This month, eBay will take away the ability for sellers to set the duration of their fixed-price listings and will impose recurring billing on a 30-day cycle. eBay announced what we refer to as the Good Til Cancelled mandate (GTC) on Tuesday, February 26 as part of the 2019 Early Seller Update.
We conducted a survey of readers between Monday, March 2 and Wednesday, March 6, 2019, to ask sellers how the change would impact them.
Eight percent of respondents said they felt eBay’s policy to change all fixed price listings to Good Til Cancelled was a good change, and 72% said it was a bad change. 16% said it was neutral, and 4% said they didn’t know.
Sellers appeared skeptical of eBay’s motivations in making the change. When we asked, “Do you feel that eBay’s implementation of this policy was based on the wants/needs of their sellers,” an overwhelming majority (88%) said they felt the policy was not based on the wants or needs of sellers. Only 3% felt it was, while 9% didn’t know.
Generally speaking, people don’t like change, and they certainly don’t like having choice taken away from them. But in this case, how did eBay sellers believe change would actually impact their workload and pocketbook? Here’s how sellers responded:
Please indicate how the GTC change will impact the fees you pay eBay:
44% – I will pay the same in fees
37% – I will pay more in fees
5% – I will pay less in fees
14% – Don’t know
Please indicate how the new GTC policy will impact your workload:
59% – This change will result in more work
28% – This change will result in the same amount of work
8% – This change will result in less work
5% – Don’t know
The results show there was more certainty about how the new policy would affect sellers’ workloads, but not in a positive way. As you can see above, nearly 60% felt it would result in more work for them; only 5% said they didn’t know.
Less clear was how the policy would impact their costs. While 37% said they believed they would end up paying more in fees as a result of the GTC mandate, 14% said they didn’t know. 44% believed they would pay the same in fees, and only 5% said they would pay less in fees.
Given the fact that 37% of sellers said they would pay more in fees and 59% said they would see an increase to their workload, it’s not surprising that 69% of respondents would take some form of action once the policy takes effect. Here’s how the numbers break down: 59% said they would change their listing strategy, and another 10% said they would stop listing on eBay. 26% said they would not change their listing strategy, and 5% said they didn’t know.
Of those who said they would take action, many said they would manually (or with the help of 3rd party tools) cancel GTC each month before the listings would auto-renew. And some said they were turning to alternative venues to sell.
The comments about fees were revealing. Some sellers said they would not feel any effect on fees or workload because they already use GTC – or because they keep well under the number of listings eBay offers them for free. (eBay provides 50 free listings to all sellers, and sellers with Stores get additional free listings depending on their Store level.)
Other sellers said they would cancel their listings before the 30 day auto-renew, but said they’d find themselves paying more if they happened to forget to carry through with that monthly practice.
Here are a few of the comments sellers left about fees:
“eBay has a lot of price listing glitches that try to charge you extra for photo gallery, these will be missed with GTC and millions of sellers will not realize they are losing money.”
“It’s got nothing to do with fees. I run 3-, 5-, 7- and 10-day listings to either create urgency or to fit my schedule, ie., going on vacation so run 7-day listings to end before my trip and still give me time to ship them. If a buyer sees a listing ending soon and they are watching it, they get an email from eBay and most often this reminds them to buy. I don’t want watched listings sitting for 30 days. Buyers lose interest or forget.”
“I sell a small-ish number of items – and many are holiday sensitive. eBay doesn’t boost my items like in bigger seller’s , and so mine will be lost for a month rather than the ten days I typically list for. Watchers won’t feel urgency to buy. There will be a lot of items sitting for a month in carts, and then expiring.”
“It is unclear how this will affect sellers, but we suspect that exposure and sales will decline as a result of it. We strive to have a minimum number of listings staggered throughout every single day so that there are always “new” listings appearing and ending.”
“I always review my listings BEFORE relisting. I make changes in the title, pictures, price, double check inventory, remove listings with little to no views and retire old items. I do not relist right after a listing ends as I need time to decide. I try to keep my listings down to only what free listings come with my store. I no longer will pay for items that eBay chooses to provide little to no visibility on. If eBay decides to give my items better visibility, then, and only then, would I relist more.”
