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Hub You - eBay: Business Opportunity - You Bet
Making the Choice Between Working for a Large Company or a Small Company are some others you have to pay:Often when looking for a job, there are opportunities to work for both small and large companies, both have their good points and bad points. Although there are no hard and fast rules that can be applied when the choice needs to be made, these guidelines may help. Especially if you have for example always worked for a small company and are looking to move to a large one or vice versa.Small companies - the good! Wide variety of workOften better than average pay increases, especially if the company is doing well eBay - listing fees and final value fees. These can be significant, particularly if you use some of eBay's selling tools, especially their image listing options. It depends on the per capita value of the item you're selling. PayPal - don't forget it costs you to receive money. About 5%, in fact. In context, an online trading account from a bank might set you back 2.5% to 3.5%. The difference is that with Paypal there are no setup costs. Again, this has to be balanced against your business turnover volume - there will be a point where PayPal is no longer cost-effective. Carriage: an often-forgotten cost. This must be factored in to ensure profit. Don't forget that carriage doesn't just cost the price of a stamp! Webhosts - do you have your own website? Are Telecom Companies You have probably read dozens of articles about how you can make shedloads of cash from eBay with little or no effort. I just hope that this article doesn't burst the bubble . . .In keeping up with the fast-changing telecommunication scenario, the global Telecom Companies are vying with each other to offer the best in terms of services to the consumer. Ultimately it is the consumer who is benefiting, in terms of receiving the latest easy-to-operate telecom services and devices. New features and facilities are being added to the existing services.These companies not only cater to corporate needs but also to the needs of individual customers whose communication requirements are limited. In fact, the customers can get benefits such as That eBay is a phenomenon is a fact few could deny. It is a child of its time and its originators were both fortunate and astute in starting their business at a period of intense expansion on the part of the internet. Since the advent of inexpensive broadband access the use of the internet has exploded - I myself spend several hours each day working the web - and this is the first year when online spending could overtake the high street. So - is eBay a viable business option? You bet it is. Having been part of a 'normal' business for over fifteen years I can say that, for those who may have little or no business experience, eBay is an absolute gift. Consider a few services that eBay provide: Integrated selling and payment (Paypal) tools. Massive exposure for the tiniest trader. Buyer and seller protection - to some degree anyway. Marketing tools that would cost serious money to develop yourself. Analysis tools that most accountants would sell their mother to get. So it should be easy for anyone to become a millionaire on eBay! Wrong. Business, as is said, is business. If you don't understand business, you will struggle to make it on eBay. I'm not talking about the 'original' eBay dream of a community selling their unwanted goods to like-minded individuals. That business model, though still extant, is of utterly no use to anyone wishing to run an eBay business. Anyone launching on this premise will rapidly grind to a halt as Aunt Agatha's attic rapidly empties out. So what's needed for success? Simple. Not easy, but simple. Any product-based business, wherever it is run, whatever its trading arena, relies on the flow of goods and cash through it to survive. If you cannot source goods to sell, the business fails. If you cannot get paid for your goods, the business fails. If you cannot sell your goods - the business fails. So how do you ensure the ongoing success of your eBay business? Firstly, you run it like - a business. How do you do this? Look at these points: Identify your chosen market. This can be done by searching eBay. What do you want to sell? To whom? Why? Obtain goods to supply your market. eBay or Google can be used as powerful tools for identifying possible suppliers. The internet has literally thousands of suppliers bursting to sell their goods to you. Supply your customers. Use eBay's auction, best-offer or buy-it-now tools to market your product. If you have done your homework correctly, you are off and running! It's all going so well, isn't it? Well, maybe. Do not forget some of the other aspects of running a real business. And these are? Let's start with customer service. To many people, this means 'complaints'. Rubbish. Customer service starts with the sale listing and means exactly what it says: giving your customer - the one who chooses to buy from your auction or eBay shop - the best service you can. Period. The Bottom Line: what's that? Simply put, that's the money left when you've paid everyone. Don't fool yourself by thinking you have only yourself to pay. These are some others you have to pay: eBay - listing fees and final value fees. These can be significant, particularly if you use some of eBay's selling tools, especially their image listing options. It depends on the per capita value of the item you're selling. PayPal - don't forget it costs you to receive money. About 5%, in fact. In context, an online trading account from a bank might set you