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Re: Re:
That strategy appears to have worked for the less than welcoming seller here
viewtopic.php?f=39&t=402957&start=0
mk one":ty2xazrn said:BlackCat":ty2xazrn said:Thing is.. a couple of these bikes have been on for months already.
Anyone that buys a DB knows exactly what they’re looking at.. which means they probably spend half their lives on this fair site.. which means they know market price for one of these.
If owners genuinely want to sell, strip the bike to the frame, start it from £250. You’ll probably get enough people hooked at the low entry price to guarantee a competitive auction.
My penny’s worth.
Auctions are risky, if for example you were selling your house you would advertise the auction weeks or months in advance to get as many people aware of the sale. To put a Roberts up for auction and hope that every one of the possibly interested few is online searching that particular week is wishful. You then have to hope the interested few have the funds spare that week also.
Having sold a lot of high value items over the years on bay i find the best approach is to put it on at the price you want, based on the prices they sell for, there are so many factors to whether someone buys it straight away, which is very rarely, sometimes it can take months, but they always sell, always, despite countless cheeky offers and complaints that it is too high for that person and will never sell. As long as you can hold out and are not desperate then it will.
That strategy appears to have worked for the less than welcoming seller here
viewtopic.php?f=39&t=402957&start=0