Ebay facilitates transactions between a buyer and a seller. Both are human. Act like it.
Don’t hide behind your username. Respond to questions with real answers. Corporate-speak doesn’t work.
Ebay facilitates transactions between a buyer and a seller. Both are human. Act like it.
Don’t hide behind your username. Respond to questions with real answers. Corporate-speak doesn’t work.
There’s a whole world of buyers waiting for you when you offer your items for international sale. I shied away from selling internationally for a few years, just because I was afraid of what might happen.
When I took the leap, I realized that I had missed out on dozens (or hundreds, or thousands) of sales because I let fear control me. Don’t let that happen to you! Over the past several months, I’ve sold more items outside the US than in — the market is there.
Start out by offering just one or two items available to international bidders. See how they go. Get your feet wet and then decide if it is right for you.
Ebay does a great job of making the process simple. The customs forms are mostly filled out with listing data. All you need to do is print, sign, date, and ship!
Stop waiting and go international!
The best way to determine whether something is worth selling or not is to check Ebay’s Completed Listings. You can determine how popular an item is based on how many listings there are, how many of them completed successfully, and what the average selling price was.
You can see the completed listings by signing in to your Ebay account and searching for your item. Then check the “Completed Listings” box to see recently ended listings.

You’ll see the actual results of recent listings. Now, take some time and look at the successful listings and see if there’s anything that looks like it might help get that sale and possibly raise the price. There might be good sales copy. There might be crystal clear, high-resolution images. Maybe it sold because free shipping was offered.
Next, take a look at some of the listings that weren’t successful. Was it missing a detailed description? Were questions left unanswered? Does the seller have poor feedback?
You can learn a ton just by paying attention to history. Give it a try!