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Posts Tagged ‘ebay’

Online tools for the eBay seller

Monday, August 10th, 2009

After Amazon experienced some difficulties last week with its selling options in the Amazon Marketplace, it made me wonder if anyone decided to start selling some of their merchandise on eBay. If so, they would join thousands of others who are using the online auction site to make a few extra bucks. If that’s your goal, check out some of these services for eBay sellers.

eBay tools

Auctiva Auctiva is a full-featured product that allows you to use a variety of templates and modules to help you sell products more effectively on eBay.

Auctiva is quite powerful. You can create side-scrolling galleries with pictures you upload to the site (you’re allowed 1GB of storage), change the color of your listing page, and issue invoices. It won’t help you determine if you’re selling products that eBay users want, but it will help you easily manage your auctions. Admittedly, Auctiva is for active sellers, but at $9.95 per month for so many nice features, it’s an affordable offering.

Auctiva

Auctiva helps you add inventory and track it on the site.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

eBay Market Researcher Terapeek’s eBay Market Researcher tool is a fine way to determine how to get the most out of your listing.

After you sign up for the site and choose a membership (it costs $24.95 per month or $197.95 per year), you can immediately start searching through the app’s listings of eBay products. When you find the product you’re looking to sell, it provides you with information on the item’s average bid, how much the average listing makes, and how page design affected profits. The app even provides you with information on which day is best to list the product and end your auction. It’s a powerful tool.

eBay Market Researcher

eBay Market Researcher provides you with a variety of research tools.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

HammerTap HammerTap is another eBay market research tool that provides basic information, like the number of active item’s listings, how many times a product has sold, and the average sales price of those auctions. One of the app’s nicest features is its “will it sell?” offering, which displays a scale, showing the percentage chance of the product selling on eBay.

HammerTap is a useful tool, but beware that it costs $19.95 per month after a 10-day free trial.

HammerTap

HammerTap features the number of listings and the keywords matching your query.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

ListingTicker ListingTicker is a simple tool that helps you post all your listings on your blog or Web site. The site asks you to input your eBay user ID. It then creates a widget to be placed on your site. It shows all your auctions that will be ending soon. It also provides your site’s visitors with a search box in case they want to find something else.

ListingTicker

ListingTicker will show all your recent listings.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Photoblat Photoblat is a neat utility if you want to save some money on adding photos to your eBay listings. The site allows you to upload photos to the service. From there, you can add those photos to your eBay listings page through tools like eBay’s Blackthorne Pro. All the photos are hosted on the Photoblat site. Photoblat charges $3.99 per month for access to its service.

Photoblat

Photoblat allows you to upload images in no time.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Selling Manager eBay’s Selling Manager app is installed into the My eBay section of a seller’s listing page. The app allows you to manage all your listings in one place. You can also create customized e-mail templates to send to buyers who won your auction. If the buyer doesn’t pay, it automatically relists your item. If you want all these options, you’ll be forced to pay $15.99 per month. The free version of the Web-based app will let you create a professional listing and edit your listings in bulk.

Selling Manager

Selling Manager lets you relist items quickly.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Toolhaus Toolhaus is a service that allows you to see the reliability of an eBay user. It lists all the feedback the user has received, including both positive and negative reviews. It’s not the most useful app in this roundup, since it basically lists information you’ll find on eBay, but it does come in handy when you want to quickly determine if you can trust users.

Toolhaus

Toolhaus displays how users view you.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Vendio Vendio is an online shopping platform. If you want to sell products on your site, it will help you out. But Vendio’s real value is in its marketplace tools that help you improve your listings on eBay.

Vendio’s listing-creation tool lets you display images, set up promotions, and track all the items that were sold on eBay. The site also tracks customers, displaying their name, the last time they purchased products from you, when they bought those products, and more. Vendio is free to use, but it takes up to 1.95 percent of your sales that are generated through the service.

Vendio

Vendio lets you create a store in no time.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

My top 3

1. Auctiva: with so many options and a relatively affordable price, Auctiva takes the top spot.

2. Vendio: Vendio has some offerings that should appeal to you.

3. ListingTicker: having the option of listing all your eBay auctions is quite convenient.

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Online tools for the eBay seller

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Skype May Soon Be a Casualty of Licensing War

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

skype_logo.png Skype fans, we have something to tell you and you’re not gonna to like it: your Internet telephony service of choice may soon be defunct.

Why would a platform with twice the number of Facebook users (480 million and counting) go kaput, you ask? Well, because along the way a lot of lame stuff happened, and now eBay is being sued for breaching the licensing agreement for the peer-to-peer technology at the heart of Skype, which was not included when the auction king bought it back in 2005.

