Friday, May 16th, 2008
Feedback on Feedback to Feedback

All,
Thanks again for your kind words and emails. Sorry for the delay in getting this to you. As promised, I managed to spend time with Brian Burke this week and he tackled a lot of the follow-up questions that came through from the “Accountability” post written last week.
The following follow-up questions and answers are shown in no particular order. The questions, and the prior comments by Brian they refer to, are indented and shaded below. The new answers follow each shaded box.
I realize there were more questions asked but I wanted to get at least some addressed sooner rather than later. Thanks to Brian for taking the time to sit down with me again to discuss questions raised here on Ink.
Cheers,
RBH
Please re-round the circle squared by eBay President Lorrie Norrington on the eBay Announcement Board on March 20, 2008 titled “Update For Sellers”.
Norrington seems to be attempting to address the concerns of sellers who fear a neg from a non paying bidder. She attempts to mitigate the new “neg sellers only” policy by writing:
“What we have determined is that if the buyer does not specifically call out poor seller performance, item condition or transaction problems during the UPI process, eBay will remove the seller’s negative or neutral feedback — retroactively.”
This makes no sense. Sellers do not send items won in auctions before receiving payment. How can a buyer who leaves a neg be justified by claiming a problem with “item condition” for an item never sent, received nor seen? Again, sellers DO NOT send items without first receiving payment.
While Norrington’s “solution” may be boss pleasing “disruptive innovation”, it flat out makes no sense in the real world of selling on eBay.
This policy is designed to address a specific issue raised at the eCommerce Forum in January. Specifically, sellers complained that the current protections for sellers with the UPI process - the buyer must fail to respond completely - was inadequate, since all a buyer had to do was enter a single character or comment that they had no intention of paying, and any negative or neutral FB left by the buyer would remain.
Sellers shouldn’t send items prior to receiving payment. But if a buyer is complaining about the product condition in the UPI process, it’s a good indication that the buyer did pay.
Buyers who respond and respond in a manner that clearly indicates the seller was not at fault, such as “I found another one” or “my spouse is in the hospital so I can’t pay” shouldn’t be negatively impacted by a buyer’s negative Feedback.
However, if the buyer states, “I refuse to pay via Western Union” or “I just sent payment” or “I paid” (NOTE, some sellers file false claims, those caught are suspended) or “I did a charge back because you refused to send me a refund for the damaged product” would result in negative or neutral Feedback remaining.
A buyer who is referencing product condition, not receiving the product, etc. is a very good indicator that the buyer sent money.
We will continue to evaluate this policy.
We used a really simple definition when determining exactly what constituted retaliatory negative feedback. It was strictly a user who received a negative feedback and subsequently left a negative feedback.Severely flawed research error. The definition of retaliatory feedback” is based on an assumption not a fact.
With millions and millions of transactions happening we have to study behavior over time in order to identify trends and to determine whether or not a specific trend needs addressing. The fact is that 4 years ago, sellers would leave a negative after a buyer had left a negative twice as frequently than a buyer would and today it is eight times as frequently. That is a significant change in behavior and one that needed to be addressed. Again, we examined a lot of alternatives before coming to the conclusion that the feedback system needed to change. We learned that when a buyer gets a negative feedback in the eBay marketplace, they discontinue participating in the marketplace and it’s not healthy for anyone.
In January we mentioned that we’d block buyers from leaving negative or neutral Feedback for 3 days for sellers “with a track record.” Since January, we’ve made the decision to increase the wait period to 7 days and define “track record” as active PowerSellers who have been on eBay for at least 12 months.
What about NON-Powersellers? Does this mean the buyer could leave us a negative IMMEDIATELY? Or does it mean they can do it within 3 days, and only PS get the 7 day protection? This needs immediate clarification. Richard, PLEASE get a clarification on this.
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Why does the cooling off period, given it is so short a timeframe, only apply to PS? Why not to those who have been on the site for years? Why not to everyone?
