of story. I'm not sure how things work in the US these days but I dont think the US postal service provide on line tracking for each and every transaction. I know that even if I fully insure the article from Australia (which I do on large transactions whether the buyer pays for it or not) that will not satisfy paypal.
 
The reason for my post was that I thought other sellers should be aware of this. I have had a couple of private emails from sellers who have had similar experiences. I can live with this happening once in 5 years but I would not have been happy if the amount had have been large. Hopefully it will be another 5 years before anything similar happens.
 
Its a jungle out there.
 
 
Regards
John
 
JOHN REID VINTAGE MOVIE MEMORABILIA
PO Box 92
Palm Beach
Qld 4221
Australia
WEBSITE:
www.moviemem.com
 
eBay Userid: johnwr
 
All you need to know about Australian Posters......
http://www.moviemem.com/about.html
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, November 11, 2004 7:04 PM
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Paypal

John,
 
Sorry to hear that this fellow used PayPal to hurt you -- you've always been great about shipping posters all the way from down under for only $7.00 USD. I hope the refund amount wasn't too much. It's pretty ironic that PayPal allows sellers to accept payments from "international buyers" (even encourages it) but that if there is a problem with an international buyer they simply say that you ship international "at your own risk". Typical double-standard from PayPal again. I suppose if this happens to you very often, you'll be forced to charge everyone a higher shipping rate (one which does provide a tracking number). Or else possibly offer both, but if the buyer wants the $7.00 rate, they have to agree to not file a PayPal claim against you in the event it does not get to them. That's not a good solution, but then nothing seems to be in this case.
 
The sad fact is that PayPal always sides with the person who paid in these disputes -- the only sellers who can get away with taking PayPal and scamming the buyers are the ones who continually empty their PayPal accounts and continually close them and open new ones, staying one step ahead of those filing complaints with PayPal about them. The honest sellers get stuck with PayPal arbitrary decisions.
 
Perhaps it will soon be time to make charging insurance mandatory (an insured package must by definition carry some kind of tracking number) and at least if the package does not get to the buyer, you can get reimbursed for any refunds you have to give. Of course, insurance means declaring full value for customs, so it gets messy there as well when shipping international.
 
Nope. I got no good solutions. Probably the best is find the cheapest way of sending something with a tracking number. Here in the U.S. we can send a Priority Mail package and for 45 cents add what is called a "delivery confirmation" tag which is actually useless as a delivery confirmation, but does give the package a "tracking number" of sorts.
 
-- JR
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2004 15:41
Subject: [MOPO] Paypal

Hi everyone
 
This is a warning to sellers who use paypal. I sold a poster to a customer in France about 3 weeks ago. He paid with paypal. I sent the poster immediately - airmail as usual. He filed a complaint a few days ago saying that he had not received the poster. No contact with me at all from either paypal or the customer. I logged on to my account and found that there was an "issue" that had to be resolved. Paypal gave me two options:
 
1. Provide on line tracking of the package.
2. Refund the customer.
 
I send all of my packages normal airmail at a basic 7.00. Most of you would know that I rarely if ever have a problem and delivery is often within a week but our postal service does not offer on line tracking on international airmail.
 
So I was left with no option at all but to refund the customer. I was given no opportunity to communicate with the customer or paypal.
 
My feeling is that he received the package and uses this as a form of scam. Paypal say that if you ship internationally, you do so at your own risk. I'm not sure what they actually mean by "internationally".
 
So, basically, if you send a package without on line tracking you have no comeback with paypal. If anyone disputes the transaction you have to give them a refund.
 
Regards
John
 
JOHN REID VINTAGE MOVIE MEMORABILIA
PO Box 92
Palm Beach
Qld 4221
Australia
WEBSITE:
www.moviemem.com
 
eBay Userid: johnwr
 
All you need to know about Australian Posters......
http://www.moviemem.com/about.html
Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
___________________________________________________________________
How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List
Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L
The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.

Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
___________________________________________________________________
How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List
Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L
The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.

Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
___________________________________________________________________
How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List
Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L
The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.

Reply via email to