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Skype May Soon Be a Casualty of Licensing War

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eBay-backed community site Tokoni leaves beta

Monday, October 6th, 2008

Tokoni, a community site for “sharing stories,” has formally launched after nearly a year of public beta. It has taken investment backing from eBay as well as the auction giant’s founder, Pierre Omidyar, and was founded by former eBay executive Mary Lou Song and Alex Kazim, former president of the eBay-owned Skype. Kazim serves as Tokoni’s CEO.

“We created Tokoni to fill the distinct need for an online community where individual stories of life’s experiences have a voice and are valued, and where the collective wisdom of the community is celebrated,” Kazim said in a release. “The growth of social media has enabled people to control how they create, consume, and share content and personal experiences online; however, participation in the social Web is still daunting to the mainstream. Tokoni makes sharing your own story easy.”

Indeed, as an adult-focused “community” site rather than a social network, Tokoni’s target audience is one that hasn’t caught on to the blogging and Twittering craze, and offers a more Luddite-friendly forum for conversation by encouraging the posting, reading, and discussing of personal stories and experiences. Another site with a similar slant is Gather.

With the U.S. presidential election approaching, Tokoni (which means “help” in Tongan) has partnered with WomenCount.org to provide a forum for women to discuss political issues.

eBay-backed community site Tokoni leaves beta

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Weekly Wrapup: Nokia’s iPhone Competitor, Netflix API, RDF Apps, and More

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

It’s time for our weekly summary of Web Technology news, products and trends. This week Nokia launched an iPhone competitor called the Tube, Netflix released an API, Google Blog Search re-designed, and we ran a poll about Flash coming to iPhone. On the trends side, we investigated the lack of commercial RDF apps in the Semantic Web, reviewed 5 insightful science books, launched our ‘Gritty Entrepreneurs’ series, and interviewed a co-founder of last.fm. We also brought you the latest from our new Enterprise Channel.

Web Products

Nokia Reveals iPhone Competitor And Goes to Battle With iTunes

At an analyst and media event in London this week, Nokia unveiled their company’s first touch-screen phone, the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic, otherwise known as the Nokia “Tube,” a device designed to compete directly with Apple’s iPhone. Along with the phone, Nokia also detailed plans for their new “Comes With Music” service, a 12-month subscription service which offers unlimited downloads. There’s no charge to download the individual tracks because the cost for the music is bundled into the cost of the phone.

Netflix API Launches – Here’s What it Will and Won’t Include

netflixlogo.jpgThe much-awaited Application Programming Interface (API) for movie site Netflix launched this week. It looks pretty good, but there are some major limitations, too. Millions of people love movies via Netflix, making this API an opportunity for all kinds of developers to add well-known value to any other application.

See also: Evernote Hits a Homerun With API, Data Portability

Google Blogsearch Relaunches as Techmeme Killer, Across 11 Categories

Gblogsearchlogo-1.jpgIn its first major upgrade ever, Google Blogsearch relaunched and looks radically different. Instead of the blank page look of Google.com, Blogsearch now looks like Google News (but uglier) – with the hottest topics from the blogosphere aggregated on the front page. Readers can drill down in 11 different categories, from technology, business, sports and entertainment. Google says you can use Blogsearch to see what the world is talking about.

RWW Predictions: Will eBay Sell StumbleUpon?

Last week rumors were swirling that eBay was looking to sell StumbleUpon. eBay purchased StumbleUpon in early 2007 for a bargain price of $75 million. We’ve still yet to have these rumors confirmed, but what if eBay were to actually sell StumbleUpon? We ran a prediction challenge this week asking whether eBay will sell the service by the end of this year and if so, the price tag that it might fetch. Here are the results:

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Poll: Adobe Confirms Flash For iPhone – Do You Care?

At the Flash on the Beach 08 conference being held in Brighton, England, Adobe’s Senior Director of Engineering, Paul Betlem, confirmed that a Flash Player is in development for the iPhone. The information was provided in answer to a direct question from an audience member during the Town Hall meeting sessions held during the conference. Also check out our poll on the topic:

Does iPhone’s Lack of Flash Bother You?

SEE MORE WEB PRODUCTS COVERAGE IN OUR PRODUCTS CATEGORY

A Word from Our Sponsors

We’d like to thank ReadWriteWeb’s sponsors, without whom we couldn’t bring you all these stories every week!

Web Trends

Where Are All The RDF-based Semantic Web Apps?

RDF is the cornerstone of The Semantic Web, yet there still very few commercial RDF apps.

