Topic: Small Orders and Price Spikes
Okay, this thread is going to combine a couple issues that maybe should be addressed separately, but I just got a card order that concerns both, so..
1) Today someone bought a copy of Goblin Rabblemaster from me that I have listed for under a buck. That's it. On my user page, I advise people not to make orders under $10 since they're not worth it for me to fulfill. Yeah, I could raise the shipping cost for all orders or maybe make a special cost category for small orders (would this actually be enforceable, though?), but right now I'm not sure if it would be acceptable for me to cancel the order as it doesn't adhere to these guidelines - my impression is that it wouldn't be and I could get hit by negative feedback. The buyer could have easily not seen this policy before purchasing, so I don't fault him for it, but I'd like to imagine that I could enforce clearly-explicated sales policies without risking negative feedback. Is this not correct?
2) The bigger issue is that the Rabblemaster was bought because it's currently spiking due to its unexpected performance in day 1 of the PT. tcgmid currently puts the card at $5. I updated my card prices at midnight last night. All the copies of the card on the site from American sellers have been cleared out now, perhaps all due to this same buyer. As a seller, there is literally nothing I could have done to protect myself from getting blown out like this (well, insofar as one can be blown out on a $4 loss) short of either not listing the card or just being quicker to move on this than everyone else - in which case I guess I should've cleared out everyone else myself. As is, there's always going to be one winner and a lot of losers.
I wish sellers could pre-approve incoming orders, or at least reserve the option to cancel them within 24h without negative feedback. I understand why a lot of sites like TCGPlayer don't allow this, but Deckbox is comprised of smaller-scale traders who are probably much more-adverse than normal to these kinds of losses. I didn't complain when someone ordered a $25 Nissa from me when she was spiking to $40, because there wasn't an obvious proximate cause to this spike. But this time, I'm salty because I feel like I'm being arbitraged for not paying crazy-close attention to TCGPlayer or tournament reports or relying on Deckbox's pricing - let me reiterate again that I updated the prices less than 12h before this order came in.
Okay, I do have something that can protect me here: I can set my account to vacation mode for the next few days until things are sorted out. I guess I'll do that. But I consider that a shitty option for obvious reasons.
tl;dr version:
1) Can I cancel an order that violates the sales guidelines I explicate on my profile without risking feedback? I'm guessing "no", but imo that's a problem.
2) Can we please have some seller features that allow sellers to protect themselves from being arbitraged on price spikes, eg. having seller options so that you can approve orders before they're processed, or have a time window to refund orders without risking negative feedback? Not having these makes selling on Deckbox unnecessarily risky imo.
As is, I'll fill the order I got but in the future I'll be setting my account to vacation mode around PT events and banlist announcements, I guess.
Last edited by 9700377 (2014-08-02 23:15:19)