“I will try not to let my listings renew. If I mess up, I will be paying more. I hope that I can stay on top of it. Many of my items are long tail.”
“Will pay less fees because no longer need to additional Store subscription listing for 7 & 10 day listing renewals of popular products.”
eBay said one of the reasons for making all fixed-price listings Good Til Cancelled was to improve Search Engine Optimization (SEO) – in other words, the permanent links would help get eBay listings found in Google. We asked sellers, “Do you believe the new policy will have an impact on SEO that will impact the visibility of your fixed-price listings?” Sellers responded as follows:
41% – Will have negative effect on SEO
18% – Will have no effect on SEO
7% – Will have positive effect on SEO
34% – Don’t know
We also wondered if the GTC mandate would have an impact on auctions. 44% said they would not change their auction listing strategy, while 35% said they would run more auction-format listings. 20% said they didn’t know, while only 1% said they would run fewer auction format listings.
Sellers also weighed on whether they would make any changes when it came to their eBay Store strategy. For sellers who did not have an eBay Store, 85% said they did not plan to open an eBay Store, 14% said they didn’t know, and 1% said they did plan to open a Store.
Sellers who did have an eBay Store responded as follows:
48% – Will make no changes to their eBay store(s)
13% – Will downgrade their eBay store(s)
10% – Will close one, some or all eBay stores
1% – Will open new eBay store(s)
0% – Will upgrade their eBay store(s)
28% – Don’t know
While one seller wrote in the survey comments, “All of my items are already GTC. I think it’s a big stink about nothing,” the survey results show there is genuine concern from many sellers.
“More options are always gonna be better than more restrictions / limitations,” another seller wrote.
See “Survey: eBay Sellers Explain the Impact of GTC Mandate” for additional comments from sellers about their reactions to the new policy, in their own words.
I hae more items than I have free listings. I rotate some, move some to auctions and back to fixed price, and when I run out of my allocated listings, I let some sit. My sell thru rate on eBay is tiny so I refuse to pay for listings not covered in my monthly store fees.
This means I have to watch closely when items are about to be ‘rebilled’ by ebay. (will I have to do the math based on the start date? How will I know when to cancel?) This is a lot of extra work and will mean I will lose some of the time I paid for to have my listings active, as well as my own time doing the extra work. What 3rd parties can I use to manage this for me?
@ZZ time for you to get new products that sell better. The whole point of good until canceled is so that you don’t cancel the listings. You are not willing to pay extra insertion fees of $.05-$.10 per listing??? yet you want someone to tell you a 3rd Party software to manage listings? No 3rd party software that does what you want is going to be free. If you do want to pay money for a 3rd party software checkout Ink Frog.
Ebay has never cared about how much extra work they cause for their sellers. I actually sometimes think that Wenig and his unqualified assistants sit up in his office thinking of ways to make life harder for sellers with every update as they never have anything that actually Helps sellers. Each and every change is either another Money Grab because TPTB are grossly incompetent to run Ebay or is another large amount of work added to sellers which really serves no purpose other than to satisfy TPTB that Sellers are now earning their income. If Ebay rated their executives pay based on how effective any of their changes have been since Wenig took over, Wenig and crew would be paying Ebay for the privilege of working there as nothing they have come up with has ever been anything but an additional money grab from their existing sellers because Ebay has no clue how to grow their site by bringing traffic to it.
Wenig is more concerned about not spending any more than he has to just to get something done and every project that has been spawned under his regime has flopped and I fully expect Managed Payments to do the same when they finally roll it out as it will be so full of glitches that Ebay may make Etsys billing fiasco look like just robbing a kids piggy bank compared to what they will wind up doing. They already overbill Sellers on a regular basis and then only want to give them an Ebay invoice credit rather than refund the money. Ebay is starting to sound more and more like they are having some type of cash flow issues just like Etsy but are hiding the issues as normal for ebay.
Wenig is now just throwing anything out that he can to try and save his job because he knows its inevitable once they sell off Stub Hub and the Classifieds as all of Ebays problems will immediately start showing as there will be nothing to use to hide the loss of business.