eBay: Progress for Books from the Bottom-up
- By Bruce McKinney
Scanning listings is quicker with larger images
The book buying experience on eBay continues to improve. eBay of course sells almost everything and the revisions and additions on the eBay mother-ship are not for books alone but for the site overall. Nevertheless, the recent changes add efficiencies that improve the eBay book-buying experience. If history is any guide however these changes will primarily stimulate ‘listers’ to list rather than browsers to buy. That will be a shame. Unfortunately many would-be buyers feel the site is too complex and the rewards too small and infrequent to merit the time the site requires. I respectfully disagree. It’s clearly worth the effort. Let’s look at the most important change.
What is primarily different is that an understandable image is now a visible part of each listing in searches. This reduces the number of items on results pages but permits the eye to scan both the text and images quickly for potentially interesting material. Passing your cursor over the ‘Enlarge’ link for any item increases the image size instantly. Moving the cursor away closes the image. I run targeted searches and check a thousand or more listings twice a week and have always had to read the individual listing texts to identify the no more than 5% of matches that are possibly relevant to my interests. With images that require no clicks and can, if necessary, be instantly increased in size, I can identify the obviously uninteresting quickly and theoretically spend more time on the potentially interesting. The net change is increased efficiency.
The presentation I’m speaking of is reached through the general search at the top of eBay pages. Once the results appear I then select [--] Include Description [for broader results] and [--] Auctions only option [to focus on material in play].
Depending on your browser and site settings you may see something different but, as far as I can tell, the images are larger and quicker than previously.
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eBay: Progress for Books from the Bottom-up
- By Bruce McKinney
Easier to follow controls
In the recent updates eBay has also made the format of the Account Summary page a bit friendlier with a concise list of options now stacked on the left side of the page. All in all a good job.
Revisions to graphics which make eBay ever more ready when buyers arrive, aside, the site is not yet easy enough to induce buyers in the book field to want to buy there. The site is still mystifying, the eBay experience cult-like, the goal to induce you to sell your old lawn mower or buy your next engagement ring or car there. eBay wants a ‘relationship’ and most book collectors just want to buy books. Yes they sell old and collectible books but unless you know how to search efficiently you can get mired in trafe. It’s nevertheless important for the field that they create an efficient and transparent auction market for books because, as I have said in other articles, an enormous amount of material will come to market in the years ahead and the only way the surplus will be cleared is through bidding. The field, on listing sites, is frozen in 2006 while, five years later, prices in the auction rooms are falling. The disconnect is obvious. Much of the material has been listed for years and has gone unsold but as sellers near retirement the need to move the inventory will become urgent. Sellers will try to send their best material into the auction rooms but much will be turned away as unsuitable or too common to warrant cataloguing and promotion. All that vast quantity of unloved, unwanted, un and under appreciated material will logically head to eBay if they make the site easier to use and understand. For the moment, even with the recent nice changes eBay remains a complex amalgam of art and science, always upgrading but not yet thinking of books as a stand-alone opportunity. It’s an opportunity for entrepreneurs and I believe an increasing necessity for sellers. For eBay it’s a logical opportunity but both Google and Amazon could also do it.
For today we can report incremental improvement in eBay’s presentation. They have an enormous head start.
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