Dropshipping with Ebay Work from Home
by Joe Richey

Published on this site: April 10th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

How Dropshipping works with eBay By Joe Richey SwapSellTrade.Com
Dropshipping is a term used in reference to a type of retail
sales, where the retailer does not keep goods for sale in
stock. The retailer is in charge of passing the customer's
order with their shipment details to a wholesaler, dropshipper
or third party provider, who dispatches the goods requested
by the customer directly.
Retailers using this sales model make their profit on the
difference between the wholesale and the retail prices handled.
Because the goods are not in stock, many retailers have purchased
some of those items to be displayed at their
land-based stores, allowing their customers to inspect the
items, which are similar to those that they can purchase by
placing an order.
Many retailers can receive from wholesalers and dropshippers
different catalogs to increase the number of goods on sale
without actually investing in any of those items, although
some catalogs are not for free, but always cheaper than buying
merchandise to display for customers. Dropshipping on the
Internet is a virtual matter involving digital images of goods
a retailer is selling.
On the Internet, retailers can upload the description of the
goods for sale along with pictures and other information.
This is made through the retailers' personal or commercial
website, or listing the products at an auction site, such
as eBay, where the potential buyers are waiting to bid.
Because dropshipping, is a method of selling and distributing
goods that the retailer does not have in stock, the listings
usually include pictures and information that are available
to sales catalogs.
Manufacturers of goods and distributors are not one in the
same. Hence, dropshippers are distributors that just receive
the order from the retailer and send the items directly to
the end user on the retailer's behalf. Therefore, dropshipping
involves 3 persons in the selling process: the dropshipper,
the retailer and the end user, usually targeted at auction
sites.
eBay Inc. (NASDAQ: EBAY) is a successful online auction and
shopping website, founded in September 1995, where people
from all around the world buy and sell goods and services.
Ebay is the leading online marketplace for selling physical
and virtual goods, services and second-hand products, and
collectibles from a diverse community of both businesses and
individuals.
It is estimated that the eBay community is comprised of around
46.1 million registered users in different countries, speaking
different tongues, eBay is the most popular shopping site
on the web, thus the most frequently associated with dropshipping
activities because of the nature of the Internet.
Online it is not necessary to have a stock of physical goods
for sale, and many items sold are digital goods, easily processed
without needing to be on stock.
Retailers at eBay usually sell small quantities of their products
to other users registered at eBay's website. Whether physical
or digital, sometimes those goods are also available through
a land-based store or listed at personal web pages or e-commerce
sites owned by retailers.
Dropshipping is a common practice that occurs when retailers
receive a single large order for a product, and rather than
route the shipment of those goods through their store, the
retailers arrange for the goods to be shipped directly from
the wholesaler (the dropshipper) to the purchaser.
eBay retailers sell millions of collectibles, equipment, furniture,
computers, appliances, vehicles, and many other miscellaneous
items, which are listed, sold and bought everyday.
Because there is no limit to the number of listed items at
eBay, a retailer can list a single book and make available
50 units. These units are not in the seller's stock, but available
to be delivered in any quantity to the final end user after
arranging for the delivery with the dropshipper to the final
user.
Dropshippers are wholesalers, whether individuals or companies,
selling large quantities of goods and merchandise to commercial,
industrial, institutional, or other professional business
users, or individuals acting as agents or brokers in buying
or selling merchandise for others. Thus, it is more likely
that goods
listed by a retailer can be purchased from them at any time,
while in stock.
At eBay, dropshipping works as long as retailer can purchase
the goods on sale from the wholesalers. However, there are
rare and valuable items that can hardly be found as unique
items. If an end user wants to buy one of those rare goods,
he/she must be aware if the retailers are listing a large
number of them,
because users will be purchasing all items with the risk of
fraud. If they have, more than one of these rare items for
sale, then how rare is the item.
Although, almost anything can be sold at eBay, the listed
goods must not be illegal nor violate the internal prohibited
and restricted policy. Listing fraudulent items or those misleading
the buyer is absolutely forbidden. From physical and digital
goods to services and intangibles, eBay is the super trampoline
for retailer sales.
Dropshippers and retailers work hand in hand to sell at eBay.
Retailers are only know as sellers, who usually bid on an
item marked as new, with the goal in mind to ship the item
directly from the dropshipper to the highest bidder. The seller's
profits come from the difference between the winning bid and
the wholesale price offered by the dropshipper, minus the
selling fees from eBay.
In another modality or dropshipping practice, a retailer can
use private freight carriers to transport large volume of
goods. These items are delivered from the manufacturer directly
to a postal office closer to the location where the end
recipients live, instead of deliver the selling orders directly
to the dropshipper, with the purpose to save time and postal
costs.
