eBay as an Income Stream
I've not really sold a great deal of stuff on eBay, though I do purchase items here and there. Some years back (when I was running the osC Books site) I sold one of the eBooks on eBay 3 or 4 times a week at £9.99 a shot. After Paypal and eBay fees I cleared around £7 a time. I suppose that I was spending around 15 minutes per week on this (adding new listings, sending download links etc), so it can't really be considered an AIS. Just a normal, run of the mill, Income Stream.
Recently, I sat down and worked out a plan for 2007. Part of that plan is to utilise eBay;
- for selling products
- for advertising purposes
What to sell ?
My next problem was to work out what to actually sell. Some months ago, I had a great idea for an eBay'able product, but decided not to go ahead as I would have needed liability insurance for the product (which I would have been making after purchasing the components) - the insurance was too expensive to justify. I dumped that idea.
This past week I approached an online acquaintance who used to sell on eBay (I had, years ago, made an oscommerce site for my acquaintance), so I had an inkling about the product and the demographic. I asked if they wanted to sell (as the eBay business they had been running was defunct) - after some days, they decided to sell and I purchased it. So, I now have an eBay business to set up (of course I will also be selling direct via my own website, which is where the "advertising on eBay" comes in).
The next couple of months
I need to purchase a couple of items to run the business, which will cost around £500 ($1000) in total. After I have these items it's full steam ahead. Of course, it's difficult to justify a £500 outlay, but the items I need will be usable outside the business as well, so it's not too bad. In the meantime, I can spend some hours setting up an osCommerce based website, as well as register the business and do all the legal shenanigans. I can also set up a new eBay name and make enough sales/purchases to be able to create "Buy It Now" auctions.
Projection
On eBay, I estimate that each product will return a gross profit of £1.60, based on a selling price of £2.50. I hope to sell at least 30 per week on eBay.
On a website, eBay fees are removed, so the profit potential is slightly higher - I hope to sell perhaps 10 through a website each week.
The previous owner
I looked at the previous owners feedback before approaching them, and saw that at one stage they were selling 60 to 70 items per month with no problems. If I can do that, month after month, this will be a good adventure.
Conclusion
eBay is harder work than I normally like. But it's a marketplace with thousands of buyers, who are their to spend money, not just look. It's an important piece of my "online jigsaw puzzle" for Income Streams in 2007, and one I intend to spend some time on over the coming months.
Once I have the business up and running I will post again with more details of the product etc.

Comment by burt — February 25, 2007 @ 12:22 pm
Interestingly, I found a seller who sells (almost) the same product. That seller has sold 140 items at £2.50 + postage, since February 1st.
Can I compete? Sure, why not.
Comment by Dave J — February 25, 2007 @ 8:21 pm
Gary,
If the business is what I think it is, would a link (maybe even an aff link :)) from our speech therapy/ed. resources site be of any use - still getting well over 1500 uniques per day on there. We could do you a "featured product" page or similar.
Apologies if I'm completely up the wrong avenue - it wouldn't be the first time!
Dave
Comment by Jason — February 26, 2007 @ 1:09 am
I agree, eBay is a lot fo work and I am frustrated with their super high fees. Add in PayPal fees and now it almost doesn't make it worth it.
Comment by burt — February 26, 2007 @ 12:59 pm
Dave; I think you could be thinking of the business I purchased. It was from a DDN member ;) Thanks for the offer, I'll get with you when I have something online. Cheers.
Jason; I agree, but eBay is the place where the buyers are, eh?
Comment by Eddy — February 26, 2007 @ 4:29 pm
Burt - you may be interested in the post i have linked.
Either way - definately check out eBay selling manager pro it will save you loads of time relisting.
Comment by Dave — February 26, 2007 @ 8:25 pm
Yep - tis the business I thought, suspect the circumstances were the main reason for selling it on as its got quite some potential. Suspect a laminator and a bloody big colour printer may come in handy
Let me know when you need the linkage.
Dave
Comment by Thomas — February 27, 2007 @ 3:44 am
Try using eBay as a lead generation tool and use your "About Me" page to drive the traffic directly to your website and avoid the eBay fees..
Comment by gary — February 28, 2007 @ 5:00 pm
Dave; Spot on
Ed & Thomas; Many thanks.
Comment by Victor — April 4, 2007 @ 8:16 pm
I'm not a big fan of Ebay either, mostly because there is less marketing latitude. But I think now might be a good time to get back in the loop, considering the possible benefits from the upcoming myspace / ebay partnership. Personally, I'm going to give Ebay another shot - if nothing else than to be a myspace store pioneer.