back 2.5% to 3.5%. The difference is that with Paypal there are no setup costs. Again, this has to be balanced against your business turnover volume - there will be a point where PayPal is no longer cost-effective. Carriage: an often-forgotten cost. This must be factored in to ensure profit. Don't forget that carriage doesn't just cost the price of a stamp! Webhosts - do you have your own website? Are Small Business Success - It's a Matter of Confidence eBay is an absolute gift. Consider a few services that eBay provide:I was floored! I couldn’t believe what they were saying! But there they sat -- three of the biggest film stars of our age -- telling the world they had issues with confidence. I was watching an interview where Meryl Streep, Nicole Kidman and Julianne Moore were talking with Oprah Winfrey. Their conversation gave me a lot to think about in regard to small business success.It started with Meryl making a comment about a movie she’d starred in. Her joke was about the fact that she actually quit the movie before it began filming and then ended up following throu Integrated selling and payment (Paypal) tools. Massive exposure for the tiniest trader. Buyer and seller protection - to some degree anyway. Marketing tools that would cost serious money to develop yourself. Analysis tools that most accountants would sell their mother to get. So it should be easy for anyone to become a millionaire on eBay! Wrong. Business, as is said, is business. If you don't understand business, you will struggle to make it on eBay. I'm not talking about the 'original' eBay dream of a community selling their unwanted goods to like-minded individuals. That business model, though still extant, is of utterly no use to anyone wishing to run an eBay business. Anyone launching on this premise will rapidly grind to a halt as Aunt Agatha's attic rapidly empties out. So what's needed for success? Simple. Not easy, but simple. Any product-based business, wherever it is run, whatever its trading arena, relies on the flow of goods and cash through it to survive. If you cannot source goods to sell, the business fails. If you cannot get paid for your goods, the business fails. If you cannot sell your goods - the business fails. So how do you ensure the ongoing success of your eBay business? Firstly, you run it like - a business. How do you do this? Look at these points: Identify your chosen market. This can be done by searching eBay. What do you want to sell? To whom? Why? Obtain goods to supply your market. eBay or Google can be used as powerful tools for identifying possible suppliers. The internet has literally thousands of suppliers bursting to sell their goods to you. Supply your customers. Use eBay's auction, best-offer or buy-it-now tools to market your product. If you have done your homework correctly, you are off and running! It's all going so well, isn't it? Well, maybe. Do not forget some of the other aspects of running a real business. And these are? Let's start with customer service. To many people, this means 'complaints'. Rubbish. Customer service starts with the sale listing and means exactly what it says: giving your customer - the one who chooses to buy from your auction or eBay shop - the best service you can. Period. The Bottom Line: what's that? Simply put, that's the money left when you've paid everyone. Don't fool yourself by thinking you have only yourself to pay. These are some others you have to pay: eBay - listing fees and final value fees. These can be significant, particularly if you use some of eBay's selling tools, especially their image listing options. It depends on the per capita value of the item you're selling. PayPal - don't forget it costs you to receive money. About 5%, in fact. In context, an online trading account from a bank might set you back 2.5% to 3.5%. The difference is that with Paypal there are no setup costs. Again, this has to be balanced against your business turnover volume - there will be a point where PayPal is no longer cost-effective. Carriage: an often-forgotten cost. This must be factored in to ensure profit. Don't forget that carriage doesn't just cost the price of a stamp! Webhosts - do you have your own website? Are Increase Your Sales By Following-Up rind to a halt as Aunt Agatha's attic rapidly empties out. So what's needed for success?The difference between a successful business and one that just gets by is that the business that is just getting by thinks that the marketing is over when the sale has been made.One of the main reasons customers leave, change suppliers, or stop buying is because of apathy on the part of the company. There is never any follow-up after the sale. Customers often feel neglected. They feel that the company doesn’t appreciate their business so they will give it to another company that does.In order for your business to maximize its profits, you have to rea Simple. Not easy, but simple. Any product-based business, wherever it is run, whatever its trading arena, relies on the flow of goods and cash through it to survive. If you cannot source goods to sell, the business fails. If you cannot get paid for your goods, the business fails. If you cannot sell your goods - the business fails. So how do you ensure the ongoing success of your eBay business? Firstly, you run it like - a business. How do you do this? Look at these points: Identify your chosen market. This can be done by searching eBay. What do you want to sell? To whom? Why? Obtain goods to supply your market. eBay or Google can be used as powerful tools for identifying possible suppliers. The internet has literally thousands of suppliers bursting to sell their