Jump to content

Menu

"sniping" on ebay


Vida Winter
 Share

Recommended Posts

Isabella, on 25 Jan 2015 - 6:41 PM, said:

I've done it when I used to buy on eBay a few years ago on something I've really wanted, but I never used a program....just hung around and entered last second bids.

and it needs to be the absolute most you're willing to pay.  If I want something really bad - I'll put in a bid  in just the last few seconds.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here's an article on sniping... I'm pasting the last paragraph below. Apparently it is legit. I've never done it before, though, and don't think I would. I usually just enter my max bid towards the end of the auction. If someone else is willing to pay more than I can or will pay for an item, I'm just not going to win it. :)

 

 

At the end of the day, only you can decide whether sniping is right for you.

On the one hand, sniping can put your personal data at risk to a degree that largely depends on your own personal data protection habits, and may not help you to win or even help you to lose auctions in which your competitors are eBay shopping veterans.

On the other hand, major sniping sites are less risky than lesser-known services (though they’re all more risky by definition than simply not giving out your login information to begin with), and sniping can in many situations help you against bidders that don’t know how to make the most of eBay’s proxy bidding system.

Finally, it remains true that eBay’s strategy going forward appears to be to tip the balance ever farther toward fixed-price listings and away from auction format listings. Sniping can’t help you there at all.

Perhaps the best way to decide if sniping is right for you is to try it out as you shop on eBay and see if it improves your results. You can’t argue with success—provided you’re willing to take the associated risk.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

sniping annoys the heck out of me!  Our local auction site auto extends the auction if there is another bid in the last two minutes, so if you bid, the auction end time is 2 min after your bid.  If I then bid, the auction end time is 2 min after my bid, and so on.  It leads to some awesome last minute bidding battles sometimes, lol!

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wouldn't even consider it except that I've been "sniped" a few times now and it's getting old. It *is* annoying. I'll give proxy bidding a try though - maybe no one else even wants this particular item - no bidders yet. What usually happens is that there is a flurry of activity in the last minute and I lose out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jbidwatcher is good for Mac. The good thing about bid snipers in my opinion is a way for those who have addictive personalities to use Ebay. A family member of mine used to have a lot of trouble with getting sucked into last-minute bidding (and overspending due to the pressures of the moment) to an insane degree before using a bidwatcher restored reasonableness to the process. 

 

eta: Jbidwatcher is an app you actually install on your computer. So I think it's a better choice security-wise than online options. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I use the FREE Gixen sniping service. It would be impossible for me to place bids in the last few seconds as they do for me.

 

Note: With Gixen or any other sniping service, you must be willing to give them your eBay user name and password, so their servers can log into your account and place bids for you.

 

Read all of the information on their home page, the fine print and some of the forum posts and I think you will find that it is quite serious and OK.

 

They delete your bid information a day or two after the auction ends.

 

There is no way I would bid manually.

 

NOTE: If you use the eBay automatic bidding, you will end up paying more for the item, because it drives the prices up. Excellent for Sellers, but bad for bidders.

 

ETA: You enter the maximum amount you are willing to pay for the item. If all goes well, you will be the Winner of the auction, for less than your maximum bid amount. If someone else has outbid you, you will not be the Winner.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 I usually just enter my max bid towards the end of the auction. If someone else is willing to pay more than I can or will pay for an item, I'm just not going to win it. :)

 

I just enter my max bid - period.  It might be the first day something is listed or the last.  I have no desire to get involved with bidding wars.  I figure out how much I'm willing to pay and put that down.  If I get it for that (or less), I'm happy.  If not, someone wanted it more than I did and I'm ok with that.

 

I've never found a difference in what I actually pay based upon when I enter my max bid, and my max bid does not always get maxed out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I use esnipe and I consistently come in at 20% below my max bid. (I went back and looked at old bids to see.) These are items sometimes with heavy competition, so they assuredly would have gone higher if they had known my bid. If you're not sniping, you're paying too much.  Remember, with esnipe you only pay the fee *if you win*.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I didn't know there was a name for it or places that do it for you, but after being outbid at the last few seconds several times, I've started not bidding until the last few seconds myself. I put in my max bid, but rarely have to pay anywhere near it because there hasn't been a bidding war driving up the price.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This morning I saw something on eBay that I want to bid on. The auction will end on Sunday morning. I can't get more $ into my PayPal account that quickly.  I will use the FREE Gixen.com sniping service, because their servers will place my bid on eBay, during the last 3 (or 6?) seconds of the auction.  I will not indicate my interest by adding the item to my "watch list", because that would also reduce the possibility that I can win.  Keeping a very low profile is how successful winners win auction items for less.  The Sellers and eBay would prefer that bidders use the eBay automatic bidding system, but that makes everything public and just increases the selling price because people get into bidding wars. Great for the sellers and for eBay, but bad for the Buyers.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...