Caitlin
Well-known member
Good question.
Bodecia said:But I don't feel up to going into it all right now. And I am feeling pretty stupidsometimes I am way to trusting because I want to believe in the goodness of people but the fact is that many of them are not good and fair. My gut feelings did kick it but I read it all wrong and thought it was just me because I had just had an operation and was not feeling great.
Dawn
I feel for you Dawn. Sounds like you've encountered a nasty "Zeide Erskine experience" if you ask me. She was a master at making people feel stupid and confused. Anyway, chalk this nastiness up to experience. If you want to be successful at sales, you must stick to a set of your own rules and you have to keep repeating those rules to pesky, non-serious buyers, over and over and over, every time they give you some of their own silly spiel.
I've never done commercial sales, but I did many years of ferreting out rare things for collectors as a sort of hobby. Some collectors were very eccentric and demanding. The way I kept my sanity was to stick to my rules without exception. It would have been too stressful otherwise.
here are a few things that pose a "red flag".
Pearl_dreams said:Dawn, I looked at your Black Hills gold emerald ring auction (item number 310036343089.)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ESTATE-VINTAGE-...ryZ67727QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
My guess is that the buyer took the ring to a jeweler and was told that she overpaid. The ring is 10K and hollow and you were not sure the stone was even an emerald. What if it wasn't? Or what if it was a low quality emerald, heavily oiled or filled to make it look better?
My advice to you for the future is to be sure of what you are selling and what it is worth. For valuable items, maybe even get an appraisal. It will help you to price and describe your items accurately and with confidence and may help prevent buyer dissatisfaction.
Pearl_dreams said:It goes beyond that...if you look at the bidding history, the winning bidder's proxy bids were driven up repeatedly by a single, zero-feedback bidder whose bidding activity with this seller is 71% (last time I checked.).......
I'm sorry, but my personal conclusion is that your buyer received an item that really was not represented correctly, though you didn't realize this. Consider refunding her voluntarily. I do not mean to offend you, just giving my opinion.