goods to you. Supply your customers. Use eBay's auction, best-offer or buy-it-now tools to market your product. If you have done your homework correctly, you are off and running! It's all going so well, isn't it? Well, maybe. Do not forget some of the other aspects of running a real business. And these are? Let's start with customer service. To many people, this means 'complaints'. Rubbish. Customer service starts with the sale listing and means exactly what it says: giving your customer - the one who chooses to buy from your auction or eBay shop - the best service you can. Period. The Bottom Line: what's that? Simply put, that's the money left when you've paid everyone. Don't fool yourself by thinking you have only yourself to pay. These are some others you have to pay: eBay - listing fees and final value fees. These can be significant, particularly if you use some of eBay's selling tools, especially their image listing options. It depends on the per capita value of the item you're selling. PayPal - don't forget it costs you to receive money. About 5%, in fact. In context, an online trading account from a bank might set you back 2.5% to 3.5%. The difference is that with Paypal there are no setup costs. Again, this has to be balanced against your business turnover volume - there will be a point where PayPal is no longer cost-effective. Carriage: an often-forgotten cost. This must be factored in to ensure profit. Don't forget that carriage doesn't just cost the price of a stamp! Webhosts - do you have your own website? Are Building Your Infrastructure to Sustain Your Service Strategy literally thousands of suppliers bursting to sell their goods to you. Supply your customers. Use eBay's auction, best-offer or buy-it-now tools to market your product. If you have done your homework correctly, you are off and running!Ever wonder why so many customer service strategies are either short-lived or fail before they even get started? I mean think about it: how many companies do you patronize where you consistently (the operative word here is “consistently") receive a positive and memorable buying experience?The type of buying experience that you’ll remember and influences you to return to that company. So how many companies did you come up with?Two points I’d like to make here:1) I bet it took you awhile before a particular company came to mind. I doubt very m It's all going so well, isn't it? Well, maybe. Do not forget some of the other aspects of running a real business. And these are? Let's start with customer service. To many people, this means 'complaints'. Rubbish. Customer service starts with the sale listing and means exactly what it says: giving your customer - the one who chooses to buy from your auction or eBay shop - the best service you can. Period. The Bottom Line: what's that? Simply put, that's the money left when you've paid everyone. Don't fool yourself by thinking you have only yourself to pay. These are some others you have to pay: eBay - listing fees and final value fees. These can be significant, particularly if you use some of eBay's selling tools, especially their image listing options. It depends on the per capita value of the item you're selling. PayPal - don't forget it costs you to receive money. About 5%, in fact. In context, an online trading account from a bank might set you back 2.5% to 3.5%. The difference is that with Paypal there are no setup costs. Again, this has to be balanced against your business turnover volume - there will be a point where PayPal is no longer cost-effective. Carriage: an often-forgotten cost. This must be factored in to ensure profit. Don't forget that carriage doesn't just cost the price of a stamp! Webhosts - do you have your own website? Are Power Pricing - Getting the Right Price for Your Products and Services are some others you have to pay:There's an old joke about the New York City blackout. Power was out everywhere, and the electric company couldn't figure out what was wrong or how to fix it. Finally, they decided that the only one who could solve the problem was a long-retired worker who knew the system inside and out. He came out to the power plant, looked around, picked up a hammer and tapped one of the generators.Suddenly, lights came on all through the area. Overwhelmed with relief that the problem was solved, they asked how much they owed him. "$20,000," he replied. $20,000? For tappi eBay - listing fees and final value fees. These can be significant, particularly if you use some of eBay's selling tools, especially their image listing options. It depends on the per capita value of the item you're selling. PayPal - don't forget it costs you to receive money. About 5%, in fact. In context, an online trading account from a bank might set you back 2.5% to 3.5%. The difference is that with Paypal there are no setup costs. Again, this has to be balanced against your business turnover volume - there will be a point where PayPal is no longer cost-effective. Carriage: an often-forgotten cost. This must be factored in to ensure profit. Don't forget that carriage doesn't just cost the price of a stamp! Webhosts - do you have your own website? Are you getting the best deal? To conclude this (far from comprehensive) article, I would summarise an eBay business as being a great opportunity for those who have limited funds. The entry-level cost is so low that almost anyone can build a business. Maybe you will have to start small - a lot of businesses do - but with perseverance and a real will to succeed you can definitely have your own viable eBay business - and the sky's the limit!
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