Whichever the modality, eBay has been involved in controversy,
ranging from such dropshipping activities to privacy policy
violations, and the well-known seller fraud. However, eBay
has provided information showing that only less than .01%
of all the site's transactions result in a confirmed case
of fraud.
In some of them, eBays argues that some of those complaints
are related to end users discovering that they have purchased
an item from a wholesaler and not from a retailer, filling
a claim because of the difference of prices, or due to a very
few other deceptive practices.
Dropshippers offer wholesaler prices indeed, but retailers
do not. The difference between a wholesaler price and the
eBay's listing price is the retailer's profit. This cannot
be considered defrauding the users, however they are just
lying a
little bit when they say they have the goods in stock that
they actually do not have, and do not send from their own
location.
Genuine wholesale prices are never shown to the public by
resellers, but can be found if the end user has seen the item
elsewhere and investigate. The best way to determine if drop
shippers are legitimate wholesale suppliers is by paying
attention to their tax identification number, which is required
within the dealer application. Otherwise, established dropshippers
with wholesaler activities require either a Social Security
number or a Federal Tax ID (EIN).
Furthermore, authentic dropshippers will never require membership
fees to access their services, so they will never offer full
or partial refunds after a certain number of inventory purchases
are made. Manufacturers, wholesalers,
dropshippers, retailers and sellers are often mistakenly confused
because of their selling activity, but all of them use different
practices aimed at different clientele.
Depending on the management, dropshipping profits can be immense
for retailers, but as sellers, retailers have to rely on the
professionalism and goodwill of the dropshipper, particularly
when all the deals and businesses with them are
made via the Internet. On this basis, there is always a risk
to get a wrong item supplying a faulty product, or when the
dropshipper downright sends an incorrect one.
At eBay, the seller's reputation is affected for the good
or bad dropshipping practices, because to the end buyer it
does not make a difference whether the seller is a retailer
or not. Buyers want to receive the goods that they paid for,
and they want to receive exactly what is listed, and not
a
similar product with the excuse of that the original is "out
of stock".
Due to a fraud prevention mechanism implemented by eBay, users
have a feedback system where they can submit their experiences
after purchasing any merchandise, reflecting their un-satisfaction
if their expectations were not fulfilled. As bidirectional
feature, both the sellers and the buyers can submit feedback
and rate one other.
The rating system is only available after every transaction
is made. Buyers and sellers get a "positive", "negative"
or "neutral" rating. They can leave a short comment
or remark regarding a particular bid, for instance, when
a
buyer receives
from a dropshipper a product, which is not exactly that, was
listed by the retailer.
When buyers have problems with sellers or when they do not
receive the goods listed, buyers can rate sellers negatively,
usually leaving a comment to harm the sellers' reputation
or to warn other users about their bad experience, and even
submit a claim for fraud. The importance of the rating system
at eBay is based on the fact that buyers can examine a seller's
feedback history.
In fact, new users are always encouraged to verify the seller's
history as a buyers' protection practice. eBay's feedback
system protects buyers and sellers, who can also reject a
bid when a feedback rating is not enough for the seller's
expectations.
Another problem when a seller is involved in dropshipping
activities is that there is always a risk of getting dropshippers
that already have too many sellers using their services. This
can be discouraging, because the dreams of exceptional profits
disappear when a considerable number of eBay's users, are
selling the same goods and seeking the same opportunities
to capitalize on below-retail prices offered by the dropshipper.
If the competition is high, the prices go down, reducing the
planned profit margins, and the lower the profits and the
less affordable the dropshipping activity. However, knowing
the basics about dropshipping, many users feel attracted to
becoming sellers and develop a retailer activity using the
services of one or more dropshippers.
If you are considering this possibility, before doing anything,
choose a product to sell. Deciding on a product is the first
step towards any selling process. Many people fail at this
point because the belief that using the services of a dropshipper,
the items to sell are irrelevant, due to the fact that all
items will be available at the wholesaler's stock instead
of you own.
Although there are many factors to take into consideration
when it comes to selecting your first dropshipping product,
most retailers focus their attention on postal savings, selecting
books, CD's or other easy to carry merchandise, while others
consider small items can cut costs, but there are usually
more competitors selling the same items.
Dropshipping can deliver to your customers from a needle to
elaborated pieces of furniture, so think carefully when choosing
a product.
Once you have determined what you want to sell, locate the
distributor who will be in charge of dropshipping the merchandise
for you to the end users. This is easily achieved by doing
a research using Google or any other of the major
search engines. However, there are special eBay Dropshipping
tools created to help you find dropshippers in your area,
nationwide or worldwide.

Joe Richey Online Wholesale Master Agent Since 2001 See
our dedicated site for dropshipping tools http://www.ultimatedropshipsecrets.com


|