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Informative Articles

How to Make a Full time Income With Ebay Online Auctions
First let me tell you a little about myself. I'm an eBay Powerseller. I did about $100,000.00 in sales on eBay over the last year. I love eBay, and I regularly preach the virtues of eBay to my friends and family. I even gave out eBay...

Auction, Anywhere with Abidia. Gaining an edge over your competition.
Abidia provides tools to allow you to watch over your eBay auctions while you are not at your computer. If you are a buyer or a seller, this can give you the competitive edge over your competitors. Abidia's remarkable BidSync technology lets you...

eBay Listing Service : Make Managing Your Auctions Easy
Do you want to have a lot of auctions going but don't have time to keep track of them all? Trust me, you're not alone. With more and more people making significant portions - if not all - of their income from their eBay auction websites the need has...

Online auctions can be fun and lucrative
When the Internet became popular in the mid-1990s, one of the first things users realized was its business potential. If you can do business in a store or through a catalog, why not through a Web site? And soon online auctions were born. ...

How to Make Your eBay Auction Fail
There are a number of common errors that can cause your eBay auctions to end without bids. Here are seven of them. I don't know how many books there are by now that propose to tell you how to succeed on eBay, how to make lots of money on...

 
If You Want to Save Money, Reverse Online Auctions Are The Way to Go

By now everyone knows how eBay works. You list an item you're trying to sell, and buyers place bids on it. After a predetermined length of time (commonly seven days), the highest bidder "wins" and gets to pay that much money for the item. That's great for sellers, but what about buyers? Wouldn't it be better if sellers competed for a buyer's business, instead of the other way around? That's where reverse online auctions come in.

Reverse online auctions work in the opposite way from eBay-style auctions. A buyer lists the item he's looking for, and sellers compete for his business by offering their lowest possible prices. In effect, the buyer is playing hard-to-get. Rather than running to eBay and flinging himself at the seller -- "Please sell it to me! Look how much I'll pay for it!" -- the buyer plays it cool, letting the sellers come to him.

As a result, buyers in reverse online auctions usually pay less than people participating in regular auctions. A DVD that's only worth $12 might have its price driven up to $20 or more on eBay, due to buyers competing with each other for the right to buy it. With a reverse Internet auction, that price will stay low, because buyers aren't getting in each other's way, artificially driving up the price. Instead, the sellers are driving DOWN the price, because they want your business.

There are two ways of running an auction online: open and closed. In an open online auction, all the bidders know where they stand in the bidding, i.e., whether they've been outbid. In a closed auction, each bidder only knows his own bid. Therefore, he must put forth his very best offer at once, since he won't be able to make a better one in response to someone else's bid.

Sellers know that e-procurement -- where items are bought, paid for and sold over the Internet -- is more lucrative than traditional brick-and-mortar stores simply because there are fewer overhead costs. So it's in their best interest to attract new online customers, and they know one way to do that is to participate in reverse auctions on the Internet.

About the author:

Richard Verker has been writing business articles for 15 years. After studies in general economy and e-commerce, his work on online auctions make his articles top-rated by magazines and thousands of readers.