If your buyer did not pay you, or if you can somehow claim that your buyer did not pay (and UNMARK it as paid in your MyEbay), opening one of these will block the buyer's ability to leave you any feedback at all if:
1 - You open the dispute, AND
2 - the buyer does not respond, AND
3 - you close the dispute after eight days.
EBAY is making this harder to track, because they no longer mark the opening date for you. SO, whenever you open one of these, click to "add note" next to the item in your MyEbay and mark the date you opened it. Exactly eight days later, be on top of things, and close it.
Now, what if the buyer DOES respond?
Well, you are still not entirely out of luck. True, if you close it after he responds, the buyer will still be able to NEG you. However, many buyers view these disputes, while they are open, as a potential bad mark against them. While you have this weight against them, offer to close the dispute amicably (not giving them an unpaid item strike), if they will agree to not leave you a negative.
Of course - if the buyer really did pay and you were just hoping to pull a fast one on them, this whole thing could backfire and make the buyer angry. But in some cases, if used properly and strategically, this sort of buyer dispute can really help you have at least a little weight on the buyer.
1 - You open the dispute, AND
2 - the buyer does not respond, AND
3 - you close the dispute after eight days.
EBAY is making this harder to track, because they no longer mark the opening date for you. SO, whenever you open one of these, click to "add note" next to the item in your MyEbay and mark the date you opened it. Exactly eight days later, be on top of things, and close it.
Now, what if the buyer DOES respond?
Well, you are still not entirely out of luck. True, if you close it after he responds, the buyer will still be able to NEG you. However, many buyers view these disputes, while they are open, as a potential bad mark against them. While you have this weight against them, offer to close the dispute amicably (not giving them an unpaid item strike), if they will agree to not leave you a negative.
Of course - if the buyer really did pay and you were just hoping to pull a fast one on them, this whole thing could backfire and make the buyer angry. But in some cases, if used properly and strategically, this sort of buyer dispute can really help you have at least a little weight on the buyer.
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