In the latest issue of Nodalities, a magazine about the Semantic Web by UK company Talis, there is an article by Talis CTO Ian Davis about the state of Semantic Web applications. Davis says that we’re still in “Generation Zero” of the Semantic Web, because there are relatively few compelling apps. Specifically he notes that “there are still only a handful of applications that incorporate RDF at their heart and none of these are using the full potential of the Semantic Web.” RDF is the Semantic Web’s equivalent of the Web’s HTML – its chief characteristic is the ability to ascribe meaning to data. We investigate…

See also: Swirrl: Newly Launched Semantic Web Wiki

Web 2.0 Gritty Entrepreneurs

When the going gets tough, the tough get going. Times are now tougher. Which makes most people head home. The half-hearted entrepreneurs, the wannabes who thought it was going to be easy, the folks with connections to VCs who could get a $5m Series A for a copycat app. Who will be left? The gritty entrepreneur of the old school who knows that it is really, really tough to build a great company. At ReadWriteWeb we celebrate these gritty entrepreneurs and in a series that kicked off this week we will be writing about them – and for them.

See also: Gritty Entrepreneurs: Jigsaw, a Profitable Web 2.0 Venture

Interview With Last.fm Founder Richard Jones

This week we interviewed one of the founders of online music service last.fm, Richard “Mr Scrobble” Jones. We wanted to find out last.fm’s reaction to the launch of MySpace Music and the rise of Imeem, discuss business models in online music, and find out what’s new at last.fm. We ran the interview in 3 parts, over 3 days. Part 1 discusses the increasing competition in online music this year. See also Part 2, on business models and Part 3, on design and features.

5 Great Science Books to Expand Your Mind

From the dynamics of social networks to market bubbles, science has a lot to say about
the world of technology.

One of the great discoveries of modern science was the realization of
how interconnected the world is. The deterministic, Newtonian view of
a clockwork Universe was replaced by the much more dynamic, uncertain and entangled
world of Quantum Mechanics. The new world is the one where Godel forever cut hopes for
completeness in mathematics and Turing showed that computation, like the future, is
fundamentally unpredictable. Despite these unexpected setbacks, modern science
is wonderful, powerful and thought provoking – and relevant to technologists.

SEE MORE WEB TRENDS COVERAGE IN OUR TRENDS CATEGORY

RWW Enterprise Channel

Mumboe Uses Semantics To Pull Key Data From Contracts

Mumboe isn’t just another enterprise collaboration suite. Instead, they focus on doing one thing and doing it well: making business agreements searchable. That’s a very unique need they fill, which is why is why they already have 3000 customers using their free Express solution after only having launched earlier this spring.

To compete with the handful of other vendors in this narrow space, Mumboe has now added a new feature called On-Demand Contract Intelligence, which takes advantage of the service’s semantic processing engine to deliver something the others don’t: automatic extraction of data.

Email us if you’re interested in writing for ReadWriteWeb’s Enterprise Channel.

SEE MORE ENTERPRISE COVERAGE IN OUR ENTERPRISE CHANNEL

That’s a wrap for another week! Enjoy your weekend everyone.

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Weekly Wrapup: Nokia’s iPhone Competitor, Netflix API, RDF Apps, and More

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eBay’s iPhone app now out of the box

Thursday, July 10th, 2008
eBay for iPhone now out of the box(Credit: eBay)

When the native eBay app for iPhone was demoed at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco in June, Webware.com Editor Josh Lowensohn commended it for its slickness, storage capacity, and winning looks. The application is indeed easy on the eye and similar in look and feel to eBay Desktop that runs on Windows, Mac, and Linux on the AIR platform. At least the home screen is.

After that, the application might as well be considered eBay Light. You can quickly take in an overview of your personal stats on the home screen to see how many items you’re watching, winning, outbidding, and so on. Drilling deeper takes you to the My eBay screen, which is tabbed to show greater detail about the items you’re watching, buying, and selling. There’s also a separate search screen for browsing and reading listings descriptions.

eBay for iPhone demo(Credit: eBay)

However, unlike the eBay Desktop and eBay.com, eBay’s iPhone app has been stripped of browsing categories and ways for sellers to add or amend input on auction items. This app is strictly for bidding and viewing purposes.

And that’s too bad. While limiting the onscreen activities admittedly keeps the application from paralyzing users with choice, it also keeps it from being as useful as it could be. Imagine wanting to add another photo of your sale piece directly from your iPhone, or want to lower the price of a not-so-hot item while waiting to board a plane? And here’s a crazy thought–why not clip in to that GPS capability to show users any listed sale items nearby, an estate sale in the neighborhood, for instance?

While the app definitely has its uses as a tracking and bidding tool, I really had expected more iPhone integration from eBay, and at the very least, the visually appealing wrapper from the home screen to carry over into the other views.

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eBay’s iPhone app now out of the box

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