Right now only PowerSellers get the 7-day protection. This has replaced the 3-day block rule introduced back in January. Suspension types and frequencies of suspensions were analyzed and it was determined that PowerSellers were the safest population of users to single out for this protection. If safety issues arise we could restrict this beyond the 12-month, PowerSeller distinction and, conversely, if we see positive results and gain confidence in the 7-day protection model, we could expand to other sellers. I don’t see this happening in the next 6 months though.
Richard, while you’re at it, can you please get an explanation as to how a waiting period adversely affects buyers anyway? Sellers have to give buyers 7 days to pay before they can file a UID. Why not give ALL sellers the same 7 day “benefit of the doubt?”
Essentially, we’re trying to balance marketplace safety with seller satisfaction. We want buyers to know immediately about a potentially bad or fraudulent buyer experience to better avoid repeat occurrences.
The way we’re going to hold buyers accountable is through private reporting from sellers; through enhancing the tools that we’ve given sellers to help protect them from buyers.What enhancements? Here’s the thing — the only thing that I’ve ever found helpful on feedback left for buyers is utilizing their feedback received when someone is slow in paying (ie, I’m not sure if they will follow through). If they have negs for non-payment, I’ll file a UPI a bit faster. If they don’t, I give them a lot more time/leeway. Will sellers have access to info on whether UPI reports have been made against buyers?
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What enhancements to which tools?
Sellers will not have direct access to info on whether UPI reports have been made against buyers. However, there is a buyer requirement tool that will allow sellers to block buyers with a UPI track record of 2 or more items. We’ve also introduced a seller reporting hub.
We’re going to take a look at what buyers are saying in the UPI console and remove it if it is arbitrary.
Who is going to be doing this? What will be the guidelines as to what is “arbitrary?”
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Will the process of reporting a buyer be reviewed by an actual person or a bot? Will we receive canned answers?
Customer support representatives will be reviewing all reports. There will be canned answers associated with general issues raised for the hundreds and hundreds of cases reported. Reports will be handled on a case by case basis and will be deemed arbitrary if there is no mention of dissatisfaction with the seller or an unwillingness to complete the transaction with the seller.
Does this new PowerSeller policy constitute a barrier to entry? And what about seasonal sellers who cannot enjoy PS benefits because they sell for a few months each year (but most definitely qualify PS, they just are not onsite long enough each year to qualify)? And what about new sellers? Do they become targets with no protection? Do you guys not want new sellers?
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Do you see a place for the small time seller on eBay in the future? I would love to stay but I am being pushed away with every calculated change and it seems many others are also. Is this what eBay is counting on?
These changes don’t have anything to do with the size of the seller. They are focused on the buying experience. With regard to DSRs and feedback, smaller sellers are actually the folks in a position to take an advantage of the new changes because they already provide a more personalized, attentive service to the individual buyer… helping ensure positive feedback after a transaction is completed.
We want all sellers to feel welcome on eBay and the new PowerSeller policy should not be seen as a barrier to entry, rather it should be seen as another incentive to sell more on eBay.
Will anything be done to ensure the 12-month period does not backfire on anyone?
There will inevitably be a small group of folks that are negatively effected by the 12-month window but again, we think that recent performance and activity is a much better indicator of what a buyer can expect to experience than a performance rating from 7-8 years ago.
A couple of months ago I received an email saying that a positive feedback had been removed because a buyer had been NARU’d after a relatively short time on Ebay.
On the Australian site my feedback now reads 99.9% for the last 12 months in spite of the fact that I have not received a neutral or neg for about 8 years, and I have been on a full 100% for about 6 or 7 years. I have never entered into mutually withdrawn feedback.
