brentpresley wrote:
At $150 per 2GB for Kingston PC2700 this is an exceptional DEAL. These sticks are $175 shipped EACH at Newegg (
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6820136016). Even the cheap "valueram" is ~$120 each.
That represents an EXCEPTIONAL deal. (Ken, this should address your point of a SUBSTANTIAL discount).
To address your WARRANTY concern: memory and CPUs are solid state components. Of the hundreds I have sold in the last year, I have only heard of 3 having ANY problems (and I offered to replace those at my COST to those individuals). These things just don't fail if properly installed (i.e. avoid static electricity).
If you were to eBay these, you could set a buy-it now for $105 each and have them gone in days with no problems. Especially if you have a significant feedback rating.
MY point was that low-balling, by anyone, at these already NICE discounts is really unprofessional. That was all I was trying to get across.
My .02... I'd have to agree with Ken.
With all due respect Brent... just because YOU say something is an "exceptional" deal, does not make it so. Saying it twice will not convince me otherwise either. Here's a few recently completed eBay auctions for 1gb memory:
$57.98 shipped
$67.87 shipped
$73.99 shipped
$75.94 shipped
Some of the sellers have a low number of feedbacks, some have a higher number of feedbacks, but all of them are positive enough for me to potentially bid on their items. Yes, there are plenty of auctions that sold for more than the $105 you stated, but that does not mean that $75 per 1gb is an "exceptional deal", especially given that plenty of auctions completed with values between $75 and $100 shipped.
So $75/1gb may or may not be a "substantial" discount if you're comparing it to used prices (not full retail price). Is it still a good deal? Seems like yskim4him thought so (and by the way, I agree... it was a good deal).
As for warranty issues, you basically prove Ken's point. If one buys something at a normal retail outlet, you can easily return or exchange the item. But you are saying that if you sell a stick of memory that fails, then the purchaser can "buy" another item at a reduced price (i.e. your cost). Although the risk of failure may be small, there's still a substantial difference in your "warranty" and that offered from a retail store.
Please don't take all this the wrong way. I'm not trying to be argumentative and I have lurked on this forum long enough to know you are a respected senior member and very reputable seller in the Marketplace. However, looking at this situation from a step back, it almost seems like yskim4him was called out and shamed into making the purchase. It doesn't matter if it was indeed a good deal or not, but rather whether it was more than s/he wanted to spend. And s/he should NOT be apologizing for anything. There's plenty of haggling that goes on in the Marketplace, and if we all had to apologize for it, there would be a long line.
As for professional or unprofessional, I think of the Marketplace like Ken does... as a flea market of sorts... an informal place, where people can exchange stuff they no longer want or need. As such, there is no such thing as "professional" in my mind. This is not BB or CC or NewEgg. For the most part, there are no set prices, unless they are stated as "FIRM".
But given that you are a regular seller and "PAY for EVERY single item sold here", I can understand that you've encountered more than your fair share of lowballers and tire kickers. So, I can only imagine how frustrating it may be after a while. But for other more "casual" members like myself, I personally feel that a bit of negotiation is to be expected, given the informal setting.