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Sniping On Ebay - Does It Really Work?

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schmidty's Avatar
United States
677 Posts
 Posted 02/17/2010  11:22 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add schmidty to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I started to type that no seller would volunteer for that, because they get more money because of snipers. But, actually, it might work. It would force people to put in there very highest maximum bid, and those people that always bid too much would put in some big ones, sometimes.

Well, it's all wishful thinking on my part. It'll never happen.
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Adam_E's Avatar
United States
4846 Posts
 Posted 02/17/2010  11:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Adam_E to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
mabye I'm 2083, when I'm 84!
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schmidty's Avatar
United States
677 Posts
 Posted 02/17/2010  11:29 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add schmidty to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I think this guy says it best. It is a quote from an e-bay listing. (the guy selling a Morgan for $8...with $94 shipping)

Quote:
The best way to improve your chances on something you really want is to determine the maximum amount you are willing to pay and enter that amount. ebay will enter your bid automatically at the lowest possible price for you. If you end up losing the auction it will NOT be because you have been had by a Bid Sniper - it will be because it went beyond what you were willing to pay
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Saruma's Avatar
United States
968 Posts
 Posted 02/18/2010  12:27 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Saruma to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I saw a sniper get sniped himself the other day. I was watching a metal detector auction the other day where a guy jumped in with a bunch of bids in the final minutes, ending with $450 with 8 seconds left. But at 5 seconds a new bidder appeared out of nowhere and got it for $455. I'm pretty sure the other guy would have kept bidding it up had there been more time.

One idea I would favor for ebay is a moving end time. Basically the idea is that if the auction was supposed to end at 5:00pm it would only do so if there were no bids during the last 5 minutes of the auction. Any bid in the last 5 minutes would extend the finish time by 5 minutes, and this would continue until there were no more bids. This would prevent sniping and would ensure the selling price is the highest price possible for the item, not just the highest bid squeezed in at the last second.
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aladinslamp's Avatar
United States
3076 Posts
 Posted 02/18/2010  12:56 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add aladinslamp to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I can't see that working when most bidder's appear within the LAST few minutes/ moments.....its always been a garage style bidding where you want to buy at the lowest price, anyone thinking that is a fool. ebay has always had a history of last minute bidders so...THE BID ISN'T so high 2 days before the end of auction......the something for nothing or less than its worth is the self governing motive......they all know what they want to spend, its the guy who want's to bid 2 bucks a bid, 5 times at the end of auction who's loosing to a dollar over his bid at the last second because he didn't choose a ceiling price....Seated Nut put it nicely......choose a price your willing to spend even if its more
choose, if it goes over......bid on the next time it comes around....
even the sniper has to choose his max bid......if you bid $55 but would have bid $75 and lost to $56, who's to blame?
Locked
822 Posts
 Posted 02/18/2010  01:14 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add scubu to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
One idea I would favor for ebay is a moving end time.


Yahoo auctions tried it as an option for sellers on a per auction basis. Sellers that used it had buyers leave them in droves. So sellers stopped using it. It didn't even last a year before Yahoo disabled it all together.
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United States
539 Posts
 Posted 02/20/2010  10:52 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add weavus135 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
kaaapoww! Or however you spell that... I just won another auction where I bid the highest I was willing to pay (3 days before close) and watched the snipers have at it. However, they missed!! Bummer for them. Me, I still paid less than the max I wanted to pay. Kaaapoww! OH, and it was below Krause including shipping...

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Adam_E's Avatar
United States
4846 Posts
 Posted 02/20/2010  10:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Adam_E to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
you forgot the last KAAAAAAPOWWWW!
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SeatedNut's Avatar
United States
2797 Posts
 Posted 02/20/2010  11:41 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SeatedNut to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
If bidding on coin x and it is a known commodity in a verified grade, I would agree to place your highest bid and wait.

If the coin is represented as common coin x, but because of your extensive research, knowledge, and effort you know that it is actual rare variety x, the last thing I want is someone else to see any interest in this coin. Interest and bidding activity gets folks "thinking" and looking harder at the coin. See you with 3 seconds left with the most I'm willing to spend on it.
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jokingjoker's Avatar
United States
2150 Posts
 Posted 02/20/2010  11:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jokingjoker to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
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United States
539 Posts
 Posted 02/21/2010  12:04 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add weavus135 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Bring it on boys and girls!!

Just kidding. I doubt I'm even in the same class as you guys. I'm collecting world OFEC and grading isn't even on my radar for price range.

Although I guess I just don't see how not bidding on it discourages others from seeing the value. there are at least 6 of you who do the same thing...so it seems to me that if everyone does the same thing, there is little advantage unless you just simply are going to bid more anyway. It is sort of like the Final Jeopardy catagory, you all know the answer and now it is a matter of outwitting your opponent on the bid amount.
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