Please ask Mr Burke whether feedback that has been completely removed by Ebay is being counted as “non positive” feedback. If not, can you please ask him to review my feedback and clarify why it is calculated at 99.9% for the last 12 months on the Australian site. I am not asking for any adjustment to my feedback, only a clarification (you know, accountability) - I can supply a friends user ID with no neutrals or neg’s in the last 12 months and 4.9 dsr’s that currently rates at 99.5% if he would like to review that as well.
This is likely a data anomaly - with over 7 billion Feedback we occasionally have these come up. But since the seller is in US, I would ask that they wait until we update the US site next week. If it is still inaccurate, I can have a database engineer look into it - but I bet it’s accurate next week.
EBay is accepting the unverified opinion of buyers a fact, seller’s loose status based on the unverified feedback and DSR”s that buyers leave. Will eBay accept the reports of extortion and buyer bad behavior from sellers as fact without verifying those reports? Or will they only count against the buyer after being reviewed? A public system of accountability for sellers with no review of the facts and private backdoor accountability systems for buyers with a review of facts is not an equal and just system. So ask Brian if seller reports about buyers will be reviewed. Will sellers need to provide proof of extortion?
Sellers reports of buyers will be reviewed thoroughly. Extortion is very difficult to prove so the more proof a seller can provide, the better off we’ll all be. It will be easier to take action against buyers that have a pattern of behavior rather than a single instance of reported extortion - again because it is very difficult to prove a single instance of extortion.
In order to cut down on potential extortion situations we’re reducing the number of days someone can leave feedback from 90 to 60 days.
*How* does this cut down on potential extortion situations?
The window of time in which a buyer could resort to extortion has been shortened. For example, in the past a buyer could wait until 85 days after a transaction to practice extortion. The longer the time period; the longer the opportunity. We’ve reduced that window of opportunity considerably.
If the buyer did not pay, shouldn’t the “burden of proof” be on the buyer to report the reason why he / she did not pay?
Better yet, why not allow “private” reporting by the buyer to let eBay know that there was a good reason that they didn’t pay the seller?
What percentage of buyers actually have a valid reason for nonpayment? How about some eBay “statistics” to give us a better understanding of eBay’s desire to protect this group of eBay buyers who NEED the ability to leave negative feedback for a seller that never received payment.
We need any information regarding potential fraud to be public, and to be public fast. With regard to statistical information, Brian indicated that he would get UPI stats for me to share on the blog.
Tagged: brian+burke, buyers, detailed+seller+rationgs, dsr, ebay, ebay.com, ecommerce, feedback, Marketplace, online+marketplace, sellers
AmberOn 05.20.2008 at 7:28 am Said:
Crunchy, I believe that last fb comment can be removed as it contains profanity.
As for the others…those buyers have been on the site for quite some time. And now have the keys to the kingdom.
Ebay assumes that the buyer is always right and/or telling the truth in these instances. But I find it difficult to believe that those were all poor experiences.
The negs for delivery time are just wrong, too, as it plainly states in every listing that sellers are not responsible for delivery times. Bet she paid for Parcel Post or Media Mail and didn’t read the TOS. Or went by the carrier supplied info as to standard delivery time frames.
BTW, according to the Town Hall, blocking these kinds of abusive buyers–you know, the ones who leave an excessive number of negatives–will NEVER be an option under buyer requirements.
MechelleOn 05.20.2008 at 8:19 am Said:
I love this one
seller no negs, no neutrals, no withdraws- until yesterday
comment
negative
Shipped with messy peanuts!
MechelleOn 05.20.2008 at 8:51 am Said:
Another good one- negative rating- yesterday
(Buyer)
Should have checked item better, poor condition, disappointed.
Buyer herself inspected vintage table at time of local pickup two months ago.
VINTAGE 1930s PORCELAIN ENAMEL KITCHEN WOOD TABLE opens (#190209666931)
CrunchyPostingGoodnessOn 05.20.2008 at 8:52 am Said:
I hate to sound paranoid, and I can only hope the above are rare cases, but somehow I doubt they are.
Richard, please ask eBay if this is the type of buyer that they are trying to keep on the marketplace.
In fact, didn’t Griff say that he doubted that members would simply start leaving negs “willy nilly” just because they can? Perhaps you could have Griff come back and address this issue, since he believed the examples above WOULD NOT happen.
Patricia1On 05.20.2008 at 9:02 am Said:
Ebay obviously doesn’t read the Feedback Board or Seller Central. There are plenty of buyers like that who are just aching to give payback to all sellers they come across. My BBL is filling up because when someone posts a story like that I put that buyer on my BBL. It can’t hold ALL of them! This is so darned stupid as to be nothing BUT a ploy to get rid of small sellers! I don’t see ANY indication that ebay wants to keep us - that’s why I’m marketing vigorously elsewhere….any small seller who doesn’t is only kidding themselves.
MechelleOn 05.20.2008 at 1:13 pm Said:
@Richard
A transparency challenge-
In the two situations I posted above - do you believe that is fair and appropriate feedback that should damage those seller’s reputation creating a monetary loss to the business and LIFE of those 2 sellers?
LampLadyOn 05.20.2008 at 1:26 pm Said:
I received email from a buyer who just saw the new policy on feedback and wrote me that it was a terribly unfair way for eBay to behave toward their sellers. Will there be buyers now thinking twice about whether they want to buy on a site that has such policies???
Patricia1On 05.20.2008 at 2:31 pm Said:
One buyer’s work to kick off the no negatives from sellers yesterday - if you think this is rare…it isn’t and I’ll be happy to give the buyer’s ID to ebay if they want it:
1) Item arrived smelling of SMOKE and with DOG hair. Not Happy!!! Seller:***** May-19-08 19:11
— (#*********) — View Item
2)DID NOT HAVE ITEM FOR SALE! Seller:***** May-19-08 19:05
Reply by ******** (May-19-08 22:41):
never paid for the shoes gave us negative the shoes are currently listed
Follow-up by *********(May-20-08 09:01):
Waited 3 Months to Leave the Feedback You EARNED!!! Shoes were not Avil back the
— (#**********) — View Item
3) DID NOT HAVE ITEMS FOR SALE Seller: ****** May-19-08 19:05
Reply by ********** (May-19-08 22:39):
what a liar! waited until ebay prevents sellers from giving feedbacks we have
Follow-up by********* (May-20-08 09:02):
Left Honest Feedback, Won shoes months ago! Never got shoes cause you didnt have
— (#**********) — View Item
4) Items took well OVER 2 WEEKS to Arrive, Seller said it would be 8 days Max! Seller: ******** May-19-08 19:05
— (#********) — View Item
5) Terribly RUDE seller, Will never bid from AGAIN!!! Seller: ********* May-19-08 19:05
— (#********** — View Item
Lied About Dresses VALUE…Sold me a $15 dress for $$78..Smelled Terrible! Seller:******** May-19-08 19:05
Reply by*********(May-20-08 10:08):
No ‘value’ stated in auction; brand sold at Nordstrom (see website) for $350 tho
Follow-up by ******** May-20-08 11:53):
You know You ripped me off! Told me Vaue Via e-mail…SUCH a LIAR.Terrible Smell
— (#***********) — View Item
6) 10 DAYS, STILL NO ITEM, MISSED MY HUSBANDS BIRTHDAY, THANKS A-HOLE Seller:*********) May-19-08 19:01
— (#*********) — View Item
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Not really very much, is it? Yet is screams VOLUMES….Ebay, you really flubbed up good this time! I hope you see the light!
Richard - please please let this post stay - I took great pains to lift out all the ID’s, etc. and I can indeed, supply the real buyer’s ID - ebay needs to see these things!
DawnOn 05.20.2008 at 2:44 pm Said:
I know this has been mentioned before, but it would be great if you could try to get an answer to this, Richard. Why does it say here:
http://pages.ebay.com/help/feedback/questions/feedback.html
“A neutral rating does not change the Feedback Score.”
I thought is was just an old page, and that it would be updated soon. But, today I noticed it also says:
“Each member may affect your score by one point (positive, negative or neutral) per transaction. However, to make sure that repeat Feedback is calculated in the Feedback Score, the new transaction the member is leaving Feedback for must end in a separate week. For Feedback, eBay defines a week as Monday through Sunday, Pacific Time.”
So, it’s not an old page, after all.
Richard, it’s bad enough that buyers are being encouraged to leave less than positive feedback with the pop-up screens. Why are the eBay help pages still claiming that a buyer won’t affect our score by leaving a neutral? I would really like an answer to this question, please.
SharonOn 05.20.2008 at 2:46 pm Said:
Richard, I would love to know why Ebay feels it is okay for non-paying bidders to be able to rate sellers on communication, shipping, etc. when no transaction has occurred?
Why will they not admit what a huge problem it has become and address it as such? Because Ebay directly profits from NPB. I would love to see the stats on the increase of non-paying bidders.
I, as a seller, will now hesitate to file a UID because many buyers will leave a retaliatory negative if you do.
When a buyer has done nothing but bid on your item, how can they have the right to rate you on communication, shipping, item description, etc.? No payment, no transaction, no feedback!
Also, I just had a reason to change my password. On the alert I received from Ebay, it gave me my IP address and the address of my ISP host. If Ebay has this info, why can they not combine Ebay User Id’s for identification purposes.
It would be nice to know that when I block one user ID, that in turn blocks all of their ID’s and any future ID’s they may open after that. This would also cut down on many of the malicious buyers/sellers who keep coming up with new ID’s.
Thanks Richard!
SharonOn 05.20.2008 at 3:04 pm Said:
Richard, one more question please?
Why not throw the non-Powersellers a bone and give us a 3 day window in which feedback could not be given?
Some day Ebay may realize that retail is not going to work and wonder why they didn’t try to retain some small collectibles sellers also.
So far no changes have been for the benefit of the small sellers.
implogOn 05.20.2008 at 3:10 pm Said:
President Norrington and Mr. Burke:
The neg and negtral blood bath is coming at sellers so fast and furious that protecting ourselves from buyers is now practically a full time job.
How are any of us going to sell and provide “excellent buying experiences” when we are fully occupied adding the latest batch of naughty buyers to our BBL?
I had to create a Blocked Bidder List quick access button on my tool bar just to keep up.
You guys knew this would happen didn’t you? Why else would you increase the size of everyone’s Blocked Bidder List. Always thinking ahead…
Patricia1On 05.20.2008 at 3:39 pm Said:
I don’t list much there anymore - perhaps the safest thing to do for me is to stop listing on ebay and hope this straightens itself out. Unfortunately, a lot of small sellers are going to go down. Ebay - where is your mercy? It would be so much more business-like to just get rid of the small sellers eyeball to eyeball as a former boss told me once. Don’t let crazy buyers hurt small sellers because every small seller you lose is a buyer lost too!
MechelleOn 05.20.2008 at 3:39 pm Said:
Well if you go read the original statement of the new policies they posted you will see that they claim the sellers requested an increase to 5000 for the BBL- yes they told the buyers that we felt we had to have a higher max than a thousand.
Don’t you know by now that they listened to us and this is what we asked for?
you know they have trashed us so badly that all their little BS suggestions to educate the buyer on the DSRs and I guess the neutrals as well is a joke. I don’t mention it to my customers I’m sure some would decide I was a big freaking trashy crooked con just like eBay said and leave me a damn negative.
Patricia1On 05.20.2008 at 3:40 pm Said:
“I had to create a Blocked Bidder List quick access button on my tool bar just to keep up.”
How is blocking bidders enhancing their ebay experience? This is sheer madness! THINK ebay - THINK!!!! You’re doing irreparable harm.
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