Review
Product Description
Want to know how best to use eBay? Whether you're a newcomer or longtime user, eBay Hacks will teach you to become efficient as both a buyer and seller. You'll find a wide range of topics, from monitoring the bidding process, getting refunds, and fixing photos so that sale items look their best, to in-depth tips for running a business on eBay and writing scripts that automate some of the most tedious tasks.
That's just the nuts and bolts. The book also gives you an inside look into the unique eBay community, where millions of people gather online to buy and sell. Author David Karp--an eBay user himself, with years of experience--teaches you how to work within this community to maximize your success. eBay Hacks includes four powerful sections:
- "Hacks for All" covers eBay's diplomacy and feedback system, describing how you can maintain a good feedback profile and use it to inspire trust in others.
- "Hacks for Buyers" shows you how to focus your searches to find auctions before anyone else--including ways to create an automated search robot. Then, learn how bidding works in the real world, using eBay's proxy bidding system to improve your win rate while spending less money.
- "Hacks for Sellers" teaches strategies for competitive selling, like promoting your items without spending extra money and protecting yourself from deadbeat buyers. Learn how to run a fulltime business on eBay by streamlining the listing process, communications and checkout.
- "Hacks for Developers" delves into eBay's API, an interface for writing programs that do the work that most users have to do by hand through a web browser.
About the Author
Excerpted from EBay Hacks: 100 Industrial Strength Tips and Tools by David A. Karp. Copyright © 2003. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Choose when and how plurals and variations of your search terms are used in searches.
For the most part, eBay searches return only listings that match your search terms exactly. That is, if you search for "possum," you wont necessarily retrieve the same results that you would in a search for "opossum."
Historically, to perform a fuzzy search, youd have to include all the variations of a word in the search box manually, like this:
(opossum, possum, apossoun)
or, to accommodate singular and plural variants, youd have to type something like this:
(antenna,antennas,antennae)
The OR search commanded by the use of parentheses, as described in "Focus Your Searches with eBays Advanced Search Syntax" [Hack #9], takes care of this nicely. But its not always necessary.
As part of eBays new search engine (code-named "Voyager" and introduced in 2003), all eBay searches automatically include common plurals and known alternate misspellings of words. For instance, a search for "tire" will also yield results matching "tyre" as well as "tires" and "tyres," rendering the messy OR search unnecessary in this case.
Of course, the inclusion of these variations isnt always desirable. For instance, if youre looking for rooftop antennas for a Pennsylvania Railroad PA-1 locomotive, you wouldnt so much be interested in a book discussing the antennae of Pennsylvania cockroaches. To force eBay to search only for exact matches of words, enclose such terms in quotation marks, like this:
pennylvania "antennas"
which is practically equivalent to:
pennylvania antennas antennae
Whether or not the quotes will be necessary, or whether youll still need to manually include variations (using parentheses), will depend on the particular search youre trying to perform. eBays fuzzy searches are based on a hand-selected dictionary of common variations and plurals, meaning that "tire" will match "tyre," but its unlikely that eBay will go as far as to equate "potato" with "tater."
Punctuation
To simplify searches that would otherwise require very cumbersome search phrases, nearly all forms of punctuation are considered equivalent to spaces in eBay searches. For instance, say youre looking for a 1:43-scale model car; you might expect to have to type the following:
car (1/43,1\43,1:43)
Instead, all you would need to type is:
car 1/43
wherein the 1/43 keyword will match "1 43", 1:43, 1;43, 1\43, 1-43, 1.43, 1!43, 1@43, 1#43, 1$43, 1%43, 1^43, 1&43, 1_43, 1=43, 1+43, and 1~43.
Now, say that car is a 1968 Ford GT 40; the appropriate search phrase would then be:
(gt40,gt-40) 1/43
While gt-40 is equivalent to "gt 40", it wont match gt40 (without any space or punctuation), so the OR search is still needed.
Unfortunately, punctuation doesnt fall under the same rules as variations and plurals, meaning that the quotation marks discussed above wont have any effect on unwanted variations. Furthermore, the equivalence of punctuation also means that the following will not work as expected:
"gt 40" -gt/40
See "Focus Your Searches with eBays Advanced Search Syntax" [Hack #9] for more information on search exclusions.