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AUCTION MANAGEMENT FIRM:
Garry Heath of Dealtree says iPods are big sellers this
year. |
eBay
sellers see green
Increase in online shopping for the holiday
season keeps part-timers, companies busy meeting demand.
Saturday, December 24, 2005
By JAN NORMAN
The Orange County Register |
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It's the day before Christmas and all through
Bill Moore's Irvine house, not an eBay brand Priority Mail box
is stirring. It's still as a mouse. Finally.
Online sales pick up the week of Thanksgiving and don't ease off
until a few days before Christmas, Moore says. Then the pace
slows because most shoppers are unwilling to pay for next-day
delivery to get their gifts to their destination before Dec. 25,
he says.
The year-end hecticness has grown since Moore began selling
electronics and toys on the eBay auction Web site in 2002. In
December 2004, his sales increased 30 percent from the previous
December. This year his sales were up 60 percent by mid-month –
and he's just one of thousands of online retailers who are
experiencing brisk sales.
American consumers are projected to spend $19.6 billion
(excluding airline tickets) online in the seven weeks before
Christmas, according to ComScore, a market research firm. And
eBay is one of the most heavily trafficked e-commerce sites,
with 63.3 million visitors compared to Amazon's 47.9 million.
EBay won't release sales figures, but the site's popularity
attracts potential buyers to sellers ranging from part-timers
such as Moore to companies such as Dealtree, an Aliso
Viejo auction management firm for major manufacturers. And like
their brick-and-mortar counterparts, these eBay sellers get a
big boost from people shopping for Christmas. |
Dealtree always gets a significant
bump in eBay auction business after Thanksgiving, and this
year's holiday sales are 35 percent to 40 percent ahead of last
year, said partner Paul Fletcher. TiVo sets and iPod music
players were flying off the shelves.
While companies like Dealtree can adjust staffing to
handle the increase, most eBay sellers are part-timers working
solo.
During the holiday season, the average eBay seller responds to
150 e-mails a week on top of actual orders; devotes two rooms of
the house for inventory; and makes 4.3 trips weekly to the Post
Office to mail products, reports the AC Nielsen polling company. |

ONLINE STOCK:
Garry Heath of Dealtree walks through the company warehouse in
Lake Forest. |
Moore doesn't bother going to the post
office. He works full time for the City of Irvine, so he does
his eBay business only at night. "Most bidders want Priority
Mail, which the post office will pick up free from my house," he
said.
Huntington Beach resident Jeff Minard also uses Priority Mail
for most of the old license plates that he has been selling on
eBay since 1997.
While his merchandise is less seasonal than Microsoft Xbox game
players and Mattel Barbie dolls, his winning bidders pay a third
more in November and December than the rest of the year.
"Prices go up because of competition among more bidders," he
said. "I've learned to put expensive stuff on eBay at this
time."
He recently sold on eBay a 1914 porcelain California license
plate for $75 and a 1944 Mexico plate for $50.
"This time of year, people buy presents for themselves or for a
family member or friend who is a collector," he said. "I'm sold
out right now."
Even people who don't know how to sell on eBay have reaped some
holiday profits from the online auctioneer. They have discovered
eBay drop-off stores such as iSold It, a Pasadena franchisor
that handles all the logistics of listing items, selling and
shipping.
The company's 170 stores handled 35,000 eBay auctions in
November for $3 million in sales, and December is 25 percent
ahead of that pace, according to Chief Executive Ken Sully. He
attributes the increase to more customers and the opening of
about 28 stores in recent weeks.
Morgan Lanchantin, an iSold It franchisee in Anaheim Hills, said
his December business was up 35 percent from November. The
company ran a Christmas promotion right after Thanksgiving "to
put a little jingle in your pocket."
Many customers did want to get extra money for Christmas, but
they also were cleaning out their closets. In recent weeks, he
has auctioned such items as a 1907 piano for $1,519, Lalique
crystal for $1,000 and "lots of train sets, guitars and Hummel
(figurines)."
He had expected his busiest auction-closing day would be Dec. 12
to allow plenty of time for delivery by Christmas, but sales
continued strong for several days after that.
Now he is preparing for a Dec. 26 stampede of customers
unloading unwanted Christmas gifts and electronics and cameras
for which they received a newer version.
Moore is also using this relatively slow period to change his
eBay business from auctioning electronics and toys to selling
military T-shirts, coffee mugs and hats.
This product line will have more year-round sales, which he
hopes will take the December pressure off while increasing
profits.
"I'm not worried about Christmas sales (of the T-shirts). If
(buyers) don't want them for Christmas, they'll want them
sometime," he said. |
About Dealtree
Dealtree is a leading provider of auction management, logistics
and value added services.
Dealtree provides a full service, single source solution that efficiently
moves goods and information through the reverse supply chain.
The company leverages world-class technology infrastructure, and
professional services to deliver its partners with optimal efficiencies and
superior market value on asset recovery. More information on the company can
be found by visiting www.Dealtree.com
or email bizdev@Dealtree.com.
Dealtree, Inc.
Ph: 949.305.6600
bizdev@Dealtree.com
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