English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am selling a hockey collectable thats a limited edition. Check it out and tell me what a good price for it would be or am i just about right? Heres a link.....

http://cgi.ebay.com/CAROLINA-HURRICANES-RON-FRANCIS-GOLD-PLATE-500-GOALCOIN_W0QQitemZ330149428988QQihZ014QQcategoryZ25224QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem

2007-07-23 14:40:04 · 8 answers · asked by Awinagainov 2 in Sports Hockey

8 answers

Yeah, the starting bid is a little much, and I really don't want to know how much you're paying eBay to put up both a bid option and a buy it now option (it sounds quite painful). I also sell stuff on eBay so I'll give you some pointers.

1. (a)Your S&H is a little too high. Come on, $9.50 to send a coin over? Personally, I make anywhere from two to three bucks off handling and my buyers seem to like that.

1. (b) OR you can put your S&H to something ridiculous like $15 USD and your starting bid at $.99. eBay will charge you $.20 to put it up instead of the few bucks and just worry about the Paypal fees. Also, I'm pretty sure it'll pay itself off if people start bidding like crazy for it.

2. You're selling a hockey merchandise, but you only have a S&H charge for the US. What about Canada? What about the rest of the world? Buyers don't like to contact and wait on shipping and handling quotes. Take it to your post office, ask for a price, and include it in your listing. They're pretty straight forward, like send to Canada is, say, $5 USD, send to Europe is $7 USD, send to anywhere in Asia is $10 USD. You can also attract a lot more buyers this way, and increase your chances of having a bidding war.

3. Also, your picture's a little too dark. If you have a brighter picture, buyers can see what the coin itself look like and you won't have to shell out extra money on putting in the additional pictures.

Or you can just throw everything I said out the window and hope for a die-hard Ron Francis fan to buy it. These are just strategies I use to keep my expenses down while making it desirable to buyers. Good luck.

2007-07-23 16:16:44 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Overpriced, and a hell of a lot for shipping. Also, it's a coin. If it was a signed puck, you could get a lot more for it. It also looks like it's come out of the packaging from your picture. that's going to make it worth less to a serious collector.

That would have been a good item to sell to coincide with the Hall of fame game and induction weekend- that's when people will be looking for Francis stuff. You'll be lucky to get an opening bid on that setup.

2007-07-23 16:39:31 · answer #2 · answered by The Big Box 6 · 1 0

The hike in petrol fee became necessitated as a results of fact of strengthen in fees of crude oil interior the international industry, Union Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee pronounced. "the fee of crude oil interior the international industry has touched $ninety a barrel. Petrol fees have been deregulated already. So the hike in fee became in parity with international fees," Mukherjee pronounced. jointly as consumers are relatively unhappy and the rustic's opposition political events have all started to make the main this sadness, the Union government had no determination yet to hike petrol fees. Analysts say that there is not any convincing case for subsidising petrol, notwithstanding if there can nonetheless be some case for subsidising diesel and kerosene. those are all old arguments which have been long surpassed with the aid of for over a decade now. It became the so-stated as 'R group', headed by utilising economist Vijay Kelkar, a former petroleum secretary, that first laid out the line map for deregulation of petrol and petroleum product fees over a decade in the past, pronounced a corporation generic record some days in the past. The argument is predicated on the elementary concept that an import-based us of a like India can not handle to pay for to motivate severe intake of capacity in step with unrealistically low fees. =========================== Butter Flutter

2016-10-22 11:49:57 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Overpriced.
I would start it out at 7.99
And see what happens.
Remember,its only worth what someone is willing to pay.
Whats the least you would take?Then go from there.
Its July-people aren't looking for Ron Francis coins.But there is a buyer for everything too.Good luck.

2007-07-23 15:40:04 · answer #4 · answered by Darren 4 · 1 0

first of GO Sabres! Carolina Sucks! Buffalo Native.
I would make something like that around $30. Any hockey collecters would buy it for that. Thats my opinion though

2007-07-23 14:44:00 · answer #5 · answered by Mitch Ramone 2 · 0 2

I tend to start eBay auctions low, and let the public bid it up. This might be a bit high for openers, but all's you need is one or two bidders and you'll be fine.

2007-07-23 14:52:28 · answer #6 · answered by wdx2bb 7 · 0 0

And I have a bridge for sale in Brooklyn. I don't think this is the place to peddle your wares. I'm not the reporting type though. Have at it.

2007-07-23 14:52:37 · answer #7 · answered by Bob Loblaw 7 · 4 1

kinda pricy. i would've started at $10 and then went up

2007-07-23 14:42:59 · answer #8 · answered by Playboyperry509 6 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers