HOWTO: Roll your own #twebay
Having sold individual things sporadically via Twitter (usually after mentioning I was about to put them on eBay) and finding myself needing to raise funds for a rather magnificent Sony Vaio P series, I thought it was about time I developed a system. Enter #twebay.
(I hate the elision of ‘Twitter’ and ‘eBay’ as much as you, but it’s a convenient hypocrisy…)
Here’s what I did:
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Set up and published a Google Doc and passed it through Bit.ly Pro to get http://dajb.eu/twebay. This includes my details (including avatar and photo), a rationale for selling, and details of the items.
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Configured and tested a Google Form (via Google Docs) to collect information from those interested. I figured the important information was the person’s name, email address, bid amount and a box for any other details they wanted to give me.
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Publicised it and asked for retweets.
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Checked the spreadsheet attached to the Google Form at regular intervals and replied to those making bids.
I managed to sell 3 items within an hour with an additional one that I’d forgotten later in the week. These were all to people who I’ve known a while on Twitter but I’ve never met in person.
The advantages of this method?
- No eBay/Paypal fees
- Buyer knows it’s going to a good home, seller knows where it’s come from
- Time spent listing items for sale is massively reduced
Possible drawbacks?
- You need a fair number of followers to gain traction/interest
- There’s no formal feedback system
- There’s potential to damage existing relationships when money becomes involved